The interior of Villa De Eikenhorst is more spacious than one would expect from pictures. The King told that the whole ground floor has a public function: guests are received on ground floor. The family holds its "appartment" upstairs.
When Huis ten Bosch, the 17th C palace in The Hague to become his residence, is ready (end of 2018/start 2019), the family will be happy to have a private wing with doors directly open to the park, so they can enjoy the green surroundings.
The King told that at Drakensteyn, the estate where he lived until ca. his 13th year, there was NO television: "My youth was radio". There was a television in one of the annexes of Drakensteyn, where (then) Princess Beatrix and Prince Claus enjoyed dinner and watched the news and maybe a film. The three princes however got movies: home made super-8 movies, or films like Laurel and Hardy. Of course their mother's atelier (sculpting) was a meeting place for the boys.
Only when the family moved to Huis ten Bosch, there was a television and -as a result- Willem-Alexander almost became a "tv-junk". Interesting detail: also Máxima had no access to television. Apparently also her family had the same ambivalent attitude towards this. When finally also Máxima got a television, also she became a "tv-junk", completely in the spell of what television showed.
The King told that his three daughters all have a mobile phone now. They recreived theirs at their respective 10th birthdays. When they go to bed and at holidays, the mobiles must be laid away. "That is the theory", laughed the King: this rule is not always strictly followed.
The King's parents had a deal with the security officers responsible for his protection: Don't be a tell-all. The King has adopted the same policy with his daughters' bodyguards: they are there to protect them. They are not there to brief the King and Queen about their actions and whereabouts. "That would mean Amalia and her security know things, you don't know?" asked Wilfried de Jong. "That is completely okay with me: I dó not even want to know it" stressed the King.
About his puberty the King told that he missed a paternal authority to rebel against: his father was sick (chronic depression, later paired with Parkinson) and his mother was the young Queen, with barely time for family life. His period at the Atlantic College in Wales and his military service at the Royal Navy were so important and formative for him. The King: "If I have not had those so important years in the Navy, I am not sure I would have succeed my studies". The King explained that the Navy taught him structure and discipline, features he used when he enrolled at Leyden University after the military service.
The King hoped that Princess Amalia would rebel too. That she can make her own mistakes. That she would also get doubts about her destiny. Not that he meant that Amalia should abstain but: "When you put your future in question, it also can help to determine why it is something to go for. When someone only does a function because that simply was an expectation, then this will result in unhappiness."
About his German family two interesting details: his father was so shocked and shamed in 1972, that his homeland Germany was not able to protect -of all countries- Israel at the Olympic Games in Munich. The tragedy of the kidnapping and killing of Israelian athletes in Germany was something which left a deep scar inside Prince Claus. Since then he wanted nothing to do with the Olympics. When Willem-Alexander had ambitions in the Olympic movement, he expected a "No Way!" from his parents, but to his surprise his father backed him: "It is your life, not mine. It gives you opportunities and a way to profile yourself".
The other German thing was the fall of the Berlin Wall. This was something the then Prince would have seen in flesh. A few friends went to Berlin, that eventful night. He absolutely would have liked to be there too. He told about his grandmother (Gösta von Amsberg, Baroness von dem Bussche-Haddenhausen) who lived at the borders of the Elbe river. Her estate in Hitzacker (Haus Dötzingen) looked out on the Elbe and at the other side of it was the DDR. The King told that every time when he was staying at his grandmother's place, he saw the fences, he saw the Vopo (DDR police force) on patrol. The Iron Curtain was a visible part of his grandmother's daily life. So the fall of the Iron Curtain certainly also had a deep impact in the family.
The King told that on one day he visited his grandparents at Soestdijk Palace (Princess Juliana and Prince Bernhard). At that moment Nelson Mandela was in the house, something the Prince was completely unaware of. There was some sort of fundraising in the palace for Prince Bernhard's nature preservation projects in Africa and Nelson Mandela was a guest. The Prince hesistated to meet him because he was not dressed properly (the pic showed him in jeans and a summer shirt). There was an encounter and this was the start of the friendship. The King told how Nelson Mandela got a list with invitations from his staff, to be sent a declination. Mr Mandela scrapped the royal wedding 02-02-2002 from that cancellation list and insisted he wanted to be in Amsterdam on Willem-Alexander's big day.
The four ladies of the King are his all and everything. So much has become clear. In the start the camera zoomed in on a side table with photo's. The one of the Queen with the three princesses at a recent gala event (the Greek wedding in London). The king told how beautiful they all were dressed and looking so gorgeous. He was visibly proud on his four ladies.
He told lovely words about Máxima, who he knows now for 18 years. He praised her for being supportive, caring, critical, his sparring partner. He was happy that she was "forgiveable" too. Sometimes the King has moods but apparently always Máxima knows how to solve it.
The King told that he can be "demanding". He can also be determined ("vasthoudend") when he is convinced that things should go a certain way. At the other hand, when things are well done, he can be happy and generous to share that with his surroundings. (That sounds beatrixian to me).