Prince William was today said to be frustrated that the BBC has been helping Netflix 'commercialise' his late mother Princess Diana's Panorama interview for The Crown.
The Duke of Cambridge is understood to be disappointed that broadcasters are still making money from her bombshell chat with Martin Bashir on the BBC in 1995.
Producers were spotted outside the BBC's offices at New Broadcasting House in London filming a scene portraying events that followed the interview.
Actor Richard Cordery, 71 - playing Marmaduke Hussey, then chairman of the BBC's board of governors - was seen getting out of a car and walking into the building.
The scene is said to have recreated when Lord Hussey arrived amid the fall-out from the programme in which Diana said: 'There were three of us in this marriage.'
MailOnline understands the filming consisted of a single shot of him walking into the building and then back out again - but nothing further inside.
The filming took place six months after a report by Lord Dyson concluded the BBC covered up 'deceitful behaviour' used by Mr Bashir to secure the interview.
The BBC and Mr Bashir both apologised, and the BBC wrote to Princes William and Harry. The report led to a call from William for the interview never to be aired again.
Kensington Palace declined to comment but William is believed to be standing by his previous statement following the Dyson report, when he said: 'It is my firm view that this Panorama programme holds no legitimacy and should never be aired again.
Prince William talks with refugees evacuated from Afghanistan at a hotel in Leeds yesterday
A photo ahead of the upcoming season of The Crown shows actor Richard Cordery (left), 71, dressed as Marmaduke Husssey (right), the former chairman of the BBC's board of governors
MailOnline understands the filming consisted of a single shot of him walking into the building and then back out again - but nothing further inside. Cordery is seen getting in a car
Princess Diana is seen during her interview with Martin Bashir for the BBC's Panorama in 1995
'It effectively established a false narrative which, for over a quarter of a century, has been commercialised by the BBC and others. This settled narrative now needs to be addressed by the BBC and anyone else who has written or intends to write about these events.'
The Daily Telegraph reported today that William was 'understood to remain deeply frustrated that broadcasters continue to make money from the interview'.
A TV source told The Sun earlier this week: 'It's