Meghan Markle’s former Suits co-star Patrick J. Adams has changed his Instagram bio to reference the royal family.
The Toronto-born actor, 42, who played Meghan’s on-screen husband in the legal drama from 2011 to 2019, described himself as: “the guy from that show you’re watching on that app because that girl married that prince ‘.
Suits tells the story of Mike Ross (played by Adams) as a courageous law student who moves his law firm into a prestigious law firm and falls in love with beautiful paralegal Rachel Zane (played by Markle).
Despite ending in 2019, the show has seen a surge in viewership across screening platforms in recent months.
After launching on Netflix earlier this year, the series set a viewing time record for an acquired series during the week of June 26 – July 2, with 3.14 billion minutes of viewing time.
Meghan Markle’s former Suits co-star Patrick J. Adams has changed his Instagram bio to refer to the royal family
The Toronto-born actor, 42, who played Meghan’s on-screen husband in the legal drama from 2011 to 2019, described himself as: ‘the guy from that show you watch on that app because that girl married that prince’
After her departure from the show, Meghan remained friends with a pose of her former co-stars who attended her wedding to Prince Harry, including Gabriel Macht, Abigail Spencer, Sarah Rafferty and Patrick.
It is believed that Meghan liked to play her stylish lawyer alter-ego and felt like “a kid in a candy store” when it came to choosing her outfits.
Famed costume designer Jolie Andreatta previously explained, “Meghan and I loved Rachel’s clothes. We always said we’d live in Rachel’s clothes if we could. Designing Rachel’s look was like being a kid in a candy store.”
When she retired from acting to join the royal family, Meghan insisted that instead of dwelling on the end of her career, she would dedicate herself to making a change in the world through her humanitarian work. to establish.
Meghan has been pictured this week on Beyonce’s Renaissance World Tour with Kelly Rowland and Kerry Washington
Patrick, who has defended Meghan on several occasions, complained last year that he was “drawn into” debates surrounding his former opponent.
“Hello to the people and the many bots who debate all about Markle and include me in the conversation. I just want you to know a few things. 1. I don’t read any of it. 2. Life is short. 3. There must be better things for you to do. Even you bots,” he wrote.
Patrick has also previously described the monarchy as “poisonous, archaic and shameless.”
He said his “powerful” and “friendly” friend was the subject of underhanded behavior on the part of the monarchy after reports were published that Meghan had “bullied” several former Kensington Palace staff, which she has strongly denied.
Patrick J Adams has fallen out after being constantly ‘drawn into’ debates surrounding his former co-star Meghan Markle, seen together in hit legal drama Suits, in which they co-starred from 2011 to 2017
‘I can not remember. It could have been the director-producer at the time, or her agent,” he said, when asked who told him she couldn’t say “poppycock.” Meghan can be seen on the show
After her 2022 interview with Oprah Winfrey, he said, “She fell in love, moved to a new country, became a household name around the world, and embarked on the difficult work of finding her place in a family dynamic that can best be described as complicated and at worst seemingly archaic and poisonous,” he wrote in the rant of eight tweets.
At the time, Buckingham Palace engaged “an outside law firm” to investigate allegations that Meghan had bullied royal staff.
Recently, the creator of the legal drama sensationally claimed that the royal family insisted that the word ‘poppycock’ be removed from her script, fearing that excerpts would be edited to sound as if the Duchess of Sussex had said something rude .
Aaron Korsh, 56, spoke with The Hollywood reporter about how things changed on set after Meghan started dating Prince Harry — and about the bizarre demands he says the monarchy made when it came to her lines.
His claims echo those of Harry, who claimed in his explosive memoir Spare that the Suits writers became increasingly “frustrated” with the “palace communications team” “advising” about changes to Meghan’s rules.
According to showrunner Korsh, the royal family has “weighed in on some things” — including what the Duchess of Sussex’s character said in episodes filmed after she and Harry started dating — that he found “a little irritating.”
He said there was one particular word he threw into the script as a tribute to his own in-laws — “poppycock,” which is slang for nonsense — but claimed he was forced to change it after the royals vetoed it pronounced because it contained the term “c**k.”