TIME EUROPE July 24, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 4
Believe It or Not
A century lived to the full
In facts...
Childhood
· Elizabeth met her future husband, Prince Albert, Duke of York, at a tea party, aged five. She gave him the crystallized cherries from her cake.
· Her mother often said: "Nobody is boring, and if you find somebody or something a bore, the fault lies in you."
· During World War I, she and her sister Rose caught a German spy, a dentist who got his servicemen patients drunk enough to spill secrets. They refused medals from the King.
Young Duchess
· A sign set up in the middle of the busiest street in Nelson, New Zealand, in 1927, read: "Traffic must proceed quietly. Horns must not be sounded." This was to enable her to recover from tonsillitis in a nearby hotel.
· On this 1927 tour of Australia and New Zealand, Elizabeth was obliged to accept three tons of toys and 20 parrots as gifts for "Baby Betty" (Princess Elizabeth, b. 1926), who remained in London.
· When Albert and Elizabeth were crowned King and Queen in 1937, coronation novelties for sale in London included hairbrushes and cakes of soap bearing sculptured busts of them in bas relief. There was also a bathroom gadget that held, side by side, a bust of His Majesty and a toothbrush.
Queen
· She said she never felt the same after her coronation. The diarist Harold Nicolson noticed it too, saying: "Nothing could exceed the charm and dignity which she displays, and I cannot help feeling what a mess poor Mrs. Simpson would have made of such a situation."
· "At teatime in Buckingham Palace last week Princess Margaret Rose, 8, was invited to have a buttered scone with her father, mother and Queen Mother Mary. Proudly she strutted up and down, swinging a cane, wearing her new coronet. 'Who are you supposed to be, dear?' asked Queen Elizabeth. 'Are you Daddy or the Mad Hatter?' 'No, I'm Johnnie Walker,' said Princess Margaret Rose." (Time, May 17, 1937)
· During World War II, she learned to shoot in the garden of Buckingham Palace and delivered broadcasts in fluent French to occupied France.
Queen Mother
· In August she often repairs to her castle in Mey, on the windswept coast of north Scotland. There she loves to listen to her collection of bagpipe records, and, until she was 80, she donned waders and went fishing for salmon with her grandson Prince Charles. Once she noticed a farmhand struggling to herd his lambs into a pen. She scrambled over the stone wall to assist him.
· A South African once accosted her with the challenge, "I don't think much of royalty. I think South Africa ought to be a republic." With flawless equanimity, she replied, "That's how we feel in Scotland too, but the English won't allow it."
· Given a nebuchadnezzar of champagne (20 bottles worth), she quipped that even if her family didn't come for the holidays, "I'll polish it off myself."
· She likes helicopters and jokes that "the chopper has changed my life as conclusively as it did Anne Boleyn's."
· Her eyesight is poor. She uses a magnifying glass to read, but won't wear glasses. Both hips have been replaced.
· Her politics are conservative. She has favored De Gaulle, the Shah of Iran and Margaret Thatcher.
· She dislikes Jimmy Carter because he greeted her with a kiss on the lips. "Nobody has done that since my husband died," she fumed.
· For her 85th birthday she took Concorde, eating a gourmet lunch and sitting in the cockpit as the plane broke the sound barrier.
...and figures
5 Homes
6 Grandchildren
6 British monarchs in her lifetime
9 Brothers and sisters
10 Age when fluent in French
29 Years of marriage to "Bertie"
41 Guns to be used in Royal Birthday Salute in Hyde Park
48 years as a widow
74 and 69 Age of her two daughters, Queen Elizabeth and Princess Margaret
118 Official engagements she undertook in Britain during her ninetieth year, on top of many unofficial ones
440 Races won by her horses
$6 million Reported size of her overdraft last year
1937 Year Adolf Hitler pronounced her the "most dangerous woman in Europe," because of French public adulation
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July 24, 2000
COVER
One Is 100 Famous and beloved for her entire adult life, the Queen Mother notches up a century on August 4 and the celebrations are already in full swing
Believe It or Not A century lived to the full
TIME Trail: The Queen Mother Britain's biggest birthday bash this year is a celebration of both a life and a century as the Queen Mother turns 100
EUROPE
Crackdown Moscow's powerful oligarchs feel the heat as Vladimir Putin's tax police and prosecutors continue to make life uncomfortable for Russia's big business
The Hit List Russia's ruble rousers
Q & A Berezovsky speaks
The Tax Break Man By squeezing through sweeping reforms, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder has stolen a march on his critics
BUSINESS
Third Generation Gap Lower-than-expected bidding for mobile licenses is bad news for governments but good news for consumers
Names in Waiting The trial is over now judgment day looms for Lloyd's and investors
HEALTH
The New Science of Alzheimer's Racing against time and one another researchers close in on the aging brain's most heartbreaking disorder
SOCIETY
The French Disease In France, a best seller exposes a nationwide problem of emotional abuse in the workplace
THE ARTS
In Praise of Flattery How the rampant sucking up to the famous has undermined the language of private praise
You Look Marvelous! Tips for kissing up
Irony Is Dead. Long Live Irony (on the Web) The snide tradition of disrespecting media and movie stars is thriving on delightfully sardonic sites
DEPARTMENTS
Essay
Olympic Monitor
World Watch
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