Meghan Markle began working on her new animated Netflix show with Sir Elton John's husband in 2018 - two years before she left Britain, it was claimed today.
The Duchess of Sussex is teaming up with David Furnish to work on the project which follows a '12-year-old heroine who finds inspiration in influential women from history'.
Sources have now claimed to Page Six that talks about this new programme have been 'active' for three years – but they also told the website that the project started as a charitable venture when Meghan was a working royal.
Its report claimed the show was 'originally just one of a number of one-off advocacy projects that Markle started work on while a working member of the royal family'.
Meghan's husband Prince Harry told Oprah Winfrey in March that they only thought of their big deal with Netflix – said to be worth £75million - after leaving the UK for North America early last year.
It is therefore possible that the Netflix deal is something altogether separate from this newly-announced show, which Meghan could have been working on for years.
Harry had said the plan came after his family cut them off financially. During the bombshell Oprah interview, Harry said: ‘The Netflix and the Spotify of it all, that was never part of the plan.' Meghan then added: 'No.' Oprah said: 'Because you didn't have a plan.' And Meghan said: 'We didn't have a plan.'
Harry continued: 'We didn't have a plan. That was suggested at the point at where my family literally cut me off financially and I had to afford security for us.'
Oprah interjected: 'Wait, hold up, wait a minute? Your family cut you off?' And Harry replied: 'Yeah, in the first half, the first quarter of 2020. But I've got what my mum left me, and without that we would not have been able to do this.'
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, pictured in July 2018 at Marlborough House in London
Sir Elton John and his husband David Furnish, pictured in April, who is working with Meghan
Similar projects at the time included her charity cookbook to raise money for victims of the Grenfell Tower fire and the British Vogue issue that she guest edited.
Mr Furnish, 58, also appeared to point towards the long length of the project, posting on social media two days ago that he was 'finally able to announce' it.
Meghan, 39, will be an executive producer on the Netflix project alongside him, the Sussex's audio production company Archewell revealed this week.
Sir Elton was good friends with Harry's late mother Princess Diana and maintained a close relationship with the Duke after her death in Paris in 1997.
In 2019, Sir Elton paid for Harry and Meghan to fly via private jet to his multi-million-dollar mansion in the South of France - and the singer vehemently defended the couple following a furious backlash over their decision to travel in a private plane, despite actively advocating for environmental issues.
Sir Elton and Mr Furnish were also among the many celebrity guests - also including Oprah - invited to attend the Sussexes' wedding at Windsor Castle in May 2018.
And Sir Elton made a guest appearance in the first episode for the couple's new Spotify podcast, last December, in which he discussed the toll of the pandemic and his 'hope for healing' in the future.
The new claims by Page Six come three weeks after a row over financial support for the couple, with the Sussexes claiming on June 24 that it was false to say Prince Charles bankrolled them with a 'substantial sum' following Megxit.
Royal accounts made public for the first time last month showed the future king continued to fund Harry and Meghan until summer 2020 from a £4.4million Clarence House pot used to support his two sons and their families.
This contradicted what Harry told Oprah in March when he said he stopped getting financial support from his family in the 'first quarter' of last year. He even claimed he and his wife were reduced to living off what 'my mother had left me'.
But Harry and Meghan's friend and trusted journalist Omid Scobie tweeted a clip of the Oprah interview along with an attempt at a clarification.
Mr Scobie said: 'Despite some confusing reports, Prince Charles and Prince Harry's timelines for the period the Sussexes' financial support ended are the same.
David Furnish said he was 'delighted' to be 'finally able' to announce the new Netflix series
'Clarence House says funding continued until last summer (Q1 of the UK's fiscal year is April to June) and Harry told Oprah the same.'
Details of Charles's continued financial support for his estranged son came as both Clarence House and Buckingham Palace opened up their yearly financial accounts.
The new Netflix series, which has the working title Pearl, which will be released as part of the Sussexes' lucrative deal with streaming site Netflix.
In a statement Meghan said: 'Like many girls her age, our heroine Pearl is on a journey of self-discovery as she tries to overcome life's daily challenges.
Meghan issued a statement about the new show through the Sussexes' Archewell website
'I'm thrilled that Archewell Productions, partnered with the