Introduction
Oscar-winning actress Helen Mirren took to the stage to re-enact Queen Elizabeth II in 60 years

The Audience of "The Queen's Summoned" is presented live at the National Theatre
Winston Churchill, Harold Wilson, Margaret Thatcher, John Major, David Cameron...
the names of the British Prime Ministers known to the world have been changing over the past 60 years,
and Queen Elizabeth II is always sitting behind them.
What people don't know is that, over 60 years,
Queen Elizabeth II has met with 12 prime ministers in a secret meeting at Buckingham Palace known as "Meet Tuesday".
Unlike other meetings in British public life, this is a private meeting between the Queen and her Prime Minister.
Regarding the content of each meeting, both sides of the conversation have maintained a tacit agreement:
never repeat the conversation to others, even their family members and spouses.
However, The Queen's Summons, presented live at the National Theatre,
breaks this silent pact and imagines a series of important meetings between
Downing Street officials and the Queen.
Every prime minister, from Churchill to Cameron,
has used these private conversations as megaphones and confessions—
sometimes intimate, sometimes gunpowder.

Helen Mirren, who won an Oscar for her role as Queen Elizabeth II in the 2006 movie "The Queen",
is "coming" to London's West End this time,
leading the leading role in the theater masterpiece "The Queen's Summoned."
From young mothers to grandmothers, these private conversations chronicle the arc of the Elizabeth II era -
politicians come and go through the revolving doors of electoral politics, and only she remains,
waiting to meet her next prime minister.


Writers Peter Morgan and Helen Mirren reunite for the West End hit after their Oscar-winning "Queen."
The director of this play is directed by Oscar-nominated director Stephen Dedley ("Dancing Out of My Life", "Every Moment"),
and its splendor has been guaranteed multiple times.
"The Times" commented on its viewing experience:
"Funny, real, kind, ups and downs, and full of surprises. I love every minute of this show."
Helen Mirren and Prime Minister Harold Wilson Richard McCabe also won the Oliver Award for Best Actress,
Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play, and Best Supporting Actor in a Play.
