For many people, 2012 remains one of the most memorable summers on record.
Andy Murray, Usain Bolt and Mo Farah all made history with gold wins at the Olympics, the band Fun had a hit with We Are Young and Boris Johnson got stuck on a zip wire in Victoria Park while waving Union flags.
But perhaps most iconic of all was the Queen’s surprise cameo alongside Daniel Craig in the Olympics opening ceremony, which took place 13 years ago this week.
And while the Queen’s royal dresser Angela Kelly was initially given credit for persuading Her Majesty to take part, it was another member of the royal household who was brave enough to ask the 86-year-old to ‘jump out of a helicopter’.
Royal author Valentine Low wrote in his 2022 book Courtiers, that Edward Young, who worked as deputy private secretary, was associated with ‘three of the greatest triumphs’ of the Queen’s latter years: her Diamond Jubilee, her state visit to Ireland and her appearance at the London 2012 Olympic Games.
He added: ‘At the opening ceremony, the Queen starred in a memorable film made by director Danny Boyle, in which she welcomed James Bond – as played by Daniel Craig – to Buckingham Palace, and then appeared to parachute from a helicopter into the stadium in time for the opening.
‘It was an audacious stunt, and showed a side of the Queen most people had not seen before.’
The royal author tells the story of how Lord Coe, an old friend of Young’s, had been asked by Boyle if the Queen wanted to appear in a film with James Bond.
The Queen, with her personal footman Paul Whybrew (right), appeared in a film for the London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony alongside Daniel Craig playing James Bond

Her Majesty appeared to parachute from a helicopter into the stadium in time for the opening ceremony

The film became one of the most memorable moments of the London 2012 Olympics
Coe approached Young, who arranged for Boyle to visit the Palace to make his case, and is said to have ‘listened sagely, laughed and promised to ask the boss’.
Low wrote: ‘Some versions claim that it was Angela Kelly, the Queen’s dresser, who asked Her Majesty.
‘That is not true; it was Young who asked, while they were at Balmoral. Angela Kelly did have a significant contribution to make, however, as it was she who, on the day of filming, persuaded the Queen to say, “Good evening, Mr Bond.”
‘More important than the question of who persuaded the Queen is this: other senior members of the household thought it was a mad idea and could not possibly work.
‘Only one had the vision, or the humour, or indeed the knowledge of what made the boss tick, to see that it was not as lunatic as it seemed – and that person was Edward Young.’
Palace insiders claimed he bided his time before asking the Queen, aware that he had to pick the right moment.
And while it would be fair to assume the Queen would think he was joking, she apparently got the point right away.
‘Before he’d even finished, she turned to him with a real twinkle in the eye and said: “I know, and then I jump out of the helicopter?”‘, wrote Low.


Royal author Valentine Low wrote that Edward Young, who worked as deputy private secretary, was associated with ‘three of the greatest triumphs’ of the Queen’s latter years: her Diamond Jubilee, her state visit to Ireland and her appearance at the London 2012 Olympics

Senior members of the household thought it was a mad idea and could not possibly work. But the late Queen’s deputy private secretary, Edward Young (pictured), could see that it was not as lunatic as it seemed

Oscar-award winning director Danny Boyle was the mastermind behind the Olympics opening ceremony
The film became one of the most memorable moments of the Olympics, as Daniel Craig made his way into Buckingham Palace, past corgis Monty, Willow and Holly, to be presented to the Queen, who is seen working at her desk, by her personal footman Paul Whybrew.
With her back to the camera, most Brits, including Prince Charles, assumed that the monarch in the peach dress was a body double – perhaps Helen Mirren.
But when she turned to greet the spy with ‘Evening, Mr Bond’, there was no doubt that this was the real McCoy.
The unlikely duo then flew across London in a helicopter emblazoned with a Union flag, before they reached the Olympic Park where in real-time, spectators in the east London stadium looked up to see a twin-engine helicopter.
As the aircraft steadied in the movie sequence, Bond was seen opening the door and appearing to hesitate.
While he dithered, the figure of the Queen pushed past him and dived out into the air, closely followed by 007.
Meanwhile, from the real helicopter above the stadium, the same two figures appeared to plunge to earth.
And, with the familiar Bond theme tune sounding around the stadium, the spotlight shone on the royal box to reveal the Queen in exactly the same dress she wore in the film.

The Olympic cauldron is lit during the opening ceremony at the 2012 Summer Olympics

The Queen took spectators by surprise as she appeared on a large video screen during the ceremony

Queen Elizabeth took to her seat in the royal box to enjoy the rest of the show – as if nothing had happened
The initial idea was to have Her Majesty arrive to the opening ceremony via the Tube, but security would prove to be too big an issue.
Boyle was apparently so stunned by the Queen’s acceptance of the role that he had to double-check whether or not it was April Fools’ Day.
Describing the day of filming, Boyle revealed that the Queen had been at the dentists all morning and was therefore ‘not in a very good mood’.
‘That put me in my place immediately,’ he quipped.
Boyle said the Queen delivered her lines ‘beautifully’ and had the ‘instincts of a performer’ as she is, after all, ‘on stage’ all the time.
According to royal author Tina Brown, the late Queen had a heartwarming reason for taking on the unexpected role.
‘She thought it would be a great joke to amuse her grandchildren,’ Brown wrote in her book, Palace Papers.
‘Her only real concern was keeping it a secret until the moment she walked out in person after the “leap” to take her place with Philip in the royal box.

The royal box with Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip

Prince William and Harry, who were standing behind the then-prime minister David Cameron and his wife, Samantha, were beside themselves and shouted out in unison: ‘Go, Granny!’

The faces of her family members in the crowd were of pure shock, amusement – and slight concern for the 86-year-old, as a delighted Charles and Camilla enjoyed the spectacle
Sebastian Coe, a former Olympian middle-distance runner who headed the successful London 2012 Olympic bid, watched the opening ceremony next to Charles, then Prince of Wales.
Prince William, along with Kate, and Prince Harry were sitting in the row behind.
‘None of them knew about the Queen’s involvement, nor that the film even existed,’ Coe told Brown.
The faces of her family members in the crowd were of pure shock, amusement – and slight concern for the 86-year-old.
William and Harry were beside themselves and shouted out in unison: ‘Go, Granny!’
As they say in the theatre: and… scene.