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Jewish stars remember a much-loved monarch with a 'mischievous' side

With the community and the country united in grief, Jewish stars of stage and screen spoke candidly to the JC about the monarch they loved

September 15, 2022 16:12
Maureen Lipman
G4JEMT G4JEMT The Queen talks meets (from left) actress Maureen Lipman, Artistic Director of the Almeida Theatre Jonathan Kent and actor David Suchet during her visit to the Almeida Theatre in London, part of a tour by The Queen and the Duke to London's Theatreland.
5 min read

Vanessa Feltz
When she announced the Queen’s death to listeners on TalkTV’s drivetime show last Thursday, Ms Feltz says, there was an “audible quiver in my voice and tears were running down my face”.

It was her first week in the job. In August, she left the BBC after nearly 20 years. She told the JC she was “squaring shoulders” before the time came.

“I was aware as the show unfolded that the hour was growing ever closer and when the moment came and I was handed the fateful piece of paper, I prayed I’d be able to communicate clearly and professionally.”

In the event, the award-winning broadcaster was both professional and emotional. “It’s been reported that 50 per cent of Britons have cried at the news and I am among that 50 per cent.”

As she broadcast the news, Ms Feltz said her thoughts turned to the prayer Jews said for the Royal Family every week in synagogues across the country for the past seven decades.

“The words were throbbing in my head, and so I asked my producer to book Rabbi Alan Plancey for the show because I knew he had met the Queen on many occasions. He came on and the first thing he did was recite that prayer. It was a moment of exquisite humanity in a sea of grief.”