Amazon to Adapt YA Tudor Fantasy 'My Lady Jane'

Amazon to Adapt YA Tudor Fantasy 'My Lady Jane'

As we've seen many times, our pop culture is positively obsessed with England's Tudor family. From the soapy melodrama of King Henry VIII's disastrous marriage track record to the untold stories of the complicated women who essentially all outshone him, we can't get enough. Starz's Becoming Elizabeth and AMC+'s Anne Boleyn are just two of the series connected to this royal family that we've seen arrive on our screens over the past year, and it doesn't seem like this trend is stopping any time soon. (Especially if you count Tudor-adjacent series like The Serpent Queen, which will follow the story of the French royal house around roughly the same period.) So it's no wonder that Prime Video wants to get in on the act, even if their upcoming series will be quite different from most of its predecessors.

Prime Video is set to adapt My Lady Jane, a YA novel by the "Lady Janies" trio of Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows. It is based on the story of Lady Jane Grey, the infamous Nine Days Queen. Edward VI's decision to rewrite his will immediately before his death and cut his sisters Mary and Elizabeth out of the line of succession essentially shoved her onto the throne of England. Jane's reign was exceptionally short-lived as public support for Mary Tudor's claim to the throne grew, and she was deposed, imprisoned in the Tower of London, and eventually executed.

That is... not exactly the story this show will be telling. The book My Lady Jane is the first in a series of young adult novels that reimagines the stories of overlooked, misunderstood, or ill-treated historical women, usually with a magical or supernatural twist. The series boasts whip-smart dialogue, tons of modern-day pop culture references, and a sense of adventure and possibility that doesn't often exist in their source material. (The other novels focus on women, both real and fictional, such as Calamity Jane, Jane Eyre, Mary, Queen of Scots, and Mary Shelley.)