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Britain's Television Queen [Paperback]

Bob Crew

Price: £9.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Book Description

15 Feb 2012
Focusing purely on Queen Elizabeth II's relationship with television, this book shows how she was ahead of the game in helping to change the face of British television from the outset of her reign in 1953 when she let the cameras into Westminster Abbey. The Queen embraced television at a time when Winston Churchill and her government advisors recommended that she should keep them out - on the grounds that the cameras would destroy her royal mystique - right through the 1950s which was Britain's television decade (for reasons that are not generally understood today), when Britain became the first nation in the world to have public service television. In 1969 the Queen opened the doors to the cameras once again for the invention of Britain's first family-reality-TV, fly-on-the-wall programme, showing how she and her husband the Duke of Edinburgh and their children, Charles and Anne, went about their daily lives, thereby giving the seal of royal approval to reality-TV, ahead of the first programmes in the United States and the UK that followed in her wake. Queen Elizabeth II can accurately be described as a television queen, the first monarch to understand and embrace television and, in particular reality-TV, which is why she was light years ahead of other royals and her government ministers. Television was for her a right of passage and, not until she ran into bad and stormy weather with Princess Diana in the 1980s and 1990s, did she have any image problems with television. These problems no longer remain today, evidently, as once again the television arrangements are in full swing for her Diamond Jubilee celebrations this June. Queen Elizabeth II remains the most televised and visualised person in the world.

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About the Author

Bob Crew is a former International Correspondent for The Times. He read English Literature at the University of London and spent a lifetime in journalism specialising in international and business affairs. He did his national service with the British Army in the Royal Corps of Signals in Cyprus and Germany. He is the author of Gurkha Warriors and The Beheading and Other True Stories, currently in the bookshops, in the former of which he interviewed HRH Prince Charles, and following Queen Elizabeths coronation in 1953, he won one of her coronation prizes for the most outstanding school children in her realm. As it happens, so did another school boy, back then, Paul McCartney, of future Beatles fame. Bob Crew is also a former Financial Times business journalist and he has lived in Hampstead Garden Suburb in North London for 37 years.

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