Princess Anne can’t help but soften around ‘fun-loving’ Zara Tindall as ‘tungsten royal’ becomes ‘just like any other mum’ when the pair are together, a body language expert has said.
An unearthed clip of the Princess Royal trying to get Zara’s attention during a joint appearance at Royal Ascot two years ago left royal fans delighted after the ‘amusing’ interaction was shared online.

The footage showed Anne seemingly trying to spot someone in the crowd before wandering over to Zara, who was engaged in conversation, for assistance.
However, Zara failed to acknowledge her mother as body language expert Judi James noted she had her ‘hat brim pulled down over the right side of her face’ such that she doesn’t see her mother’s ‘authoritative digit or chooses to ignore it’.
Anne then proceeded to tentatively tap her daughter on the arm, but to no avail as Zara continued her conversation without looking toward the Princess.
‘It’s the way Anne is forced to go back for a double tap on Zara’s arm that looks amusing from a woman who is normally never ignored and who can often be seen as intimidating,’ Ms James told the Daily Mail.
‘While her sheer presence would normally end any conversations she enters, she has to wait her turn like any other mum with Zara.’

The hilarious moment also showed Anne ‘drop her carefully-curated veneer of being the tungsten royal’ and allowed onlookers to catch a ‘glimpse of the maternal, tactile, and playful woman inside the almost military exterior’.
Ms James also noted that it is ‘ironic’ that while Anne is ‘the most formal and least emotionally-giving royal’, her daughter is the complete opposite.
‘Zara’s whole body language brand with her husband Mike is about showing deep love in public. She is as uninhibited as her mother is restrained.’
Anne likely inherited her discipline from her late father Prince Philip, as Ms James described the Princess Royal as the ‘sole keeper of the flame in terms of old-fashioned royal body language standards’.
Ms James also noted that these rare breakaways from her ‘royal persona’ could indicate that Anne believes the use of ‘powerful body restraints in public’ is part of her ‘duty’ as a member of the Firm.
By deliberately refusing a HRH title for her daughter, Anne gave Zara ‘the freedom to be openly expressive, free-wheeling and fun-loving in a way that she has never been’.

Zara has previously said both she and her brother, Peter Phillips, feel ‘lucky’ that they were not given a title at birth and ‘commended’ their mother’s decision.
Speaking on former rugby player Rob Burrows’s Total Sport podcast two years ago, Zara added: ‘We were very lucky that we got to do it a bit our own way’.
The hilarious moment is rare instance in which Anne (pictured) appears to ‘drop her carefully-curated veneer of being the tungsten royal’ and allows onlookers to catch a ‘glimpse of her warmer, more playful side’, according to body language expert Judi James
While it has often been suggested that Anne is the more stoic, less affectionate royal, her daughter (pictured) encourages the Princess Royal to breakaway from her ‘royal persona’
This is also not the first time that we have seen the Princess Royal’s ‘softer and more maternal side’ when she is with her beloved daughter.
Archival footage captured at the European Championships at Oxfordshire’s Blenheim Palace 20 years ago showed the moment Anne and Zara shared an emotional hug after Zara won gold at the equestrian event.

Royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams told the Daily Mail that, until this moment, Princess Anne was perceived as ‘severe and imperious’.
He recalled how she told reporters to ‘naff off’ when they photographed her after she fell from her horse in 1982.
This was what made the ‘sheer, undiluted joy’ of her and Zara’s hug ‘a delight to watch’, he continued.
Describing Anne’s visibly emotional reaction as ‘pleasure unalloyed’, Mr Fitzwilliams said: ‘What was significant, and softened Princess Anne’s image, was when the public saw them rejoicing together and hugging each other.’
In recent years, royal commentators and fans alike have suggested Zara should play a more prominent role in the family – especially with her mother.

It comes after royal onlookers were left in stitches when Zara, who accompanied the Princess Royal for a rare royal engagement in London, was seen hilariously munching on a biscuit as she walked behind her mother.
With Zara, Anne’s ‘softer and more maternal side’ is finally allowed to shine through and ‘remind us of the real woman inside the royal persona’
But this is not the first time that we have seen Zara bring out her mother’s affectionate nature. At the European Championships at Oxfordshire’s Blenheim Palace 20 years ago, Anne and Zara shared an emotional hug after Zara won gold (pictured)