Queen Elizabeth II has scripted history
by becoming the first UK royal to broadcast in 3D the traditional
Christmas message. The Queen praised the
army of volunteers at the Diamond
Jubilee and the Olympic and Paralympic Games. It is the first time the
message filmed at Buckingham Palace - was recorded in 3D yesterday.
Viewers needed special glasses to watch the monarch in all her
technological glory. The 86-year-old monarch's 3D broadcast message was
interspersed with footage from the large-scale UK events of 2012, 'BBC
News' reported. In her Christmas message, she said it was striking to
see the friendship of so many people who marked her Jubilee,
particularly during the river pageant. The Queen gave her first
Christmas message in 1952 and her first live television broadcast on
Christmas Day 1957. The tradition began with her grandfather George V in
1932, when he delivered a radio broadcast written by Rudyard Kipling.
She said the 1,000-vessel pageant on the Thames - on a wet, cold June
day - showed a determination to celebrate triumphing over the elements.
She earlier attended Christmas service at St Mary Magdalene Church in
Norfolk. Her husband, sons and daughter, and many grandchildren,
accompanied the Queen to church. Afterwards she received bouquets of
flowers and spoke to about 70 children who had waited outside for her.
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