Waterloo Region Record

Queen to miss jubilee service after experienci­ng ‘discomfort’

- DANICA KIRKA AND JILL LAWLESS

Queen Elizabeth II stepped gingerly onto the Buckingham Palace balcony Thursday, drawing wild cheers from the tens of thousands who came to join her at the start of four days of celebratio­ns of her 70 years on the throne.

Her fans sported Union Jack flags, party hats or plastic tiaras. Some had camped overnight in hopes of catching a glimpse of the 96-yearold Queen, whose appearance­s are becoming rare, and a chance to watch the Trooping the Colour — a military parade that has marked each sovereign’s official birthday since 1760.

It was an explosion of joy in the massive crowd, one of the first big gatherings in the U.K. since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

“Everybody has got the same mission,” said Hillary Mathews, 70, who had come from Hertfordsh­ire, outside London. “All the horrors that’s been going on in the world and in England at the moment are put behind us for a day, and we can just enjoy really celebratin­g the Queen.”

Elizabeth, who became Queen at 25, is Britain’s longest-reigning monarch and the first to reach the milestone of seven decades on the throne.

Yet after a lifetime of good health, age has begun to catch up with her. Buckingham Palace announced late Thursday that the Queen would not attend a thanksgivi­ng church service Friday after experienci­ng “some discomfort” at events on Thursday.

The palace said with “great reluctance” the monarch has decided to skip the service at St. Paul’s Cathedral.

The Queen has had trouble moving around in recent months, and has pulled out of many public events.

But the monarch took part Thursday night in lighting a chain of ceremonial beacons at Windsor Castle as planned.

The jubilee celebratio­ns go on for a long weekend, and it was not immediatel­y known how the news would affect Jubilee events on Saturday and Sunday.

The palace says “the Queen greatly enjoyed” Thursday’s events — and it showed.

She basked in her moment. Smiling, she chatted with her greatgrand­son Prince Louis, four, who occasional­ly covered his ears as 70 military aircraft old and new swooped low over the palace to salute the Queen. The six-minute display included a formation of Typhoon fighter jets flying in the shape of the number 70.

The Queen, wearing a dusky dove blue dress designed by Angela Kelly, was joined on the balcony by more than a dozen royals — though not Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, who gave up front-line royal duties two years ago. The couple travelled to London from their home in California with their two young children to take a low-key part in the celebratio­ns, and watched Thursday’s Trooping the Colour with other members of the family.

They did not appear on the palace balcony, because the monarch decided that only working members of the royal family should have that honour. The decision also, handily, excluded Prince Andrew, who stepped away from public duties amid controvers­y over his links with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Andrew will also miss Friday’s service of thanksgivi­ng after testing positive for COVID-19.

The jubilee is being commemorat­ed with a four-day holiday extravagan­za and events including a concert at Buckingham Palace on Saturday and a pageant staged by thousands of performers drawn from schools and community groups around the country on Sunday. Thousands of street parties are planned nationwide, repeating a tradition that began with the Queen’s coronation in 1953.

Not everyone in Britain is celebratin­g. Many people have taken advantage of the long weekend to go on vacation. And 12 protesters were arrested Thursday after getting past barriers and onto the parade route. The group Animal Rebellion claimed responsibi­lity, saying the protesters were “demanding that royal land is reclaimed.”

Yet the jubilee is giving many people — even those indifferen­t to the monarchy — a chance to reflect on the state of the nation and the huge changes that have taken place during Elizabeth’s reign.

Elizabeth, who became Queen at 25, is Britain’s longestrei­gning monarch and the first to reach the milestone of seven decades on the throne

 ?? AARON CHOWN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Queen Elizabeth stands as Prince Louis covers his ears at Buckingham Palace after the Trooping the Colour ceremony during a celebratio­n to to mark the Platinum Jubilee.
AARON CHOWN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Queen Elizabeth stands as Prince Louis covers his ears at Buckingham Palace after the Trooping the Colour ceremony during a celebratio­n to to mark the Platinum Jubilee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada