Tuesday, June 5, 2012
The President Sends The Queen His Greetings
Addressing "Her Majesty" in a special video message, the US President salutes the Queen as he wishes that she "reign supreme for many years to come".
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/the_queens_diamond_jubilee/9312118/US-President-Barack-Obama-records-Diamond-Jubilee-message-for-the-Queen.html
Jubilee Service Highlights
Service of Thanksgiving held for the Queen's Diamond Jubilee
Watch highlights from the National Service of Thanksgiving celebrating the Queen's Diamond Jubilee at St Paul’s cathedral in London.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/the_queens_diamond_jubilee/9306562/Service-of-Thanksgiving-held-for-the-Queens-Diamond-Jubilee.html
Royal Jubilee Concert
It was Madness at Buckingham Palace, as the much loved nutty boys of ska took
to the roof of Her Majesty's residence. For the Golden Jubilee, they only
had Brian May up there, playing the national anthem. This time the roof had
to take the weight of a seven strong band doing silly dancing. They were one
of the highlights of the Diamond Jubilee Concert delivering a rambunctious
performance of Our House, a song more usually associated with humble
terraces rather than grandiose palaces.
Everything about this year's show had been planned to upstage its predecessor,
from the massive purpose built stage surrounding the Victoria Monument to
the dazzling laser mapped projections that turned the palace itself into an
ever-changing backdrop. The staging was actually more ambitious and cutting
edge than the line-up.
Perhaps inevitably, the show tread lightly around the edges of pop culture. Queen Elizabeth II has reigned over psychedelia, heavy rock, punk, indie, hip hop, electro, rave and Britpop, but there was nobody on the bill at the Palace who was likely to upset the corgis. “We forgot to invite The Sex Pistols,” joked Gary Barlow backstage. The Take That frontman was heavily involved in setting the concert up, and it reflected his middle-of-the-road, light entertainment tastes. “You don’t want to be on the edge of your seat at an event like this. There’s plenty of great artists who want to be there, and deserve to be there.”
They included several knights and dames of the realm, superstars who can usually be relied upon to perk up royal entertainment. Sir Tom Jones proved popular with the crowd, the kind of cheerful performer who can be relied on to lead a big lusty singalong. Delilah may be a song about infidelity and murder but it sounded oddly uplifting sung by massed voices on the doorstep of the Palace. Perhaps circumspectly, Her Majesty delayed her entrance until after the Welshman had finished his murder ballad. "You missed Tom Jones," joked Lenny Henry. "You just live over there!"
Continue reading... http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/the_queens_diamond_jubilee/9311374/The-Queens-Diamond-Jubilee-Concert-review.html
Views from Royal London
The crowds along The Mall went wild as the Queen's carriage went past on the
final section of its short journey back to Buckingham Palace.
This was the moment they had been waiting all day for.
As she raised her hand and waved, the spectators cheered even louder and fluttered their flags even more vigorously.
Celebrity spotting: just before the Queen arrived, John Barrowman, the star of the BBC's Doctor Who spin-off Torchwood, rushed through the crowd heading in the direction of the Palace.
He was obviously in a hurry, but one middle-aged lady managed to grab him and kiss him as he passed.
This was the moment they had been waiting all day for.
As she raised her hand and waved, the spectators cheered even louder and fluttered their flags even more vigorously.
Celebrity spotting: just before the Queen arrived, John Barrowman, the star of the BBC's Doctor Who spin-off Torchwood, rushed through the crowd heading in the direction of the Palace.
He was obviously in a hurry, but one middle-aged lady managed to grab him and kiss him as he passed.
Monday, June 4, 2012
Princesses Beatrice & Eugenie – In Awe of Granny
All across the British Commonwealth, people are commemorating Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee.
The monarch has long inspired enormous admiration in her subjects and, it turns out, in her granddaughters as well.
(Matt Dunha/AFP/Getty Images)Princesses
Eugenie and Beatrice - daughters of the Queen's son Prince Andrew -
shared their feelings last month about their royal grandmother.
"It's phenomenal, actually, when she walks into the room because everyone just stops and stares. And even I catch myself going, 'Oh, wow,'" Eugenie said an interview May 21 with ABC News' Claire Shipman at the royal family home in Windsor.
"Because she's just this most incredible lady who makes everyone just stop for a second and we're all kind in awe of her. So it's great. It's fantastic.
Despite her status as head of the state of the United Kingdom, to the princesses, the queen is "granny," first and foremost.
"I think Granny is … she's very funny," Eugenie, 22, said.
"She says, 'I'm too young to be a grandmother,'" Beatrice, 23, added.
The girls especially like talking to their grandmother about what her
earlier life was like. "I think it's always so nice when you can say,
'Oh, Granny. What was Frank Sinatra like?'" Eugenie said.
The monarch has long inspired enormous admiration in her subjects and, it turns out, in her granddaughters as well.
(Matt Dunha/AFP/Getty Images)Princesses
Eugenie and Beatrice - daughters of the Queen's son Prince Andrew -
shared their feelings last month about their royal grandmother."It's phenomenal, actually, when she walks into the room because everyone just stops and stares. And even I catch myself going, 'Oh, wow,'" Eugenie said an interview May 21 with ABC News' Claire Shipman at the royal family home in Windsor.
"Because she's just this most incredible lady who makes everyone just stop for a second and we're all kind in awe of her. So it's great. It's fantastic.
Despite her status as head of the state of the United Kingdom, to the princesses, the queen is "granny," first and foremost.
"I think Granny is … she's very funny," Eugenie, 22, said.
"She says, 'I'm too young to be a grandmother,'" Beatrice, 23, added.
Asked about rumors that the queen loves to play cards, Eugenie
laughingly replied: "We play a lot of Patience, which is the most
difficult game ever. And I don't have very much patience. So when we
play, it's quite funny because she will sit there for a good hour and a
half and I'll sit opposite her and she'll win a fairly few times."
While Eugenie said she wouldn't describe her grandmother as competitive, she added, "She just wins."
She said the queen enjoys the time playing with her granddaughters
because "it's the time when we can all just kind of hang around together
and it's quite nice."
Beatrice added: "Those are the bits that I enjoy the most, sort of
learning, 'Oh my gosh, you know, [what] was it like to drive an
ambulance in the Second World War?'
"She's an incredible driver, she's still driving now," Beatrice added.
"She drives the big trucks, the big Land Rovers around Balmoral," her
residence in Scotland.
Official Communiqué from Buckingham Palace
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh was taken to King Edward VII Hospital in
London this afternoon, from Windsor Castle, as a precautionary measure
after developing a bladder infection, which is being assessed and
treated.
Prince Philip will remain in hospital under observation for a few days.
He is, understandably, disappointed about missing this evening’s Diamond Jubilee Concert and tomorrow’s engagements.
http://www.royal.gov.uk/LatestNewsandDiary/Pressreleases/2012/TheDukeofEdinburghadmittedtohospitalwithbladderinf.aspx
Prince Philip will remain in hospital under observation for a few days.
He is, understandably, disappointed about missing this evening’s Diamond Jubilee Concert and tomorrow’s engagements.
http://www.royal.gov.uk/LatestNewsandDiary/Pressreleases/2012/TheDukeofEdinburghadmittedtohospitalwithbladderinf.aspx
Portrait by Richard Stone
Duke of Edinburgh Rushed to Hospital
The Duke, 90, will spend the next few days at King Edward VII Hospital in London after being taken there by ambulance from Windsor Castle.
He was said to be "disappointed" that he would miss the remainder of the Jubilee weekend, which culminates tomorrow with a Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul's Cathedral and a carriage procession through the capital.
The Duke's sudden illness, which follows a spell in hospital over Christmas after he suffered heart problems, will lead to inevitable speculation that his health has suffered as a result of the four hours he spent in the open in bitterly cold and wet conditions during yesterday's Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant.
A spokesman for Buckingham Palace said: "His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh was taken to King Edward VII Hospital in London this afternoon from Windsor Castle as a precautionary measure after developing a bladder infection, which is being assessed and treated.
"Prince Philip will remain in hospital under observation for a few days. He is understandably disappointed about missing this evening's Diamond Jubilee concert and tomorrow's engagements."
The Duke was taken to the hospital in Paddington following a call to ambulance control from Windsor at 2pm stating that the Duke was feeling unwell.
His doctor had been called to Windsor Castle and was with him when paramedics arrived and he was lifted into the ambulance in a chair before it set off for London.
His illness will cast a long shadow over tonight's Diamond Jubilee concert in front of Buckingham Palace, which should have been the most fun-filled event of the Jubilee weekend.
Instead, the Queen's thoughts, and those of the rest of the Royal family, will no doubt be elsewhere as the Duke, who will be 91 on Sunday, fights to regain his health.
Continue reading...http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/prince-philip/9310881/Duke-of-Edinburgh-rushed-to-hospital-with-bladder-infection-Buckingham-Palace-announces.html
The Thames flotilla – The Highlights
Cheering crowds greeted the Queen
as she travelled through the heart of the capital at the head of her
majestic 1,000-strong Diamond
Jubilee flotilla.
Surrounded by her family the Queen acknowledged the well wishes of thousands
who had flocked to the River Thames to witness the once in a lifetime
spectacle.
Bridges and embankments were filled with spectators while others found vantage spots in offices blocks, all desperate to catch a glimpse of the myriad of boats, ships and tugs passing by.
Continue reading... http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/the_queens_diamond_jubilee/9309497/Thames-Diamond-Jubilee-River-Pageant-The-Highlights.html
BBC's Lamentable Coverage of the Queen's Jubilee
People in the UK are united in celebration of The Queen's leadership...but they also seem quite in unison regarding the "lamentable" coverage of the event by the BBC. In fact, in an online poll carried by the Telegraph in London, 92% of readers condemn the public television system's lackluster coverage the various events surrounding the Jubilee.
One wonders what little Socialist anti-monarchist minion at the BBC is responsible for this!
"Seems we all agree on terrible BBC coverage. Low grade, celebrity driven drivel. How did Beeb get it so wrong" he wrote.
Despite the poor coverage those who turned out for event enjoyed the day in spite of torrential downpours.
The Queen smiled on through the cold and wet, resisting the joint temptations of an indoor berth and a hot cup of tea to wave non-stop from the windswept deck of the royal barge from start to finish of the Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant.
“It was absolutely worth waiting for,” said a shivering Joanne Revitt, 48, who watched the procession from the Embankment near the tower of Big Ben (or the Queen Elizabeth Tower, as MPs want to rename it).
“The Queen looked stunning and I am quite convinced she waved at me as she went past,” she added.
Countless thousands of others no doubt went home with the same belief, and they would have gone home happy as a result.
It was, the Duke of Cambridge told one guest, a “very emotional” day for his grandmother and at times it showed as she seemed slightly overwhelmed by the scale of the public’s response.
The BBC defended its coverage. A spokesman said: "We're very proud of the quality and breadth of the BBC's coverage of this extraordinary event."
But those watching at home were less than complimentary.
One posted: "BBC's coverage of the jubilee is awful! Bad camera angles and bad presenting. Sky much better."
Another said: "Are the BBC trying to be quaint and 'British' with their p*** awful coverage?"
Another damning posting from the politician read: "Which is worse, the heavy rain falling on the flotilla along the Thames or the BBC's dreadful coverage of this Royal Jubilee event?"
Austin Mitchell, Labour MP for Great Grimsby, summed up the coverage in similarly disparaging terms.
"One hated Thames Armada. No Navy left so hordes of tatty boats. Queen freezing, BBC 5Live and TV commentary pathetic. A disgrace," he
An estimated 1.2million people, a bigger turnout than for last year’s royal wedding, lined 14 miles of riverbank, turning it into an unbroken chain of red, white and blue.
For the artists on the Millennium Bridge who had been invited to paint the 21st century’s “Canaletto Moment”, however, the colour palette was overwhelmingly grey.
No one would have blamed the Queen if she had turned out in oilskins, but instead she wowed the crowds in an ivory coloured bouclé dress and coat, braided with silk ribbon and with a silk organza frill, which included a clever nod to her three big jubilees.
Made by the Queen’s dresser Angela Kelly, it was embroidered with gold and silver spots and embellished with crystals to represent diamonds. Was it coincidence that it seemed to borrow from the Ditchley portrait of Elizabeth I wearing a similarly opulent spotted dress?
The day had begun with six million people around the country attending 10,000 street parties from Devon to Dumfriesshire, almost all of which had gone ahead despite the weather. The one notable exception was Downing Street, where David and Samantha Cameron decided to move their party indoors to escape a drenching.
At 2.10pm, as the trifles and chocolate fingers were being polished off around the country (triggering a mass retreat to the comfort of a dry sofa and a television set), the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh made their entrance. Waiting for them at Chelsea Pier were the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall, together with an honour guard of 22 Chelsea Pensioners.
Over her wrist, the Queen had brought what at first glance appeared to be a small towel (which would have been sensible enough) but later proved to be a shawl — her only concession to the drizzle — which she reluctantly deployed an hour later when even her stoicism began to be tested.
The tender from the royal yacht Britannia took her downstream to the royal barge, Spirit of Chartwell, a Thames pleasure cruiser that had been transformed into a handsome ship of state with gilded carvings, Royal Watermen in scarlet ceremonial dress and a royal coat of arms made from half a million gold buttons.
Already on board were the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry, the only other members of the Royal family given the honour of travelling with the Queen, who wants her Jubilee to focus on the direct line of succession.
“Spectacular!” the Queen told the Duke of Edinburgh as she surveyed the scene. “So nice, so impressive.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/the_queens_diamond_jubilee/9310251/Diamond-Jubilee-criticism-grows-of-BBCs-lamentable-coverage.html
One wonders what little Socialist anti-monarchist minion at the BBC is responsible for this!
"Seems we all agree on terrible BBC coverage. Low grade, celebrity driven drivel. How did Beeb get it so wrong" he wrote.
Despite the poor coverage those who turned out for event enjoyed the day in spite of torrential downpours.
The Queen smiled on through the cold and wet, resisting the joint temptations of an indoor berth and a hot cup of tea to wave non-stop from the windswept deck of the royal barge from start to finish of the Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant.
“It was absolutely worth waiting for,” said a shivering Joanne Revitt, 48, who watched the procession from the Embankment near the tower of Big Ben (or the Queen Elizabeth Tower, as MPs want to rename it).
“The Queen looked stunning and I am quite convinced she waved at me as she went past,” she added.
Countless thousands of others no doubt went home with the same belief, and they would have gone home happy as a result.
It was, the Duke of Cambridge told one guest, a “very emotional” day for his grandmother and at times it showed as she seemed slightly overwhelmed by the scale of the public’s response.
The BBC defended its coverage. A spokesman said: "We're very proud of the quality and breadth of the BBC's coverage of this extraordinary event."
But those watching at home were less than complimentary.
One posted: "BBC's coverage of the jubilee is awful! Bad camera angles and bad presenting. Sky much better."
Another said: "Are the BBC trying to be quaint and 'British' with their p*** awful coverage?"
Another damning posting from the politician read: "Which is worse, the heavy rain falling on the flotilla along the Thames or the BBC's dreadful coverage of this Royal Jubilee event?"
Austin Mitchell, Labour MP for Great Grimsby, summed up the coverage in similarly disparaging terms.
"One hated Thames Armada. No Navy left so hordes of tatty boats. Queen freezing, BBC 5Live and TV commentary pathetic. A disgrace," he
An estimated 1.2million people, a bigger turnout than for last year’s royal wedding, lined 14 miles of riverbank, turning it into an unbroken chain of red, white and blue.
For the artists on the Millennium Bridge who had been invited to paint the 21st century’s “Canaletto Moment”, however, the colour palette was overwhelmingly grey.
No one would have blamed the Queen if she had turned out in oilskins, but instead she wowed the crowds in an ivory coloured bouclé dress and coat, braided with silk ribbon and with a silk organza frill, which included a clever nod to her three big jubilees.
Made by the Queen’s dresser Angela Kelly, it was embroidered with gold and silver spots and embellished with crystals to represent diamonds. Was it coincidence that it seemed to borrow from the Ditchley portrait of Elizabeth I wearing a similarly opulent spotted dress?
The day had begun with six million people around the country attending 10,000 street parties from Devon to Dumfriesshire, almost all of which had gone ahead despite the weather. The one notable exception was Downing Street, where David and Samantha Cameron decided to move their party indoors to escape a drenching.
At 2.10pm, as the trifles and chocolate fingers were being polished off around the country (triggering a mass retreat to the comfort of a dry sofa and a television set), the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh made their entrance. Waiting for them at Chelsea Pier were the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall, together with an honour guard of 22 Chelsea Pensioners.
Over her wrist, the Queen had brought what at first glance appeared to be a small towel (which would have been sensible enough) but later proved to be a shawl — her only concession to the drizzle — which she reluctantly deployed an hour later when even her stoicism began to be tested.
The tender from the royal yacht Britannia took her downstream to the royal barge, Spirit of Chartwell, a Thames pleasure cruiser that had been transformed into a handsome ship of state with gilded carvings, Royal Watermen in scarlet ceremonial dress and a royal coat of arms made from half a million gold buttons.
Already on board were the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry, the only other members of the Royal family given the honour of travelling with the Queen, who wants her Jubilee to focus on the direct line of succession.
“Spectacular!” the Queen told the Duke of Edinburgh as she surveyed the scene. “So nice, so impressive.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/the_queens_diamond_jubilee/9310251/Diamond-Jubilee-criticism-grows-of-BBCs-lamentable-coverage.html
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