Platinum Jubilee: Queen thanks nation as Jubilee
celebrations begin
By Doug
Faulkner
BBC News
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-61654780
An official photograph of the Queen has been
released ahead of celebrations to mark her Platinum Jubilee.
The portrait, by Ranald Mackechnie, was taken in the
Victoria Vestibule at Windsor Castle earlier this year.
In her Jubilee
message the monarch thanked people for organising events to celebrate her
milestone, saying "many happy memories" would be created.
Millions
are gearing up for street parties to mark 70 years on the throne over the
four-day bank holiday weekend.
There are
also a series of official events starting with Thursday's Trooping the Colour
parade and ending on Sunday with a Jubilee Pageant through London.
The
specially commissioned portrait pictures show the Queen looking contented,
sitting on a cushioned window seat at the castle which has been her main home
for the last couple of years. The historic residence's famous Round Tower is
visible in the distance.
Mr
Mackechnie took two previous portraits of the Queen alongside the Prince of
Wales, the Duke of Cambridge and Prince George to mark her 90th birthday in 2016.
In her
Jubilee message the monarch said: "I continue to be inspired by the
goodwill shown to me, and hope that the coming days will provide an opportunity
to reflect on all that has been achieved during the last 70 years, as we look
to the future with confidence and enthusiasm."
The
traditional Trooping the Colour parade to mark the Queen's official birthday
will involve more than 1,500 officers and soldiers and 350 horses from the
Household Division, as well as an RAF flypast.
The
96-year-old monarch, who has mobility issues and has recently cancelled several
public appearances, is likely to join members of the Royal Family on the
balcony at Buckingham Palace to watch the display.
The Duke
and Duchess of Sussex will watch the parade, although they will not appear on
the balcony.
The couple,
who now live in the US, will have a prime vantage point from the Duke of
Wellington's former office, overlooking Horse Guards Parade, where they will
watch Prince Charles inspect the guardsmen and officers and take their salute
in his mother's place.
They are
travelling with their children Archie, three, and Lilibet, who turns one on
Saturday. Lilibet is the Queen's family nickname.
The Queen's
son Prince Andrew, whose royal titles were returned to the Crown amid a lawsuit
in the US, will not be present.
Analysis box by Sean Coughlan, royal correspondent
For any big
family gathering there are questions to smooth out before it gets started. Like
who is going to be there.
There's
been speculation about when we might see the Queen over the Jubilee weekend.
A couple of
events will be her priorities - and Thursday's Trooping the Colour and the
Buckingham Palace balcony will be one of them.
Although it
will be Prince Charles who inspects the troops, taking on another ceremonial
task.
It's been
made clear that Prince Andrew won't be at this first showcase event.
But Prince
Harry and Meghan, although very publicly not invited on the palace balcony,
will be watching with other members of the Royal Family through windows above
Horse Guards Parade.
It looks a
bit like a balcony, so maybe it's building bridges one step at a time.
After all
that planning, the celebrations and the long holiday weekend can finally begin.
On Thursday
evening, more than 3,000 beacons will be lit across the UK and the Commonwealth
in tribute to the Queen, with the Tree of Trees beacon illuminated outside the
palace.
The monarch
is to lead the lighting of the principal Jubilee beacon in a special ceremony
at Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace said.
Also on
Thursday the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall will guest star in an
episode of TV soap EastEnders, on BBC One at 19:30 BST.
At a
service of thanksgiving at St Paul's Cathedral on Friday, there will be other
accommodations made for the Queen's comfort, with no ceremonial journey to the
event.
If the
monarch does attend, she will use a different entrance rather than scaling the
steps.
And it is
not certain she will make the planned trip to Epsom for the Derby on Saturday.
On that
evening, the BBC's Party at the Palace concert - set on three stages in front
of Buckingham Palace - will see Diana Ross, George Ezra, Alicia Keys and Nile
Rodgers entertain a live crowd of 22,000 people and a television audience of
millions.
At the
concert, heir to the throne Prince Charles and his son, the Duke of Cambridge,
will pay tribute to the Queen who will be watching on television.
On Sunday
there will be street parties, picnics and barbecues across the UK with more
than 85,000 Big Jubilee Lunches planned.
The finale
of the weekend will be the Jubilee Pageant which will make its way through the
streets of the capital with a cast of 6,000 performers and close to 200
celebrities.
It will end
with Ed Sheeran singing the national anthem with a choir made up of
"national treasures" outside Buckingham Palace.
Ahead of
the celebrations, the Queen took a short break at Balmoral Castle, in
Aberdeenshire, but returned to Windsor on Tuesday.
Saturday is
the first birthday of Harry and Meghan's daughter Lilibet - who is named after
the Queen's family nickname.
The Queen's
granddaughter Princess Eugenie has led tributes to her in an article in the
Spectator, describing her "grannie" as "a woman who has
transcended time and has been that constant rock for so many when the world can
feel so fragile".
She said
she would love her son August to "have her patience, her calmness and her
kindness, while always being able to laugh at himself and keep a twinkle in his
eye".
Scotland's
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon congratulated the monarch on a "lifetime of
service" and urged all Scots to mark her "values of integrity,
wisdom, justice and compassion" - regardless of their views on the British
monarchy.
Not
everyone will be celebrating the occasion. Anti-monarchy campaign group
Republic said a recent poll had shown the British public "just aren't that
bothered about royal events".
Speaking
for the group, Graham Smith said: "The Jubilee is not a national
celebration, it is a carefully staged event to promote the monarchy and the
royal brand."




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