Vanessa Feltz has said she believes that Prince Harry’s upcoming memoir will not contain any ‘nastiness’ about King Charles III or the Royal family.
The 38-year-old is reportedly cutting out ‘insensitive’ parts of the tell-all book following the Queen’s death at the age of 96.
The ‘accurate and wholly truthful’ account of Prince Harry’s life’s launch date has also been pushed back ‘until next year’ it has been claimed, as the nation comes to terms with the death of Britain’s longest-reigning monarch.
Discussing the upcoming book on This Morning, Vanessa told hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield she believed the book would not attack the royal family.
She said: ‘When they book a guest for a show, like for example, I’m A Celebrity or something like that, they book them because they think they’re gonna go in and spill the beans about something absolutely sensational and they’re being paid accordingly.
‘But they just don’t. They go in there. They’re very nice. They eat their beans. They sit there and then they go home, And they don’t say the thing that the company that booked them were hoping they would say.
‘I think the book might be very, very honest about Harry’s own personal feelings about when he lost his mother and his personal feelings about being in the Army.
‘He just won’t say the horrible things that everyone hopes he will. I hope he won’t. And I just think it’s a book by him – it will deliver – but it won’t deliver the nastiness and I think if there was any in it, he’ll take it out now. I really do.’
Vanessa previously defended Prince Andrew after he wore his military uniform at the vigil for Queen Elizabeth II.
During an earlier edition of This Morning, the 60-year-old said: ’Well that just shows two things, one it shows that the King [Charles] is a compassionate person.’
Addressing the highly publicised Virginia Giuffre sexual assault case, presenter Matthew Wright interrupted saying: ‘He’s done some fairly horrendous crimes Vanessa. The compassion surely falls to the victims, that’s all I’m saying.’
‘Sensitive,’ Vanessa replied.
‘This doesn’t exclude or preclude having sympathy on the victims at all. This is an example of a man held up to public gaze during the funeral of his own mother.’

She continued: ‘And also, it’s his brother, so I think it shows a kindness and generosity and compassion and some form of empathy.
‘I don’t think he needs to be punished at that moment at his mother’s funeral and the funeral proceedings. I think the other thing it shows is just how much tittle tattle there is, and how much nonsensical reporting there is, and how many people pretend to know what’s going on behind the scenes of everything and have absolutely no idea.’
This Morning airs weekdays at 10am on ITV