The Platinum Jubilee Pageant was held on Sunday, 5 June 2022 near Buckingham Palace, as part of Queen Elizabeth II's Platinum Jubilee celebrations. Conceived and directed by David Zolkwer with Pageant Master, Adrian Evans, it featured over 10,000 people from across the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth and combined street arts, music, puppets, carnival and costume to celebrate the Queen's reign, as well as honouring the collective service of people and communities across the United Kingdom.[1][2][3][4]
Date and location
The pageant was a major event of the 2022 Platinum Jubilee celebrations for Queen Elizabeth II. It took place on 5 June 2022, a Sunday and the last day of the extended Jubilee weekend.[1] The money for the event, which was estimated to cost £15 million, was raised from corporate sponsors and individuals.[5]
The event was broadcast by the BBC and had a peak viewing figure of 8.7 million and an average audience of 6.3 million people.[6]
Preparation
Pageant attendees with vehicles (including Daleks, motorbikes and bicycles) the buses and the celebrities riding them, first assembled at Horse Guards Parade in the early morning to prepare for the Pageant. This also included numerous interviews with news crews and journalists.
The Pageant Route
It involved more than 10,000 people and covered a 3km route, similar in length to the path taken by the Queen during her coronation.[5]
All the vehicles prepared to depart Horse Guards Parade at 14:00 and would go towards Whitehall, where dancers would merge in pre designated areas in front of the buses in the era they represented. They then proceeded through Admiralty Arch and down the Mall; then past the specially erected Royal Box at Constitutional Hill and past Buckingham Palace. It would then proceed along Spur Road and then up Birdcage Walk. Finally then through Horse Guards Road and back to Horse Guards Parade. The route took 1.5 hours to complete.
The first act, For Queen and Country, was composed of a military parade with 1,750 people and 200 horses.[5] To mark the beginning of the pageant, the bells of Westminster Abbey pealed as they did on the Queen's Coronation Day in 1953. The Mounted Band of the Household Cavalry led the Gold State Coach, pulled by eight Windsor Grey horses. The coach windows showed original footage recorded on Coronation Day.[7][8] Many units of the British Armed Forces and representatives of the armed services of the Commonwealth of Nations participated:[9]
The third act, Let's Celebrate, was composed of carnival floats and featured street theatre acts and urban dance from various performer groups.[18] Highlights from the act included a dancer interacting with The Hatchling, a 21 feet (6.4 m) dragon puppet,[19] depictions of the Queen's Beasts that were also a part of her coronation, Asian/Bollywood wedding dances, the coronation scenes recreated with an Afro-Caribbean style, a mighty oak and maypole whose ribbons formed a picture of the Queen, depiction of past jubilees and royal weddings via dance, paper and with butterflies representing different faiths, the River of Hope flags featuring artworks by children, jazz music and sousaphones, a 20 feet (6.1 m) puppet of Godiva, and a mobile circus.[20]