Meghan Markle leaves ‘Suits’ with a TV wedding weeks before her real one with Prince Harry
The creator of the legal drama said that once he saw how happy the American actress was in her relationship with Harry, he started making plans for a happy ending on TV
Among the many things that few could have predicted in the last two years, who would have thought a legal drama on USA Network would become intertwined with British royal history?
Alas, “Suits” will be forever linked to the monarchy, as the show propelled actress Meghan Markle to fame before she met her fiancée, Prince Harry.
Markle starred for seven seasons as paralegal-turned-lawyer Rachel Zane – and on Wednesday night’s season finale, she said goodbye for good, as she prepares for her new job as a member of the royal family with her May 19 wedding rapidly approaching.
Will Meghan Markle wear royal tiara on her wedding day?
So it was only fitting that Markle’s character bid farewell to the show with a wedding. Rachel tied the knot with her long-time love, Mike Ross (Patrick J Adams), who started the series pretending to be a lawyer and got himself in all sorts of trouble.
But now, all is well – Mike finally got a real law license last season. In the two-hour season finale, he and Rachel were approached about running a firm in Seattle, one that only works on class-action lawsuits against Fortune 500 companies.
At first, they weren’t sure, but ultimately decided to take the plunge. It was the perfect, drama-free way to write the two characters off the show, as Adams also announced he would depart after Season 7.
The eighth season of “Suits” will kick off in July, with new series regular Katherine Heigl playing a fiercely competitive lawyer.
Luckily, the writers had time to plan Rachel’s exit. “Suits” creator Aaron Korsh told Variety last month that once he saw how happy Markle was in her relationship with Harry, he started making contingency plans.
“I guessed that if she married a prince that she wasn’t going to stay on the show. So we decided, in our hearts, to bank on her finding love and kind of having a fairy tale ending in her own life and assuming that good things were going to happen for her,” Korsh said.
“Plus it would be easier to undo a decision to write her off than it would be to at the last minute have to make her leave. She would have to get hit by a bus or something, and I didn’t want to do that. ”