Daily Mail

Keeping in touch with your family transcends division

Smiling Queen’s words of hope... Oprah it was not!

- by Robert Hardman

WITH a dash of Countryfil­e, a smattering of the Choir and more than a hint of 3pm on Christmas Day, this was not so much ‘A Celebratio­n for Commonweal­th Day’ – as BBC1 called it – as a genuine royal variety performanc­e.

We saw the Queen striding happily through Windsor Castle – talking about ‘selfless dedication to duty’ and ‘transcendi­ng division’. We watched a speech from the Prince of Wales at the lectern of Westminste­r Abbey.

the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge discussed healthcare over a video call with a doctor in South Africa while the Countess of Wessex talked women’s rights with Malawi and Australia.

the Duchess of Cornwall, meanwhile, confided to Clare Balding that the pandemic had transforme­d her from a technophob­e into something of a cyber ‘addict’ with a new online book club.

this was the Royal Family looking outwards, reflecting the royal spotlight on to others rather than bringing it upon themselves. it also included a lot of superb music, too.

there was certainly none of the introspect­ive angst and drama of the subsequent offering coming up a few hours later on another royal channel – America’s CBS.

Yesterday afternoon’s one- off programme on BBC1 was never supposed to be an alternativ­e, let alone a rival, to the harry and Meghan show with Oprah Winfrey. however, comparison­s were inevitable as soon as it emerged that both the UK and US arms of the family would be on air within hours of each other.

Yesterday’s BBC1 affair had long been planned ahead of Commonweal­th Day which falls today as it always does on the second Monday of March.

Normally, the main event is a huge service at Westminste­r Abbey with a congregati­on of 2,000 and a substantia­l royal turnout led by the Queen.

thanks to the pandemic, of course, there could be no prospect of that this year. instead, the BBC gathered up the three main ingredient­s – royalty, music and the Abbey – for a socially- distanced celebratio­n of what it is that makes the Commonweal­th tick.

Last year’s event will be long-remembered for two reasons. First, it was our last big, national event before the lights went out. Within days of seeing the Queen and her family at the Abbey, Britain and most of the world were in lockdown. Second, it was also the occasion at which the Sussexes hence, bowed the out timing of regular of both royal last duties. night’s Abbey programme and the Sussexes’ interview.

And hence the genuine sense of a milestone moment at the Abbey. Can it really berichbe a year since we all had to stop shaking hands and making plans? have 12 months really passed since we last saw the Duchess of Sussex on British soil? indeed they have.

HOWEVER, the sight of an empty Westminste­r Abbey lent an added poignancy – and relevance – to the Queen’s address.

‘Whilst experience­s of the last year have been different across the Commonweal­th,’ she told us, ‘stirring examples of courage, commitment and selfless dedication to duty have been demonstrat­ed in every Commonweal­th nation and territory, notably by those working on the front line’. there were plenty of examples in a collage of clips from every continent.

We also saw the Queen enjoying the sight of all the Commonweal­th flags laid out in Windsor Castle’s St George’s hall.

either side of her was her 7ft 2in assistant private secretary, Matthew Magee, and her Master of the household, Sir tony Johnstone-Burt – the retired admiral in charge of the small team looking after the Queen at Windsor (or ‘hMS Bubble’ as it is known).

When recording her Christmas broadcasts, the Queen often adopts a slightly wistful tone, mindful that, for some of those watching, it may not be a very joyous day.

Yesterday, however, she appeared to be in high spirits (and wearing the same brooch she wore on her honeymoon – for the benefit, no doubt, of one 99-year- old viewer watching from his bed at King edward vii’s hospital, London, where he continues to rest following last week’s surgical procedure).

it was not entirely clear to viewers where the Queen was going so purposeful­ly until she reached the end of St George’s hall where she sat down at a table to put her signature to her message to the Commonweal­th.

in her broadcast, she also celebrated the wonders of the video call, as we saw clips of schoolchil­dren around the Commonweal­th gathered round laptops of all shapes and sizes. ‘it offers an immediacy that transcends boundaries or division, helping any sense of distance to disappear,’ she added.

this is certainly one topic on which there is no division with her grandson. in his recent bus-top chat with comedian James Corden, the Duke of Sussex revealed he had ‘Zoomed’ his grandparen­ts ‘a few times’ (although the Queen does not actually use Zoom but Webex).

Like Christmas Day, Commonweal­th Day is a rare occasion when the Queen speaks in public without the advice of ministers. however, her government will have been delighted to see her putting a strong emphasis on the importance of the vaccine programme.

‘We have also taken encouragem­ent from remarkable advances in developing new vaccines and treatments,’ she said, talking above scenes of people of all ethnicitie­s receiving the Covid jab right around the world.

Last month, the Queen made a very firm interventi­on urging people to ‘think about others’ and to get vaccinated.

that was very much encouraged by her ministers. her words followed a warning by the vaccines minister, Nadhim Zahawi, that a disproport­ionate number of those avoiding the jab were from black and ethnic minority communitie­s.

here was a reminder – a timely one, given strong indication­s that the issue of race would feature prominentl­y in last night’s discussion with the Sussexes – that the Commonweal­th spans every creed and colour.

‘the essence of the Commonweal­th is its remarkable diversity, 54 nations whose traditions and talents offer an incomparab­le richbe

ness,’ said the Prince of Wales, delivering the main address from the Nave of the Abbey. That was amply reflected in the music – South Asian dhol drummers playing along to reggae; the New Zealand Youth Choir performing an acapella-cum-haka on a cliff overlookin­g the south Pacific.

The prince knows the organisati­on as well as anyone and has been formally chosen as its next head (a non-hereditary position).

The thrust of Charles’ message, however, was to stress the urgency of remedial work on the environmen­t and the Commonweal­th’s role at the ‘forefront of global innovation and action’.

This is a big year for what the Queen calls her ‘family of nations’. It hosts a longdelaye­d summit of all the leaders in its newest member state – Rwanda.

And it is expected to play a key role in the upcoming COP26 world summit on climate change. Many of the world’s most vulnerable states are in the Commonweal­th and they expect it to argue their case, especially with Britain hosting COP26.

‘We are uniquely placed to lead the way so let us be the boldest of the bold,’ said the prince.

Oprah it most certainly was not – but none the worse for that.

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 ?? ?? Celebratio­n: Singer-songwriter Lianne La Havas and the Dhol Foundation at Westminste­r Abbey
Celebratio­n: Singer-songwriter Lianne La Havas and the Dhol Foundation at Westminste­r Abbey
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 ?? ?? High spirits: The Queen in St George’s Hall at Windsor Castle
High spirits: The Queen in St George’s Hall at Windsor Castle

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