As the U.K. suffers from the COVID-19 pandemic, Queen Elizabeth II will be giving a rare televised address this Sunday that will hopefully lift her country’s spirits during this difficult time.

“Her Majesty The Queen has recorded a special broadcast to the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth in relation to the Coronavirus outbreak. The televised address will be broadcast at 8 p.m. on Sunday 5th April,” Buckingham Palace said in a statement on Friday.

Her appearance on camera only serves to highlight the severity of the pandemic, given that she has given only a handful of such addresses during her long reign as Britain’s chief monarch, according to Fox News.

Last month, the COVID-19 pandemic hit the royal family when Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, tested positive for the virus. In a video message on Instagram, Charles called upon the citizenry to practice social distancing. Fortunately, Charles experienced only minor symptoms.

“Having recently gone through the process of contracting this coronavirus, luckily with relatively mild symptoms, I now find myself on the other side of the illness but still in no less a state of social distance and general isolation,” he said. “As we are all learning, this is a strange, frustrating and often distressing experience when the presence of family and friends is no longer possible and the normal structures of life are suddenly removed. At such an unprecedented and anxious time in all our lives, my wife [Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall] and I are thinking particularly of all those who have lost their loved ones in such very difficult and abnormal circumstances, and of those having to endure sickness, isolation and loneliness.”