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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
National
Caroline Davies

The Queen’s common touch: from Tupperware to her electric heater

An electric heater is seen behind the Queen as she greets Australia’s then high commissioner, Mike Rann, and his wife, Sasha, at Buckingham Palace in February 2013.
An electric heater is seen behind the Queen as she greets Australia’s then high commissioner, Mike Rann, and his wife, Sasha, at Buckingham Palace in February 2013. Photograph: Reuters

Though she lived a very different life, the Queen embraced a few common touches that endeared her to many of her subjects.

Famously, she stored her morning cornflakes in Tupperware containers, an incongruous sight among the gilt and silverware at Buckingham Palace, a fact revealed by a tabloid journalist who managed to work undercover as a footman for two months.

While headlines rejoiced in our “Tupperware Queen”, the journalist also revealed staff were issued with a detailed plan of the monarch’s breakfast table, setting out the exact positions of every utensil, condiment and cereal. Snuggled under the breakfast table, her corgis and dorgis would sit patiently, waiting for their mistress to slip them toast spread with “light” marmalade.

According to his account, it took several staff to deliver her a cup of coffee: a maid to pick up the pot of coffee from a hotplate and pour it into a silver jug; a footman to take the tray 20 metres to a page; and the page to carry it another eight metres to the Queen in her dining room.

Her grand fireplaces, set in rooms groaning with original art masterpieces, housed cheap two-bar electric fires – or convection heaters – retailing at about £20, and were spotted in official photographs on occasions such as David Cameron’s Balmoral sojourn. The ITV documentary film-maker Michael Waldman described her private sitting room at Balmoral as appearing to be littered with personal paraphernalia, including several teddy bears, a basket of pebbles, miniature statues and floral dog baskets.

The Queen driving her Jaguar in the grounds of Windsor Castle in November 2021.
The Queen driving her Jaguar in the grounds of Windsor Castle in November 2021. Photograph: REX/Shutterstock

Balmoral was also where she liked to roll up her sleeves and get stuck in to the washing up after Prince Philip’s famous barbecues. Margaret Thatcher, appalled that the monarch had no washing up gloves, bought her a pair. Cherie Blair recalled of a visit to Balmoral: “The Queen asks if you’ve finished, she stacks the plates up and goes off to the sink.”

Some of the more amusing personal items in her possession would appear to be gifts from her family, who exchange jokey presents at Christmas. The Duke of York once bought her a Big Mouth Billy Bass singing animatronic fish, which had pride of place for a while on the piano at Balmoral.

A plumber, summoned to Buckingham Palace to attend to the Queen’s private bathroom, regaled the Sun with his discovery that she possessed a rubber duck wearing an inflatable crown.

A cushion, embroidered with the words “It’s good to be Queen” spied at Balmoral, was probably from one of her grandchildren. William is said to have once given her as a present a pair of slippers emblazoned with her face, and Harry once reportedly gave her a shower cap.

Palace aides liked to highlight some of her more frugal touches, a legacy of the war years she lived through, and were happy to see reports of her recycling her clothes, going around her residences switching off lights, and smoothing out and storing Christmas wrapping paper for reuse the following year.

Her position meant she was denied some of life’s rites of passage. She never went to school, for example, and was palace-tutored. She never had to take a driving test, learning during the second world war. But driving herself was one of her pleasures, and she was regularly behind the wheel on her estates until her very late years.

Proof, if it were needed, of her willingness to appear less remote from her subjects as critics might say, came from a surprising source in 2005. Scientific analysis of her accent, using four decades of her Christmas broadcasts, and published in Nature magazine, detected her vowels moving steadily downmarket. “There has been a drift in the Queen’s accent towards one that is characteristic of speakers who are younger and/or lower in the social hierarchy,” researchers from Macquarie University in Sydney found.

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