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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Music royalty performs for Queen Elizabeth II

Jill Lawless Associated Press

LONDON – Elton John sang “I’m Still Standing,” Stevie Wonder crooned “Isn’t She Lovely,” and Paul McCartney sent “All My Loving” as musical royalty celebrated Queen Elizabeth II’s 60-year reign with a concert outside Buckingham Palace on Monday. But the joy was tempered by news that the queen’s husband, Prince Philip, had been hospitalized with a bladder infection.

Palace officials said the prince, who will turn 91 on Saturday, was taken to the King Edward VII Hospital in London from Windsor Castle on Monday as a precaution and will remain under observation for a few days.

As the Diamond Jubilee show ended, Prince Charles took the stage and encouraged concertgoers to make some noise for his father. The crowd responded with a roar and chants of “Philip.”

The heir to the throne paid tribute to his mother, addressing her as “Your Majesty – Mummy” and leading the crowd in three cheers for the monarch.

Despite Philip’s illness, many members of the royal family, including Charles, his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, and Princes William and Harry sat in a royal box to watch the show, performed on a specially erected stage outside the palace.

The queen was cheered as she arrived partway through the show, wearing a gold lame cocktail dress under a dark cape. It was decided before Philip’s illness that she would watch only part of the concert.

The queen is not a noted pop music fan, and she appeared to be wearing yellow ear plugs as she observed the concert.

Some 12,000 contest winners watched the show from an enclosed area, while a huge crowd stretched down the Mall, the wide boulevard leading up to the palace.

The lineup featured a full hand of knights – McCartney, John, Cliff Richard and Tom Jones, all “Sirs” – along with Dame Shirley Bassey and younger artists including JLS and Kylie Minogue.

Performers from around the world sang a special jubilee song written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Take That’s Gary Barlow.

It was the veteran entertainers who went down best. The crowd roared along to Cliff Richard’s “Congratulations,” and cheered Bassey singing – fittingly – “Diamonds are Forever.” Prince Harry could be seen singing along – “Why, why, why?” – as Tom Jones belted out “Delilah,” while the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge joined in on John’s “Crocodile Rock.”

McCartney closed the concert playing “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” on a Union Jack guitar before the queen took the stage with her family – but without Philip, who until Monday had been her constant companion throughout the jubilee celebrations.

The palace said Philip was “understandably, disappointed about missing this evening’s Diamond Jubilee Concert,” as well as a St. Paul’s Cathedral service and other jubilee events planned for Tuesday.

The jubilee was being marked around the world in members of the 54-nation Commonwealth of former British colonies.

At the end of the concert, the queen lit the last in a chain of more than 4,200 commemorative beacons that have been set alight in Britain and abroad.

One beacon was lit in Kenya at the Treetops Hotel, where Elizabeth was informed of her father’s death in 1952, making her the queen.

Although not everyone has embraced the jubilee – anti-monarchists have protested, and some 2 million Britons used the four-day holiday weekend to leave the country – many said it gave them a sense of pride.

“Sixty years on the throne is a remarkable achievement,” said 47-year-old Dean Caston, who joined the crowds outside the palace on Monday. “People knock Britain and how depressed we are, but this weekend you can see we have got a lot to be proud of.”