THE prospect of appearing on live television is enough to fill most of us with fear - but for the six ladies-in-waiting who accompanied The Queen on her coronation, it was nothing short of terrifying.
Appearing on the ITV documentary The Queen: Inside the Crown, Lady Anne Glenconner revealed that they were each given a bottle of smelling salts if they felt faint during the Westminster Abbey ceremony in June 1953.
Although she had the smelling salts hidden in her gloves, Lady Anne - who is the daughter of the fifth Earl of Leicester - suddenly felt overwhelmed by the millions of people watching the ceremony on live TV.
Describing how the smelling salts "didn't do much good", she recalled: "I started to sway, everything was black.
"I couldn't see, everything was black. It was awful."
Determined not to "let the Queen down", she added: "I could ruin the whole thing.
"All the cameras, millions of people all over the world watching."
Fortunately, the Black Rod (a name given to a senior official of the House of Lords) noticed Lady Anne was struggling and stopped her from falling over and drawing attention away from Her Majesty.
"Suddenly I had this wonderful arm pinning me to the pillar at the back" she added. "He kept [it there] long enough for me to recover."
Before they left for the ceremony, Lady Anne said seeing The Queen in her coronation dress - which took eight months to design - was "like a Disney film".
She said: "It was absolutely unreal!"
What's more, The Queen previously admitted she "couldn't look down" while wearing her coronation crown or her neck would "have broken".
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