Andrew Lloyd Webber shared a touching anecdote about Queen Elizabeth II visiting his Newbury home, after paying his respects at Buckingham Palace.
The composer was travelling to Her Majesty’s Theatre in London when he “diverted” his journey to lay flowers on Thursday, adding: “It was absolutely the right thing to do.”
The 74-year-old told BBC Breakfast told how the monarch visited him to listen to the Queen’s official Diamond Jubilee single, Sing, in 2012, composed by Lloyd Webber and Take That’s Gary Barlow.
“She was in the Newbury area where I live, one of her great joys was going to Newbury racecourse where I had met her several times,” he said.
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“It was arranged that she would come round and hear the song with Gary and myself and a choir we put together of equestrian people, racing trainers and jockeys.
“It was great fun, we had a lovely evening and we also played a couple of songs from the Rodgers and Hammerstein era because she loved the musicals when she was in her teens, it was a magic evening.”
Lloyd Webber said he could not put into words how “extraordinary” the Queen was but said “I am just so lucky to have met her just a very few times”.
He added: “Particularly when I was lucky enough to see her off duty, she was so warm and so wonderful.
“She came round once to our house and you know what the children did, it was so naughty of them and they were old enough to know better, but they put football shirts outside the windows as she was coming past and the Queen said, ‘Do you normally put your washing outside of the window?’
“She had this extraordinary way of putting people at ease.”
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Speaking about paying his respects to the monarch, he said: “Having had the luck and joy and privilege of knowing Her Majesty a little over the last 20 to 30 years, I thought it was the least I could do.
“I was ironically on my way to Her Majesty’s Theatre, which will now of course be His Majesty’s Theatre, but I diverted and my wife and I and our daughter all met outside the gates.
“I just thought it was absolutely the right thing to do. She was the most extraordinary person and we will never see the like again.
“One of the things she represents to our generation is stability. She just represented a force for the good which was really, really extraordinary.
“We all know how passionately she believed in the Commonwealth and I think that speaks volumes about what she really represented to people right over the world.”
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