Queen Elizabeth II has given her blessing to a book written by her trusted stylist on Her Majesty's responses to Prince Philip's death and the coronavirus lockdowns.
Angela Kelly, the Queen's stylist and valued counsel for over 30 years, was among the inner circle that spent much of the lockdown at Windsor Castle with Her Majesty and the Duke of Edinburgh in what became known as HMS Bubble.
Queen Elizabeth Pays Tribute on Prince Philip's First Death Anniversary
In a new edition of her book, the Queen's right-hand woman will provide details of how the royal household helped keep Her Majesty safe throughout the lockdown.
Kelly will provide her firsthand experience of how the Queen dealt with the pandemic and the Duke of Edinburgh's death in a new version of 'The Other Side Of The Coin: The Queen, The Dresser, and The Wardrobe,' which has been authorized by Her Majesty.
Per Daily Mail, Kelly claims she was called upon to trim the Queen's hair when regular formality could not be followed in one of the lighter tales. Miss Kelly, the three-times-divorced daughter of a Roman Catholic crane driver from Liverpool, has spent the previous 20 years cultivating an intriguingly intimate friendship with the Queen.
The influence of the dresser has now spread to the younger Royals, with Prince George being baptized in a long robe created by Miss Kelly, who learned to sew from her mother and aunt.
Prince Philip, the longest-serving consort in British history, died "peacefully" at Windsor Castle on April 9, 2021, at the age of 99. As the first anniversary of Prince Philip's passing approached on April 9, Queen Elizabeth went to Twitter to share a poignant poem penned by the famed UK poet Laureate Simon Armitage.
Queen Elizabeth even made a video montage of her memorable moments with Prince Philip and shared it on social media. Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, as well as Prince William and Kate Middleton, shared the tweet, as per Republic World.
On April 17, Prince Philip was laid to rest in St. George's Chapel on the grounds of Windsor Castle in a private ceremony. The Queen was sitting alone in the chapel due to coronavirus restrictions. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the funeral ceremony was shortened since St. George's Chapel had a capacity of just 30 mourners. The funeral was attended by around 730 members of the military forces.
Queen Says COVID-19 Left Her "Very Tired and Exhausted"
Furthermore, Queen Elizabeth II empathized with patients, physicians, and nurses in a London hospital last week as she listened to their accounts of life on the front lines of the pandemic following her own recent fight with COVID-19.
COVID-19 might make a person feel "exhausted," according to Queen Elizabeth II. During a virtual visit to the Royal London Hospital, the monarch spoke to patients and staff about the Queen Elizabeth Unit, a 155-bed critical care facility created in only five weeks at the height of the pandemic.
In February, Queen Elizabeth tested positive for COVID-19 and experienced "moderate cold-like symptoms," according to Buckingham Palace.
Staff from all around the region, including retired physicians and nurses, as well as troops sent in to aid, have treated roughly 800 coronavirus cases from across northeast London.
Senior nurse Mireia López Rey Ferrer informed Queen Elizabeth that they tried their utmost to soothe extremely ill patients as friends and family members prohibited from the hospital due to tight virus-control procedures.
By the end of December 2020, Hussain became the third member of his family to be hospitalized with COVID-19. Hussain's brother died first, followed by his father, who died while he was on a ventilator, USA Today reported.
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