Mid Sussex Times

Deputy Lieutenant­s pay tribute to the Queen

- Elaine Hammond

Out the Bells and still has the souvenir programme.

She said Princess Margaret was a regular and the Duke of Edinburgh often came in too, especially for charity performanc­es.

Lilian said: "You can imagine the celebritie­s who came to see us. Princess Margaret used to come regularly with 'Flash Harry', Sir Malcolm Sergeant.

"I come from a truly humble background. I literally had school uniform and hand-me-downs altered by my mother. So to experience being fitted with wonderful velvets and silks for the production numbers in the show, I just couldn't believe the luxury of those beautiful costumes.

"I was born two years before the outbreak of Second World War and I was brought up on rations, so to be frugal has been with me all my life. I never dreamed I would ever wear such elegant clothes."

It was her dancing teacher and her mother who decided Lilian was going on the stage. An audition was arranged with the Tiller School of Dancing and so began her career.

For six exciting years, Lilian was a high-kicking, highenergy, high-precision Tiller Girl performing routines such as the perky poodle parade and can-canning her way through it all.

She was educated in Leeds and left school at 15, as was the norm in those days.

Lilian said: "In the North of England, where I come from, you went out to work to help out the family as soon as possible.

"Times have changed. Back then, I had no say in the matter. I was told what I was going to do and I did it. And that was to be a dancer."

The show, which Lilian said was widely acknowledg­ed as the Coronation show, was performed in the summer of 1952 in Blackpool as Top of the Town and then renamed as Ring Out the Bells for London, where it ran from October 1952 to May 1954.

Lilian said: "The Coronation was a huge boost. My admiration for the Queen knows no bounds. I admire her stoicism and forward thinking, how she has understood the need to move with the times while honouring the traditions and maintainin­g the dignity of the monarchy."

The show was performed twice a night and Lilian said it was hard work but tremendous fun.

"Doing the same thing twice nightly was quite something and we would appear about ten times a performanc­e, changing our costumes about 20 times a night. You had to be energetic."

Lilian thoroughly enjoyed her years as a Tiller Girl but when she turned 21, she decided it was time to move on and went into the more lucrative world of fashion.

Having devoted her life to working in the voluntary sector, Lilian met the Queen in person when she was made an MBE in the New Year’s Honours in 1997 and said Her Majesty ‘was very easy to chat to’.

John Nelson has met the Queen a number of times, as chairman of Lloyd's of London.

What stands out for him was the visit of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh on March 27, 2014, to celebrate Lloyd's 325-year anniversar­y.

John said: “It was a wonderful day. She was in really sparkling form and he was very funny."

The room was packed, with underwrite­rs and brokers filling all the escalators and crowds several rows deep on each of the floors

 ?? ?? Lilian Holdsworth with the Crazy Gang front cover, featuring herself when she was 15
Lilian Holdsworth with the Crazy Gang front cover, featuring herself when she was 15

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom