<p>From a Sex Pistols single to <em>The Simpsons</em>, <em>The Crown</em> and Andy Warhol works, Queen Elizabeth's pop culture cameos were frequent and often unforgettable.</p>.<p>Some depictions were affectionate, others more hostile, but the monarch's indelible image in art, music and film cemented her status as one of the most recognisable people in the world.</p>.<p>Here are some of her most memorable appearances:</p>.<p>With her eyes and mouth covered with collaged words, the cover of the 1977 Sex Pistols single <em>God Save The Queen</em> is one of the most iconic images of the punk movement -- and of Elizabeth II.</p>.<p>The artist, Jamie Reid, also created a version depicting the queen with a safety pin through her mouth and Nazi swastika symbols on her eyes.</p>.<p>Of the many other songs about the queen, the gentle <em>Her Majesty</em> by The Beatles in 1969 contrasts with<em> Elizabeth My Dear</em> on the 1989 debut album by The Stone Roses, where they declared they would not rest until she lost the throne.</p>.<p><em>The Queen Is Dead,</em> the title track from the 1986 hit album by The Smiths, featured lead singer Morrissey railing against media fascination with the royal family.</p>.<p>"The very idea of the monarchy and the queen of England is being reinforced and made to seem more useful than it really is," Morrissey told <em>NME </em>magazine.</p>.<p>"The whole thing seems like a joke. A hideous joke."</p>.<p>In 2005, electronic dance act Basement Jaxx imagined the queen on a night out in London for the music video for <em>You Don't Know Me</em>, showing her visiting a strip club and getting into a fight.</p>.<p>The queen sat for numerous artists during her reign, including Cecil Beaton, Lucian Freud and Annie Leibovitz, showing her in full regalia, at work or with her family.</p>.<p>But few captured the public imagination like Andy Warhol's technicolour silkscreens, as part of a 1985 series about reigning queens.</p>.<p>Warhol used an official photograph that he customised in a range of colours and styles -- a treatment also used to depict stars such as Marilyn Monroe.</p>.<p>Readily identified by her cut-glass accent and boldly-coloured outfits, the queen was much depicted in cartoons, television shows and films.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/queen-elizabeth-ii-passes-away-at-96-tributes-pour-in-1143491.html">Queen Elizabeth II passes away at 96; tributes pour in</a></strong></p>.<p>She popped up several times in cult US series <em>The Simpsons</em>, including in one episode where the main character, Homer, drove into her golden carriage on the grounds of Buckingham Palace.</p>.<p>The monarch featured in British satirical puppet show <em>Spitting Image</em> and in children's television hit <em>Peppa Pig</em>, where she jumped in muddy puddles.</p>.<p>She also featured in the movies <em>Minions</em>, <em>Austin Powers in Goldmember</em> and <em>The Naked Gun</em> among many others -- in some of them played by Jeannette Charles, her most famous British lookalike.</p>.<p>The queen rarely gave interviews and never retailed details about her most private moments.</p>.<p>But cinematic portrayals of the life she was presumed to lead behind the palace gates were many.</p>.<p>Laid out in films, plays and television programmes, all helped to shape public perceptions of the royal family.</p>.<p>She was depicted as a child in the Oscar-winning movie "The King's Speech", about her father King George VI's struggle to overcome his stammer, and as a monarch, facing public anger after the 1997 death of her daughter-in-law Princess Diana, in <em>The Queen</em>.</p>.<p>One of the most influential was Netflix's big-budget TV series <em>The Crown</em>, which told in luxurious detail the story of the queen and her husband Philip from before she ascended to the throne, complete with family rows, scandals and political crises.</p>.<p>After years of her image being used and abused, the queen took to the screen herself in 2012 in a sketch for the opening ceremony of the London Olympic Games.</p>.<p>She was filmed surrounded by her beloved corgis at Buckingham Palace as she met James Bond star Daniel Craig, who was dressed as the suave spy in black tie.</p>.<p><em>Good evening, Mr Bond</em>, she said, before the pair appeared to get in a helicopter, fly across London and then parachute into the stadium.</p>.<p>In 2016, she also appeared in a video with her grandson Prince Harry which also featured former US president Barack Obama, to promote the prince's veterans sports championship, the Invictus Games.</p>.<p>One of her last appearances was with the popular animated children's television character, Paddington Bear, at her Platinum Jubilee celebrations in June.</p>.<p>The pair shared a love of marmalade sandwiches and tapped out the beat to Queen's anthem <em>We Will Rock You</em> to kickstart a star-studded pop concert.</p>
<p>From a Sex Pistols single to <em>The Simpsons</em>, <em>The Crown</em> and Andy Warhol works, Queen Elizabeth's pop culture cameos were frequent and often unforgettable.</p>.<p>Some depictions were affectionate, others more hostile, but the monarch's indelible image in art, music and film cemented her status as one of the most recognisable people in the world.</p>.<p>Here are some of her most memorable appearances:</p>.<p>With her eyes and mouth covered with collaged words, the cover of the 1977 Sex Pistols single <em>God Save The Queen</em> is one of the most iconic images of the punk movement -- and of Elizabeth II.</p>.<p>The artist, Jamie Reid, also created a version depicting the queen with a safety pin through her mouth and Nazi swastika symbols on her eyes.</p>.<p>Of the many other songs about the queen, the gentle <em>Her Majesty</em> by The Beatles in 1969 contrasts with<em> Elizabeth My Dear</em> on the 1989 debut album by The Stone Roses, where they declared they would not rest until she lost the throne.</p>.<p><em>The Queen Is Dead,</em> the title track from the 1986 hit album by The Smiths, featured lead singer Morrissey railing against media fascination with the royal family.</p>.<p>"The very idea of the monarchy and the queen of England is being reinforced and made to seem more useful than it really is," Morrissey told <em>NME </em>magazine.</p>.<p>"The whole thing seems like a joke. A hideous joke."</p>.<p>In 2005, electronic dance act Basement Jaxx imagined the queen on a night out in London for the music video for <em>You Don't Know Me</em>, showing her visiting a strip club and getting into a fight.</p>.<p>The queen sat for numerous artists during her reign, including Cecil Beaton, Lucian Freud and Annie Leibovitz, showing her in full regalia, at work or with her family.</p>.<p>But few captured the public imagination like Andy Warhol's technicolour silkscreens, as part of a 1985 series about reigning queens.</p>.<p>Warhol used an official photograph that he customised in a range of colours and styles -- a treatment also used to depict stars such as Marilyn Monroe.</p>.<p>Readily identified by her cut-glass accent and boldly-coloured outfits, the queen was much depicted in cartoons, television shows and films.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/queen-elizabeth-ii-passes-away-at-96-tributes-pour-in-1143491.html">Queen Elizabeth II passes away at 96; tributes pour in</a></strong></p>.<p>She popped up several times in cult US series <em>The Simpsons</em>, including in one episode where the main character, Homer, drove into her golden carriage on the grounds of Buckingham Palace.</p>.<p>The monarch featured in British satirical puppet show <em>Spitting Image</em> and in children's television hit <em>Peppa Pig</em>, where she jumped in muddy puddles.</p>.<p>She also featured in the movies <em>Minions</em>, <em>Austin Powers in Goldmember</em> and <em>The Naked Gun</em> among many others -- in some of them played by Jeannette Charles, her most famous British lookalike.</p>.<p>The queen rarely gave interviews and never retailed details about her most private moments.</p>.<p>But cinematic portrayals of the life she was presumed to lead behind the palace gates were many.</p>.<p>Laid out in films, plays and television programmes, all helped to shape public perceptions of the royal family.</p>.<p>She was depicted as a child in the Oscar-winning movie "The King's Speech", about her father King George VI's struggle to overcome his stammer, and as a monarch, facing public anger after the 1997 death of her daughter-in-law Princess Diana, in <em>The Queen</em>.</p>.<p>One of the most influential was Netflix's big-budget TV series <em>The Crown</em>, which told in luxurious detail the story of the queen and her husband Philip from before she ascended to the throne, complete with family rows, scandals and political crises.</p>.<p>After years of her image being used and abused, the queen took to the screen herself in 2012 in a sketch for the opening ceremony of the London Olympic Games.</p>.<p>She was filmed surrounded by her beloved corgis at Buckingham Palace as she met James Bond star Daniel Craig, who was dressed as the suave spy in black tie.</p>.<p><em>Good evening, Mr Bond</em>, she said, before the pair appeared to get in a helicopter, fly across London and then parachute into the stadium.</p>.<p>In 2016, she also appeared in a video with her grandson Prince Harry which also featured former US president Barack Obama, to promote the prince's veterans sports championship, the Invictus Games.</p>.<p>One of her last appearances was with the popular animated children's television character, Paddington Bear, at her Platinum Jubilee celebrations in June.</p>.<p>The pair shared a love of marmalade sandwiches and tapped out the beat to Queen's anthem <em>We Will Rock You</em> to kickstart a star-studded pop concert.</p>