Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are currently living in Los Angeles as they start their new life outside the Royal Family. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex announced back in January that they will be stepping down as senior royals, and they officially withdrew from their roles by the end of March.

Now, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are making a fresh start and fans of the couple were excited after learning that the Duchess of Sussex will be making a live landmark interview on USA TV show Good Morning America (GMA). However, a new report revealed that this is not going to happen.

Meghan Markle is the narrator for the Disney+ documentary Elephant and she was expected to promote it during her appearance on GMA. But the show will air a “pre-recorded asset from the film” instead and not live as previously thought.

The confusion started when GMA noted that Meghan Markle will share an exclusive firsthand look at her role in Elephant. But the Duchess of Sussex’s representatives insisted that she is not going to give a live interview and it will only be a pre-recorded press clip.

Meanwhile, it was previously reported that Meghan Markle’s Hollywood comeback is “underwhelming.” Before the Pince Harry and his wife announced their withdrawal, the former actress gave everyone a taste of their possible future job by lending her voice to the Disney+ documentary back in August last year. After the launch of the documentary, early reviews revealed that Meghan's vocal performance was not impressive.

“Meghan is swapping pomp and circumstance for schmaltz and cheesiness. The departing Duchess of Sussex narrates Disney’s tale of a herd of elephants crossing the Kalahari Desert from the Okavango delta to the Zambezi River, and boy does she lay it on thick,” Ed Potton from The Times wrote. “The silken tones that Meghan employed on the legal series 'Suits' and which were often muzzled during her time as a full-time royal are now given free rein. And yes, she certainly has an actor’s way with a phrase and a likable sense of mischief. ‘Oh! Who did that?’ she coos in mock disgust when one of the elephant calves breaks wind. The sense of performance, though, often feels overegged. Even the underwhelming moment in which the elephants rip some bark off a tree is presented like the announcement of the winner for best picture."