Despite the late Queen’s public face appearing stoic and poised, she began to share more of her funny side towards the end of her 70-year reign.
This is according to Ingrid Seward, one of the most respected royal biographers who has spent 40 years following The Firm.
Seward, 77, wrote in her 2023 book, My Mother And I: ‘The Queen’s stern look, inherited from her grandmother Queen Mary, belies the wonderful sense of humour we got to see more and more as she got older.
‘The Queen could be extremely funny, in a slightly mocking way.
‘She was also a first-class mimic, particularly of politicians, but never to anyone’s face. She could only laugh or state her opinions in private, and some of them were pretty forceful.
‘She also liked hearing a bit of gossip, so her immediate staff saved all the chit-chat for her about what was going on in every corner of her various homes.
‘She saw everything but turned a blind eye to small misdemeanours and and disasters. She was the same with her friends.’
Perhaps one of the best-positioned people to comment on the Queen’s sense of humour is royal biographer and podcaster Gyles Brandreth first met the Queen in 1968, when he was 20.

Despite the late Queen’s public face appearing stoic and poised, she began to see share more of her funny side towards the end of her 70-year reign

The Queen is pictured sharing a joke with her son, Prince Charles, at Braemar Games in 2010


Ingrid Seward wrote: ‘The Queen’s stern look, inherited from her grandmother Queen Mary, belies the wonderful sense of humour we got to see more and more as she got older’
Over the next 50 years he met her many times, both at public and at private events
In an interview with Yours magazine he said: ‘She once performed George Formby’s When I’m Cleaning Windows for me, while strumming an imaginary ukulele!
‘She was an incredible mimic and told me she’d been inspired by famous female impersonator Florence Desmond, who came to Windsor Castle to entertain the Royal family during the war.
‘The Queen could do all kinds of regional accents.’
Even the Queen’s dressmaker, Angela Kelly, was reportedly was blown away by the Queen’s ability to copy her scouse accent.
Angela told The Sun: ‘We have a lot of fun together. The Queen has a wicked sense of humor and is a great mimic. She can do all accents—including mine.’
Brandreth wrote in Elizabeth: An Intimate Portrait, that this instinctive and self‑deprecating wit was as important a part of the Queen’s personality as the clothes she wore and the smile that lit up her face.
Nothing could better demonstrate this than the age-old tale of when the Queen watched a video of herself and called out to her husband: ‘Oh Philip, do look! I’ve got my Miss Piggy face on.’

The Daily Mail’s Richard Kay wrote that for years, the Queen’s ability to say nothing, while speaking volumes, was undoubtedly one of her greatest strengths

Both the late Queen and Prince Harry were known as the family jokers, often making eachother laugh


Perhaps one of the best-positioned people to comment on the Queen’s sense of humour is royal biographer and podcaster Gyles Brandreth first met the Queen in 1968, when he was 20

Nothing was more central to that than the Queen’s ability not just to make a joke, but to take a joke too

Ingrid Seward even went as far to suggest that the Queen’s sense of humour was the secret to her and Philip’s long and happy marriage
The Queen reportedly said, ‘And guess who is going to have to change!’, before disappearing upstairs and returning in a different dress.
Seward added: ‘It is a story she enjoyed telling all her life – with certain embellishments.’
While the Queen could sometimes appear stern on duty, Sally Bedell Smith, author of Elizabeth the Queen: The Life of a Modern Monarch, revealed in 2021 that she was much livelier’ in person, and made self-depreciating jokes showing she didn’t take herself too seriously.
Ingrid Seward even went as far to suggest that the Queen’s sense of humour was the secret to her and Philip’s long and happy marriage.
‘I think the secret is they laugh together. I think the Queen is the comedian,’ she said.