Queen Marks 92nd Birthday With Star-Studded Commonwealth Concert

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The queen usually celebrates her birthday in private, saving the pomp for her official birthday in June.London: 
Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her 92nd birthday on Saturday with a star-studded, Commonwealth-themed charity concert featuring Tom Jones,
Kylie Minogue and Shaggy.The monarch took to the stage herself at the end of the show at the Royal Albert Hall, where her son and heir
Prince Charles led the crowd in a birthday "hip hip hip hooray".Her grandsons Prince William and Prince Harry, accompanied by his fiancee
Meghan Markle, also watched performances by stars from around the Commonwealth, the 53-nation grouping which held its summit in London this
week.The queen usually celebrates her birthday in private, saving the pomp for her official birthday in June, but the concert was held in
aid of a new youth charity, The Queen's Commonwealth Trust."This organisation in your name will provide a platform for those working to make
a difference in their communities across 53 countries
Your Majesty, Happy Birthday," said Harry, who will be president of the trust.Australia's Kylie was among the performers, alongside Canadian
pop chart-topper Shawn Mendes and South African all-male choir Ladysmith Black Mambazo.US-Jamaican reggae star Shaggy shared the stage with
British star Sting, while Jones and Craig David also performed.Earlier, the queen's birthday was marked by a traditional gun salute in Hyde
Park and the Tower of London, while at Windsor Castle, the band played "Happy Birthday" during the changing of the guard.The queen has been
the symbolic head of the Commonwealth since her father king George VI's death in 1952, but its leaders agreed on Friday that Prince Charles
would eventually succeed her.The summit was overshadowed by a row over Britain's treatment of Caribbean immigrants, while Charles himself
also came under scrutiny.A non-white writer, Anita Sethi, claimed he joked about whether she was really from the British city of Manchester
when they met at a Commonwealth meeting this week.Sethi -- whose mother was born in Guyana -- said Charles asked her where she was from and
when she replied, said: "Well, you don't look like it!" and laughed.She wrote in The Guardian that she felt humiliated and angry, adding
that "some people, including the prince, urgently need a history lesson about immigration".(This story has not been edited by staff and is
auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)