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The Diplomat Recap: The Job Has a Morally Repugnant Element
Roylin’s information could have been more helpful before everything blew up in Kate’s face.
It also protects her and stymies any nefarious moments, thanks to the church being full of women with the same build and coloring, the same neat cap of auburn hair, dark gray car coat, and structured black tote, all walking every which way as the service ends. David Gyasi’s ability to put across intense feelings (in this case, fury) with a mild facial expression and low voice is essential to his performance and is, like his endless succession of three-piece suits and perfect public schoolboy diction, all part of the armor Dennison wears to survive being Trowbridge’s Foreign Secretary. If that’s the case, why on Earth didn’t she advise Kate to reach her on one of her burner phones or say, “One moment, darling, this connection is bad, let me call you back?” Doesn’t she feel some responsibility to not put one of her Whitehall colleagues at risk of assassination?
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