The Sun (Malaysia)

QE shines in new TV show

> The documentar­y also features other members of the royal family

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LONDON: Wearing a floral dress and no hat, Queen Elizabeth strolls in dappled sunlight through the garden at Buckingham Palace with an old acquaintan­ce and making quips.

The scene, filmed last summer for a documentar­y due to be broadcast in Britain next week, offers an unusually informal glimpse of the 91year-old monarch, who has given very little away of her inner self during her 66-year reign.

She is seen walking and chatting with David Attenborou­gh, also 91, a much-loved naturalist and broadcaste­r known for lavish series like “Planet Earth” and “Blue Planet”.

The pair discuss a conservati­on project to create a network of native forests across all 53 Commonweal­th countries – the subject of the new documentar­y – and muse about how there might be many new trees in Buckingham Palace garden in 50 years.

“Might easily be, yes,” the queen says. Then, after a pause, she adds with a smile: “I won’t be here though”.

Attenborou­gh chuckles but does not dwell on the remark, instead commenting on a nearby sundial positioned in the shade of a tree, rendering it useless.

“Isn’t it good, yes,” the queen says, before flashing a wide grin at a person standing off camera. “Had we thought of that, that it was planted in the shade?” she asks with a chuckle, adding: “It wasn’t in the shade originally, I’m sure.”

The queen then suggests the sundial could be moved, to which Attenborou­gh responds that it depends whether she wishes to know the time or not.

The documentar­y, The Queen’s Green Planet, is scheduled for broadcast on ITV on Monday. It also features other members of the royal family as well as the actress and campaigner Angelina Jolie, who has taken part in the environmen­tal project and is shown describing the queen as “a lovely lady”. In a separate excerpt from the queen’s walk with Attenborou­gh, released by ITV ahead of broadcast, the pair look at trees planted in the palace garden to mark the birth of the queen’s children, and Attenborou­gh is seen squatting down to read the plaques as they try and work out which tree correspond­s to which prince or princess.

The queen, who routinely receives gifts from visitors from every corner of the planet, comments that the garden has benefited from many gifts of roses and other plants.

“You know, I’ve been quite difficult to give presents to, so,” she says, drawing laughter from Attenborou­gh. “Of course they’ve said ‘Oh well, let’s give her a plant ...

or a tree or something’.” – Reuters

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