ZOOMER Magazine

Long May She Reign

Canada commission­s a new portrait of our steadfast monarch

- By Kim Honey

OWEVER 2021 UNFOLDS, it opens on a note of optimism and hope as exemplifie­d by Queen Elizabeth II, who has met the pandemic with equal parts aplomb and grace. As Canada’s monarch approaches 69 years on the throne in February and her 95th birthday in April, she has stayed the course, even as her son Prince Charles contracted COVID-19 – and now, we find out her grandson, William, too – as well as her Prime Minister, Boris Johnson.

With the fractious fallout from Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s renunciati­on of The Firm and their move to Los Angeles, not to mention Prince Andrew’s questionab­le relationsh­ip with the late, disgraced financier and sex trafficker

Jeffrey Epstein ,2020 was looking like another annushorri bi li sf or the Royal Family. Then the pandemic hit, and all of us were scared and vulnerable. That’s when Prince William and Kate Middleton stepped up, taking on the lion’s share of public-facing video duties and enlisting their little princes and princess – George, Charlotte and Louis – to help thank health-care workers, save the planet and mend the Royal Family’s tattered reputation.

With Johnson in hospital on April 5 and the country in a state of high anxiety, the Queen appeared in a televised coronaviru­s address to applaud frontline workers and urge her subjects to stay resolute in the face of lockdown restrictio­ns, evoking Dame Vera Lynn’s

wartime song of hope and optimism and Britain’s resolute response to the Blitz. “We will be with our friends again; we will be with our families again; we will meet again.”

The speech put the Queen – who worked as a mechanic in the Second World War and presided over the country as it regained its footing and enjoyed some of its greatest years of prosperity – front and centre on the world stage again. It earned her plaudits at home and abroad for or her astute reading of our collective mood and d need for reassuranc­e.

Both princes and the prime minister re- covered, but the country has been battered, with h total cases approachin­g a million and more than n 45,000 deaths by October. Like Canada, the U.K. is in the grip of a second wave, with case counts s in excess of 20,000 a day in October and rising.

For that reason, the Queen has conducted almost all her royal business virtually for seven months and even celebrated her 94th birthday on April 21 in a videoconfe­rence call with her family. For her official June birthday celebratio­n, Trooping the Colour, the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards gave her the Royal Salute from the Quadrangle at Windsor Castle.

She stepped outside the walls of the castle and onto its grounds again in July to personally knight Capt. Thomas Moore, the 100-year-old Second World War vet whom Prime Minister Johnson described as “a beacon of light through the fog of coronaviru­s.” Sir Tom inspired the country when he pushed his walker around his garden 100 times to raise more than $55 million for the National Health Service. Once again, with one simple act, the Queen shored up our faith that all was right with the world. As Sir Tom said, “The money [raised] is very useful but you’ve only got one Queen, and when you get a message from the Queen, there’s no value that can be placed on that.”

In her first public appearance since March, the unmasked Queen visited the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory near Salisbury with William in mid-October. The next day, the Canadian government unveiled its new official photograph­ic portrait of our steadfast monarch. “The official Canadian portrait of Her Majesty the Queen was updated because the previous portrait is 10 years old,” Canadian heritage spokespers­on Amélie Desmarais said. “The last Canadian portrait of the Queen was taken at Rideau Hall in July 2010 and made available in 2012 to mark Her Majesty’s Diamond Jubilee.”

In the new portrait, which appears on o our cover, the monar arch wears an elegant embr broidered white dress with her he Canadian insignia, as Sovereign of the Order of Canada and Order of M Military Merit, pinned to her lef left shoulder. Her jewelry set, the stunning King George VI Victorian Suite which dates to 1850, includes the blue sapphire-and-diamond earrings and necklace given to her by her father as a wedding present in 1947. In 1963, the Queen commission­ed a tiara and bracelet to match. The Queen wore the sapphire suite in Canada during the 1990 royal tour.

With 2021 upon us, it serves to remind us there is comfort in tradition and a sense of continuity with the Queen. It should come as no surprise that Her Majesty is the most popular royal in the U.K., according to an October survey of 1,626 Britons by the internatio­nal, London-based data research firm YouGov, which asked respondent­s whether they had a positive or negative opinion of each Royal Family member. While support for Harry dropped to 55 per cent and Meghan was at 38 per cent, the Queen and Prince William had the highest positive rating at 79 per cent, followed by Kate at 69 per cent. (Prince Andrew has just a seven per cent positive rating.)

Even in Canada, a January 2020 Angus Reid Institute survey of 1,154 people showed twothirds of Canadians have great affection for the Queen, while a previous 2016 poll revealed the most common word Canadians chose to describe her was “respected.”

The world has been in shambles before, and it will be shambolic for a good part of 2021. So when the Queen pledged to spend her life – “whether it be long or short” – in our service almost 74 years ago, we can rest assured she will hold up her end of the bargain.

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At the opening of Parliament, 1966, and (inset and below, opposite page) in 2019
ROYAL FLUSH The new official Canadian portrait of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (below). Opposite: her special pandemic address to the nation, April 2020; awarding Capt. Thomas Moore with the insignia of Knight Bachelor, July 2020; both from Windsor Castle
IN SESSION At the opening of Parliament, 1966, and (inset and below, opposite page) in 2019 ROYAL FLUSH The new official Canadian portrait of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (below). Opposite: her special pandemic address to the nation, April 2020; awarding Capt. Thomas Moore with the insignia of Knight Bachelor, July 2020; both from Windsor Castle
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