Culture | The queen on screen

“The Crown” will help shape the memory of Queen Elizabeth II

It is a flattering portrait—mostly

The Crown Season 1

The helmet of hair, the waving hand, the clipped intonation, the corgis: on screen, a few universally recognised tropes instantly evoke Queen Elizabeth II. But for much of her 70-year reign, depictions of her in the arts did not delve far below the familiar surface. Most were superficial or comical; few tried to throw open the doors of the House of Windsor and nose around inside. When, in 1977, the Sex Pistols declared that “our figurehead/Is not what she seems”, the guitars and thrashing drums sounded like a rebellion against her inscrutability. In 2001 Lucian Freud painted her with tellingly pursed lips.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Lights on the magic”

Getting the job done: How Ukraine can win

From the September 17th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Culture

Timothée Chalamet in A Complete Unknown

Performing in a cinema near you: Bob Dylan and Maria Callas

Behind the boom in musical biopics

Magnus Carlsen of Norway in action at a Freestyle Chess tournament in Germany

Can Magnus Carlsen convince people to watch chess?

The world’s best player hopes that glamming up the ancient game can make stars of its players


A model poses for photographers among wildflowers in bloom at Lake Elsinore, California

Are internet firms the problem, or are you the problem?

A veteran critic of technology offers his take on a familiar target


The Michelin Guide is no longer the only tastemaker in town

How is it adapting to changing eating habits?

Tofu: never judge a food by its political reputation

Think outside the white plastic box. Here is a carnivore’s guide to tofu