The Daily Telegraph

We are amused: the late Queen loved mishaps

- By Louisa Clarence-smith

THE LATE Queen “loved it” when things went wrong because it “spiced her life up”, one of her closest aides has claimed.

Samantha Cohen, who served Elizabeth II for 17 years as press secretary, and then assistant private secretary, spoke fondly of her relationsh­ip with the monarch in an interview with the Australian newspaper The Herald Sun.

She said: “The Queen had no ego, she was so comfortabl­e in herself, yet she loved it when things went wrong. If a cake was not cutting, or a plaque didn’t unveil, because everything was so perfectly organised, it spiced her life up when things went wrong.”

Ms Cohen, who stopped working for the royal household in 2019, said the “best times” were her two tours accompanyi­ng Her Majesty to Australia.

The Queen and Prince Philip visited South Australia and Queensland in 2002, and returned to Australia in 2011 for the Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting in Perth.

Ms Cohen saw the Queen almost daily and for nearly a decade had her own bedroom at Windsor Castle.

Recalling how she was invited to bring her family to Balmoral and also to Sandringha­m at Christmas, she said: “The Queen and I used to talk a lot. I miss her, she was a special woman.”

The former aide said the late Queen nicknamed her “Samantha Panther” for her no-nonsense work attitude, and was enthusiast­ic about the Royal family setting up a Youtube account when it was suggested.

She said: “We did a mock up and showed the Queen what Youtube was. She said: ‘Fantastic’, she was up for it.”

Ms Cohen, who now works as chief of staff for the global chief executive of the mining giant Rio Tinto, revealed she later received calls from the Vatican and White House saying: “The Queen had a channel on Youtube before we did.”

Ms Cohen was invited to the Vatican to help Pope Benedict XVI start his own channel, she said.

The former royal aide, who was raised in Brisbane, Australia, started her career as a journalist on the Sunshine Coast Daily in Queensland, before working for the Australian government.

She moved to England and joined the Buckingham Palace press office after responding to an advert in PR Week magazine, according to reports. In 2018,

‘If a cake was not cutting, or a plaque didn’t unveil … it spiced her life up when things went wrong’

she worked as private secretary to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on the personal request of the Queen, but resigned in October 2019 after being “treated harshly”, likening the job to “working with teenagers”, it was claimed in Valentine Low’s book Courtiers: The Hidden Power Behind the Crown.

Ms Cohen would not comment on the claims, according to The Herald Sun. However, the newspaper reported that she confirmed that she was one of 10 aides reportedly interviewe­d by the palace after a bullying complaint was raised by the couple’s communicat­ions secretary Jason Knauf. The Duchess of Sussex’s legal team strenuousl­y denied the bullying allegation. After leaving the Royal family, Ms Cohen was appointed chief executive of the Commonweal­th Enterprise and Investment Council, where she establishe­d the Queen’s Green Canopy, a Uk-wide tree planting initiative created to mark the Platinum Jubilee in 2022.

“It was my gift to the Queen,” Ms Cohen said. “She loved trees and nature and knew every tree in the Buckingham Palace gardens.”

In 2022, Ms Cohen served as director of office for Boris Johnson, then prime minister, amid the Covid “partygate” scandal. “I was brought in because there had been a lot of change,” she told The Herald Sun.

Her favourite job to date remains working for the late Queen, she said, adding: “I loved, loved, loved the job as the Queen’s assistant private secretary. They were happy times because the Queen was in great form.”

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