The Serpent Queen: Starz’s Addictive Catherine de Medici Drama Has Bite
Photo: Courtesy of Starz
History isn’t often kind to powerful women. For centuries, women who desire more than the circumspect, carefully prescribed roles society has allotted for them have been branded unnatural freaks at best and dangerous threats at worst. Even the so-called “strong women” we remember most fondly are often lauded for the ways their behavior either mirrors or specifically appeals to men. After all, there’s a reason that our most enduring cultural image of Elizabeth I is as sexless Gloriana defeating the Spanish Armada and going on about having the heart of a man.
It’s also why powerful women tend to be remembered badly. Call it the Lady Macbeth effect, if you will, but it’s always been easier for history (read: generally men) to call these kinds of women witches or accuse them of extravagant sin rather than admit their intelligence, strength, or political skill. From Cleopatra and Olga of Kiev to Catherine the Great and Mary Tudor, female rulers are often remembered for their worst actions—real or imagined—rather than their best. (And frequently slandered for the same choices men have been historically praised for.)
The Serpent Queen is the latest in Starz’s ongoing series of female-focused historical dramas, but it’s the network’s first that takes place outside of the familiar framework of England’s Tudor family. It’s also—perhaps most importantly—the first to embrace a female leader who is not remembered in a particularly positive light. Rightly or wrongly, much of history has decided that Catherine de Medici was a monster: a foreign commoner who poisoned her enemies, practiced the dark arts, and manipulated her children for her own ends. Was she? We’ll likely never know for sure—after all, the history of France after her death was mostly written by her enemies, who had more than a few reasons to blame her for things she both did and did not have a hand in.
Smartly, The Serpent Queen doesn’t ask us to believe that its version of Catherine (Samantha Morton) was just misunderstood, a helpless victim of the history that was written by the same patriarchy that ground down so many women before and after her. Instead, throughout the five episodes that were available to critics (out of a total of eight), the series allows its queen the agency to be the central architect of her own life, without judging her for her choices no matter how appalling they may seem in the moment. Catherine isn’t a particularly good person, but The Serpent Queen doesn’t ask her to be; rather than whitewash her worst traits, the show recontextualizes them as a necessary fact of her survival. (And something no man would be judged for.)
We initially meet Catherine in the aftermath of her eldest son Francis’ (George Jacques) death, just days before her second son Charles is to be crowned king. Her reputation is already such that her servants fear her and essentially draw lots to see who will be stuck with the task of taking her meals. Well aware of this, Catherine leans into their assumptions, slithering through her palace in dramatic black gowns and looking every inch the dark witch everyone says she is. (As fellow Italian Niccolo Machiavelli once said, it is better to be feared than loved, if one cannot have both.)
Surprisingly, Morton’s adult Catherine only appears on the edges of the series’ initial episodes, but her performance is mesmerizing from her first moments onscreen, and it’s her presence that carries this drama throughout. An unreliable narrator in every sense of the word, from the ways she decides to frame her own story to the reasons she has for telling it in the first place, viewers are left to sift through her murky motivations themselves. Her decision to take servant girl Rahima (Sennia Nanua) under her wing reads as both uncharacteristically selfless and deeply self-serving, though it’s unclear whether she simply longs for a willing audience to justify her behavior to or just thinks it’s fun to try to corrupt the God-fearing younger woman by tempting her with the power to finally strike at those that have abused and belittled her.