Parades, concerts and pudding contests … Buckingham Palace unveiled, Monday, January 10, the program of festivities scheduled from June 2 to 5 to celebrate the platinum jubilee – 70 years of reign – of Queen Elizabeth II. She came to the throne on February 6, 1952, at the age of 25, after the death of her father George VI. On the same date in 2022, the 95-year-old queen will become the first British monarch to reach 70 years of reign at the head of the United Kingdom, but also of 14 Commonwealth countries and 14 overseas territories.
To celebrate “this unprecedented anniversary”, Buckingham Palace has planned four days (including two holidays for the occasion) of“public events and activities”. The festivities will kick off on Thursday, June 2 with a military parade, then 1,500 cities in the United Kingdom, the Channel Islands and the British Overseas Territories as well as the capitals of the Commonwealth countries will light a torch “to mark the jubilee”.
On Friday, a ceremony will be held at St Paul’s Cathedral in central London. A huge concert, bringing together “the biggest stars in the world to celebrate some of the most important moments of the queen’s reign”, will take place the next day at Buckingham Palace.
Sunday, more than 1,400 “big jubilee lunches”, organized by volunteers, are planned across the country. To close the festivities, a huge parade combining “theater, circus, music, street arts” will take place in London. “Artists, dancers, musicians, soldiers, key workers and volunteers”, came from “all parts of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth”, “will unite to tell the story of the Queen’s 70-year reign in an awe-inspiring festival of creativity”, promises the palace.
Other initiatives “will be a lasting reminder of the jubilee”, added Buckingham, as the “green canopy” (which provides for the planting in 2022 of 60,000 trees across the country) but also a national pastry competition “to find a brand new pudding dedicated to the queen”. The five finalists of the competition, open to all cooks from the age of 8, will make their recipe in front of a jury, including the head chef of the palace. The winning recipe will then be made available to the public to be reproduced during the “big jubilee lunches”, but also later “by the generations to come”.