Scottish Daily Mail

My jewellery box and I

Queen’s amazing TV revelation­s about her royal gems Crown’s so heavy she can’t bend neck to read speeches... and its pearls look ‘unhappy’... they should be earrings instead!

- By Rebecca English Royal Correspond­ent

THEY may be worth millions, but as she examines the Crown Jewels the Queen could be any woman looking fondly at her jewellery box.

Among the precious rubies and emeralds, diamonds and pearls that illuminate the history of our nation, she has her favourites and those… that are, quite frankly, a bit of a pain to wear.

One is the ‘unwieldy’ Imperial State Crown, which the Queen confides is so heavy that in order not to ‘break my neck’ she is forced to bring her speeches up to her face to read them.

In a remarkably warm and chatty interview, she also reveals how, during her Coronation at Westminste­r Abbey in 1953, her elaborate gown got stuck on the carpet pile and for a moment she wasn’t able to move.

The 91-year-old Queen’s candid and often arch comments come in an hour-long programme entitled The Coronation. She is at her sparkling best, relaxed and full of gems of informatio­n about the treasures that are hers to show off. The programme is the fruit of a collaborat­ion between the BBC and The Royal Collection Trust, guardian of more than a million antiques and works of art on behalf of the nation, which tells the stories of some of its greatest treasures in a series of programmes over the next few weeks.

Unusually, to mark the 65th anniversar­y in June of her Coronation, the Queen agreed to appear on camera at Buckingham Palace with a selection of her Crown Jewels. The treasures were brought from the Tower of London to be filmed as she reminisced with royal commentato­r Alastair Bruce.

Faced with her diamond encrusted Imperial State Crown, which she wore at the end of her Coronation and until recently used for most State Openings of Parliament, the Queen has an almost comically hostile expression as she unexpected­ly pulls it towards her.

Explaining how the crown was remodelled after George VI’s Coronation, she says: ‘You see, it’s much smaller isn’t it?’

Mr Bruce notes that it was ‘huge’ when her father was crowned.

The Queen replies: ‘Yes. Very unwieldy.’ She adds: ‘Fortunatel­y my father and I have about the same sort of shaped head. But once you put it on it stays. I mean it just remains on.’ Asked if she has to keep her head very still while wearing the 2lb 5oz crown, the Queen replies: ‘Yes. And you can’t look down to read the speech you have to take the speech up. Because if you did your neck would break, it [the crown] would fall off.’

Laughing, she adds: ‘So there are some disadvanta­ges to crowns, but otherwise they’re quite important things.’

The Queen, who was 27 when she was crowned, is also shown nonchalant­ly flicking four pearls hanging underneath the arches of the crown. Two of the pearls are said to have belonged to Mary Queen of Scots and to have been bought by Elizabeth I.

The Queen says with a sad laugh: ‘They were meant to be Queen Elizabeth’s earrings. But they’re not very happy now. They don’t look very happy now.

‘Most pearls like to be sort of living creatures so they’ve just been out, hanging out here for years, it’s rather sad. So they don’t look very happy.’

Mr Bruce responds: ‘Quite dead.’ She replies: ‘Well, I’m afraid so. I mean, the trouble is that pearls are sort of live things [flicks them] and they need… warming.’

The documentar­y also features the St Edward’s Crown, which the Archbishop of Canterbury placed on her head at the moment of coronation. The Queen sees footage of the Coronation featuring her golden state coach, which weighs nearly four tons. She comments: ‘Horrible. It’s not meant for travelling in at all. I mean, it’s only sprung on leather. Not very comfortabl­e.’

When asked if she was in it for a long time, she pauses before smilingly responding: ‘Halfway around London. It can only go at a walking pace. The horses couldn’t possibly go any faster. It’s so heavy.’

Inside the Abbey, with the eyes of the world on her, the Queen is seen in her coronation dress, embroidere­d in silk with pearls, and gold and silver bullion thread.

Reflecting, she laughs: ‘Well I remember one moment when I was going against the pile of the carpet and I couldn’t move at all. Yes, they hadn’t thought of that.’

The programme also shows home movie footage of the family group at Buckingham Palace. The Queen muses: ‘What did I do with the sceptre then? It’s gone. Somebody picked [it] up and took it out.’

A young Prince Charles and Princess Anne can also be seen playing underneath the train of her purple velvet robe.

‘Such fun for the children,’ the interviewe­r says. ‘Not what they’re meant to do,’ the Queen says with mock sternness. ÷The Coronation is on BBC One on Sunday at 8pm.

‘Some disadvanta­ges to crowns’

 ??  ?? Weight of state: The Queen wearing the Imperial State Crown in a Coronation photo
Weight of state: The Queen wearing the Imperial State Crown in a Coronation photo

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