Queen Elizabeth II: The sweetest, funniest moments from her reign
The British are known for keeping a “stiff upper lip,” and Queen Elizabeth II was no exception. But those who were close to the queen knew that she had a great sense of humour underneath her serene and stoic public image.
Throughout her long life, there have been many times when she let down her guard, so to speak, whether that be delighting at animals or cracking jokes with world leaders.
In honour of Britain’s longest-reigning monarch and Canada’s longest-serving head of state, we remember some of the sweetest and funniest moments in the extraordinary life of Queen Elizabeth II.
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Queen Elizabeth II, longest-reigning monarch in British history, dead at 96
A corgi lover for life
Ever since she was a young girl, Elizabeth has been captivated by corgis — a love that lasted her entire life.
When she was just a princess, Elizabeth fell in love with the Royal Family’s first corgi, Dookie, who was adopted in 1933.
The first corgi she ever owned herself was named Susan, and was gifted to her by her father in 1944 for her 18th birthday. Susan would be the beginning of a large family tree of corgis, 30 in total, bred by the queen.
The queen also bred corgis with dachshunds to create dorgis. This adorable mix-breed was perhaps the result of an unplanned tryst between one of Elizabeth’s corgis and Princess Margaret’s dachshund. The sister mated the dogs again and more than 10 dorgis were bred over the years.
In 2015, it was reported that the queen was planning to end her corgi breeding efforts because she didn’t want to leave any behind after her death.
When the queen died, she had four dogs left: two corgis, a dorgi, and a cocker-spaniel. Ownership of the dogs will likely pass to her successor King Charles III.
Banter with Bush
Queen Elizabeth wasn’t about to let then-President George W. Bush off the hook when he hilariously misspoke during a toast at the White House.
In 2007, at a welcome ceremony for the queen, Bush mistakenly said that Elizabeth had celebrated the U.S. bicentennial in 1776, when he should have said 1976. The mix-up meant Bush had added 200 years to Queen Elizabeth’s age.
Bush said of the incident, “She gave me a look that only a mother could give a child.”
Two days later, the queen saw her chance to get the former president back. At a dinner hosted by the British ambassador, Elizabeth joked, “I wondered whether I should start this toast by saying, ‘When I was here in 1776 …’”
“Your Majesty, I can’t top that one,” Bush responded in his toast.
The iconic cow video
This hilarious video when viral in 2018, showing the queen’s excited reaction to seeing a herd of cows being paraded as part of her 90th birthday celebration. She points to the animals and blurts out “cows” to her husband Prince Philip.
Queen Elizabeth was quite the fan of cows, as she was with all animals, and bred the livestock herself. She kept the largest herd of Sussex cows in the world at Windsor castle.
Teasing Trudeau
The first time that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met Queen Elizabeth, she may have been taken aback by his boyish looks. It also didn’t help that Trudeau mentioned in a toast to her at the gala for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in 2015 that he was the 12th Canadian prime minister to hold office during her reign.
In response, Queen Elizabeth said during a speech, “Thank you, Mr. Prime Minister of Canada, for making me feel so old.”
All the queen’s horses
The only thing that could rival the queen’s love of corgis was perhaps her love of horses.
Elizabeth first started riding at the tender age of three when she started lessons at Buckingham Palace Mews.
She was gifted her first pony a year later, a Shetland named Peggy, by her father King George VI.
For her entire life, Elizabeth was an avid equestrian and horse breeder and loved cheering on her horses at the racetrack.
In fact, one of her favourite horses was reportedly a thoroughbred named Burmese, which was gifted to the queen by the RCMP.
At the time of her death, the queen was estimated to have over 100 horses in her royal stables. Those horses have earned her around $10.5 million in prize money over the years.
Claudia Joseph, an expert on the royals, predicts that Princess Anne and her daughter Zara, who were both Olympic equestrians, will be involved in making decisions about what happens next to the queen’s troop of horses.
Cracking up Prince Harry
At a military parade in 2006, the queen showed her cheeky side by making her grandson crack up.
Elizabeth was attending the Sovereign’s Parade at The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst to see Prince Harry’s “passing-out ceremony,” where he was officially commissioned as an army officer.
As Elizabeth walked down the line of newly minted officers, the soldiers were meant to keep a neutral expression. Perhaps the matriarch said something or flashed a look to her grandson because Prince Harry couldn’t help but bust out a grin as she passed.
Prince Harry served in the British Army for 10 years and served two tours in Afghanistan.
Meeting Donna the Elephant
This adorable photo, taken at a U.K. zoo in 2017, shows Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip meeting Donna the elephant (and feeding her a couple of bananas while they were at it).
The moment was captured by royal photographer Chris Jackson and he said that just out of frame were a few zookeepers who were slightly concerned that the huge elephant would lurch forward, eager for its next banana from the queen.
Donna, thankfully, kept her composure.
In the driver’s seat
Queen Elizabeth could have been chauffeured around her entire life but she chose to stay in the driver’s seat.
At just 19, Elizabeth volunteered to join the Auxiliary Territorial Service during World War II, becoming the first female member of the royal family to serve full-time in the armed forces.
She trained to become a mechanic and ambulance driver, earning her the nickname “Princess Auto Mechanic” from the British press at the time. She was often photographed and filmed servicing vehicles and driving trucks.
After becoming queen, Elizabeth could have taken the back seat but she chose to keep driving her entire life.
She was frequently spotted chauffeuring family between Windsor and the Ascot Racecourse for the annual racing event. Elizabeth last drove herself to the Royal Ascot in 2021 where she was photographed behind the wheel of a Jaguar X-Type wagon.
Elizabeth’s fleet of vehicles is primarily made up of cars from British manufacturers like Jaguar Land Rover, Daimler, and Vauxhall.
Cake cutting fiasco
This was another sweet moment caught on camera by Jackson, the royal photographer. This photo shows the time when the queen burst out laughing with her daughter Princess Anne when she got her knife stuck in a cake while trying to cut a ceremonial first slice.
The moment took place at the 100-year anniversary of the Women’s Institute in London in 2015.
Princess Anne was reportedly the one to dislodge the silver knife from the cake in the end, which you can see sticking out of the cake in the photo above.
Dropping the mic
Her Majesty certainly knew how to dish out some trash talk, while staying polite as ever.
In a promotional video for the 2016 Invictus Games, Queen Elizabeth dropped the mic on then-President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama.
The video begins with Prince Harry receiving a feisty video message from the Obamas. Michelle asks, “Hey, Prince Harry, remember when you told us to bring it at the Invictus Games?”
“Careful what you wish for,” Barack replies. A soldier in the background mimes dropping a mic.
Prince Harry showed the video message to Queen Elizabeth who responded with, “Oh, really, please.”
Enough said.
Harry then drops a mic for his grandmother’s cool, restrained response.
G7 antics
Even after the death of her lifelong partner, Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth still found moments of levity in her life and never lost her sense of humour.
During a photo-op last year at the 2021 G7 Summit hosted in Cornwall, the queen made some of the most powerful leaders in the world crack up when she asked, “Are you supposed to be looking as if you’re enjoying yourself?”
All those who loved her will sorely miss Queen Elizabeth II. She was a devoted public servant with a robust sense of duty — but as we’ve seen, that didn’t stop her from having a bit of fun every now and then.
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