On
Metacritic the show has a score of 70 based on reviews from 14 critics.
Reception in the UK In the UK the critical reception was described as “mixed at best” and 'mostly scathing'. Sam Wollaston of
The Guardian praised the characters, suggesting
Janet McTeer (Jacquetta) stole the show. He also praised the romantic elements, commenting "Mmmm, steamy". Gerard O'Donovan of
The Daily Telegraph praised the casting of the supporting characters and the exciting "lust and vengeance" fuelling the drama, but objected to the prettified portrayal of 15th century England.
The Independent's
Tom Sutcliffe found it "less historically plausible than
Game of Thrones", but concluded that "I’m sure it will give innocent pleasure to many". Barbara Ellen in
The Observer, compared the show to "a strange
Timotei advert, featuring fornication, shouting, horses, armour", whilst commenting that the sex scenes, toned down in the British version, "were so vanilla, I ended up fancying an ice cream". Reviewing the final episode for
The Daily Telegraph, Bernadette McNulty stated that the series, "fell between two stools—not serious enough for the scholars nor glitzy enough for the
Game of Thrones fans". The ratings were however good. The first episode received 6 million viewers, stabilising at around the 4–4.5 million mark from the second episode, although occasionally it dipped below this on first broadcast figures.
Reception in the US The White Queen received generally positive reviews after airing on the Starz network on 10 August 2013. Joanne Ostrow of
The Denver Post described the drama as "Sexy, empowering and violent". Linda Stasi of the
New York Post agreed that the programme was a hit, saying "
The White Queen [is] a royal winner". It was again unfavourably compared to HBO's high budget and fast-paced
Game of Thrones. In comparison to
Game of Thrones Neil Genzlinger speculated that "even if dragons were allowed, they’d mostly be lounging around and, between bouts of relatively tame dragon sex, talking about eating people rather than actually eating them". The performances of Janet McTeer and James Frain were praised by several American reviewers. Amanda Hale, despite receiving praise for her performance by British reviewers, was unfavourably reviewed by US critic Matthew Gilbert. He said "There were moments when I rolled my eyes—Amanda Hale, as the mother of young Henry Tudor, looks as if she is going to explode with ill intent. Really, her performance could be transposed into a
Mel Brooks spoof". Louise Mellor of
Den of Geek added "Why does Lady Margaret Beaufort constantly look like she is sucking on a Murray Mint?"
TV Guide writer Matt Roush praised Hale's performance as "intense", and favoured the drama, labelling it as "fun", and on a one to ten scale, ranking it at seven.
The White Queen was nominated three times at the
71st Golden Globe Awards, with acting nominations for Ferguson and McTeer and an overall nomination for the miniseries in the
Best Miniseries or Television Film category. ==Accolades==