Cookie Queens is a documentary about four girls who “strive to be a top-selling ‘Cookie Queen,’ navigating an $800 million business in which childhood and ambition collide” and Harry and Meghan executive-produced it through their Archewell Productions company.
On Sunday, in what US media described as an “uncommon move” for an executive producer, Meghan took to the stage to make a short speech about the film. Meghan praised the documentary as the “cutest film” at the festival.
Royal fans were quick to spot the rare moment and took to social media to express their views.
One user wrote on X: “In a rare move at Sundance, programmer Kim Yutani welcomes an executive producer to introduce a filmmaker before the screening.” A second one replied: “By rare you mean narcissistic move.”
A third person joked: “Meghan and her BFF, the microphone.”
A fourth one said: “Oh yeah, Meghan was up all night rehearsing her “I won the Oscar” speech.”
A fifth user added: “Meghan Markle at Sundance giving an Oscar acceptance speech for a career that never happened. The delusion remains undefeated.”
A sixth one agreed: “You’re right. It was an acceptance speech!”
And another one opined: “She is in a pink cloud, on her own, every time she gives a speech.. It’s so obvious that she loves too much every minute of it.. Words (same vocabulary all the times) come out of her mouth without any meaning but the satisfaction is over the top.. She lives for moments like that.”
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are two of the 13 executive producers of the film, including Chanel Pysnik, Regina K. Scully, Hallee Adelman, Ann Lewnes, Stephen G. Hall, Ruth Ann Harnisch, Geralyn Dreyfous, Tegan Acton, Emma Pompetti, James Costa and Trevor Burgess.
It was directed by Alysa Nahmias, who also served as producer, alongside Produced by Michael Dweck, Gregory Kershaw and Jennifer Sims.
During her speech, Meghan said: “This film, yes, is probably the cutest at the festival. But I’m also going to go out on the limb and say it is one of the most powerful and meaningful depictions of something that is an American tradition and rooted in nostalgia.”
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.express.co.uk ’














