Queen’s death overshadows Denmark’s jubilee

It was supposed to be a folk festival, but once again a world event thwarted the big celebration. The Danish Queen Margrethe II has made up for her 50th anniversary of the throne – on a smaller scale than originally planned.

Queen Margrethe II arrives for a performance at the Royal Danish Theater to mark the 50th anniversary of her accession to the throne in Copenhagen.

Ritzau Scanpix / Reuters

(dpa) After the death of Queen Elizabeth II, Denmark’s Queen Margrethe II celebrated her 50th jubilee over the weekend with extreme reticence. Before the eyes of Nordic heads of state, the 82-year-old made up for some celebrations for her milestone anniversary on Saturday and Sunday, without neglecting the sad news of the Queen’s death.

The radiant smile that characterizes Margrethe was not to be taken away from the now longest reigning monarch in the world. “She beamed like the little girl she was in 1948 when she went to the Royal Theater for the first time,” reported the theater reviewer for the newspaper “Berlingske”, Jakob Steen Olsen, according to Danish radio after a gala event on Saturday evening. In the theater in question, the art and culture-loving queen was entertained with excerpts from ballet, musical and classical plays. At Margrethe’s request, a minute’s silence was held for the late Queen at the beginning of the event.

“You share life with us”

The Danish monarch also performed this not easy balancing act – celebrating without appearing irreverent – on Sunday: In front of around 800 invited guests in the Church of Our Lady in Copenhagen, she showed herself smiling in a red costume with a matching hat and briefly waved to photographers and onlookers.

The Danish Queen Margrethe II is greeted by Bishop Peter Skov-Jakobsen on her arrival for the service in Copenhagen Cathedral.

The Danish Queen Margrethe II is greeted by Bishop Peter Skov-Jakobsen on her arrival for the service in Copenhagen Cathedral.

Martin Sylvest/EPO

‘Your Majesty, dear Queen. Today is a big day and a day of celebration,” said Bishop Peter Skov-Jacobsen of Copenhagen. For over 50 years she has been encouraging people to be human and kind. «You share life with us. Give us a glimpse of joy and vulnerability and make us proud,” he said.

Among the guests at the quiet, chanted service were Sweden’s royal couple Carl XVI. Gustaf and Silvia and Norway’s royal couple Harald and Sonja. Finnish President Sauli Niinistö and Icelandic President Gudni Jóhannesson also came to Copenhagen to attend the celebrations.

Anniversary program was adjusted at short notice

Margrethe has been Queen of Denmark since January 14, 1972. She is very popular with the people. However, the top Dane does not seem to have been able to celebrate anniversaries lately: first the big party for her 80th birthday in spring 2020 had to be canceled due to the first peak of the corona pandemic, then the omicron variant of the corona virus drove to the deadline her 50th anniversary of the throne in January 2022. Back then, Margrethe had decided to postpone the celebrations of half a century on the throne to this Saturday and Sunday – but then the Queen died two days earlier.

After the news of his death, Margrethe asked her court to reduce and adjust the anniversary program at short notice. The big folk festival, where she wanted to show herself to the people on the balconies of Amalienborg Palace and Copenhagen City Hall and in a carriage, was therefore canceled. A gala dinner was planned at Christiansborg Palace, the seat of the Danish Parliament, late on Sunday evening.

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