Location: Buckingham Palace
Produced by: BBC
Theme: After a year of events, celebrations and millennium projects, Elizabeth II takes the new millennium to its roots: it marks the birth of Jesus Christ two thousand years ago. The Queen reflects on Christ's life and ministry, and how still today there still reminders of his life and impact everywhere, such as cathedrals and abbeys and Church music. The measure of Christ's impact, the Queen suggests, is seen in the good works done daily throughout the centuries by those who seek to follow his example.
Commentary: After the hype of the unusual 'ground-beaking' 1999 broadcast, in many ways the 2000 broadcast is reassuringly traditional. The 'sofa set' looks pleasing and cosy, and has an appealling informal feel
about it which makes a refreshing change from the desks and tables of the preceding
years. The Queen speaks from the Spanish Room in the Belgian Suite of Buckingham Palace, and from the moment she begins her speech she is uninterrupted by film footage for the first time in several years.
However, the production is in many ways idiosyncratic. Although the Queen speaks with the camera's full attention, it is almost five minutes into the broadcast before we actually see or hear Her Majesty deliver her address. The first part of the programme consists of footage of the royal year, shown chronologically in 'diary format': January-December. Much of this segment, including some moments exclusive to the broadcast, is interesting: there is a conversation between Her Majesty and the then Archbishops of Canterbury and York about Elizabeth II's visit to Rome earlier in the year; there are a number of clips of the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh's visit to Australia (including an amusing moment when the Queen visits a school and a child asks whether she brought her crown: 'No I didn't', Her Majesty replies, 'well, I can't get it out of the Tower of London!').
Presumably a decision was taken to keep the two sections separate, as they did not blend together naturally. That is probably sensible as far as it goes, but then the gimmicks start. The two segments are linked by the Queen switching off a television when the outgoing (and by then beleaguered) US president Bill Clinton appears: the aim is presumably to give the impression that the Queen had been watching, and it looks just as unconvincing as when something similar had been attempted in the 1993 broadcast. Worse than this, however, is the idea of having the Queen deliver her speech from three different positions without the usual subtle tactic of editing in footage to ease the transformations. Her Majesty goes in turns from window, to fireplace, to sofa, pausing briefly from her speech each time. The Queen performs this curious manoeuvring with impeccable elegance, but it still looks odd. Surely it would have been better to do the whole speech from the same position, with a combination of wide-angles, close-ups and panning to relieve the monotony.
Trivia:
Sofas were 'in' at the turn of the millennium - after all, this was the era of 'sofa government'. The idea of the Queen delivering her message from a sofa was not new (she had given her annual address from this very sofa on a number of occasions in the 1970s), but she had not done so for many years.
Curiously, the one hundredth birthday celebrations of Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, perhaps the major royal event of 2000, are not mentioned by the Queen. However, clips from the event are shown during the footage segment, and it should be recalled that Her Majesty did refer to her mother's ninety-ninth birthday celebrations in the previous broadcast.
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