Harry also described his brother’s baldness as ‘alarming’ (Picture: Getty Images/Backgrid)
The Duke of Sussex has likened his brother to the character Stewie Griffin in his new memoir.
Prince Harry and Prince William’s sibling rivalry has dominated headlines in the lead-up the official release of Spare.
In the memoir – released at midnight on Kindle, Audible and in selected bookshops – large portions of the book surround the warring brothers.
William is mentioned 358 times in total – 349 times as Willy and nine times as William.
Harry discusses shaving his head as a dare as a schoolboy, and rushing to tell his older brother about his regrettable decision.
Their following response from William reminded Harry of Stewie Griffin, the one-year-old ‘baby prodigy’ from Family Guy.
Harry writes: ‘Of course, there was nothing Willy could do [about the shaved head].
‘I was just hoping he’d tell me it would be OK, don’t freak out, keep calm, Harold.
Prince William is yet to comment on the revelations made in Spare (Picture: AP)
‘Instead, he laughed like the others. I recall him sitting at his desk, bent over a book, chuckling, while I stood before him fingering the nubs on my newly bare scalp. “Harold, what have you done?”
‘What a question. He sounded like Stewie from Family Guy. Wasn’t it obvious?’
Harry also references the cartoon character once more in his retelling of his school years, this time in relation to smoking in school bathrooms.
He writes: ‘Then we’d all head to one of our rooms and giggle ourselves sick over an episode or two of a new show. Family Guy.
Harry described Stewie as a ‘prophet with honour’ (Picture: BBC/20th Century Fox)
‘I felt an inexplicable bond with Stewie, prophet without honour.’
Prince Harry also described his brother’s loss of hair as ‘alarming baldness’ in one chapter of the book.
The section surrounds a tense argument between the brooding brothers and their father.
Harry writes: ‘I looked at Willy, really looked at him, maybe for the first time since we were boys. I took it all in: his familiar scowl, which had always been his default in dealings with me; his alarming baldness, more advanced than my own; his famous resemblance to Mummy, which was fading with time.
‘With age. In some ways he was my mirror, in some ways he was my opposite.
‘My beloved brother, my arch nemesis, how had that happened?’
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].
For more stories like this, check our news page.
The Duke of Sussex also described his brother’s baldness as ‘alarming’.