Death in Paradise season 12: Could Florence become the next detective? | TV & Radio | Showbiz & TV express.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from express.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Best Medicine event on the first anniversary of lockdown
A series of online events exploring the links between comedy and mental health is to be launched on the anniversary of the first lockdown.
Ruby Wax, Tim Key and Felicity Ward are among the comics taking part in the Best Medicine Festival, which aims to celebrate the way in which comedy can both destigmatise and raise awareness of mental health issues.
The festival kicks off on Tuesday March 23 with its keynote event: a panel discussion with comedians Ruby Wax, Kemah Bob, Ahir Shah, psychiatrist and comedian Dr Benji Waterhouse, comedian and Angel Comedy co-founder and psychotherapist Sarah Pearce, and chaired by Martin Willis.
This sounds like such a good idea for the BBC show! March 11, 2021 - 15:08 GMT Emmy Griffiths Ralf Little has opened up about how Humphrey Goodman could potentially return to Death in Paradise - and we love it
Ralf Little has opened up about how he thinks
Death in Paradise could incorporate a storyline that sees Kris Marshall’s character DI Humphrey Goodman return to the series (along with some other old faces) - and we love it!
Chatting to HELLO!, the actor suggested that Humphrey could take over temporarily after his character, DI Neville Parker, is taken ill. He said: “It would be fun if [Kris Marshall’s character] has to get flown out because I m taken ill and
Comics give messages to their younger selves : News 2021 : Chortle : The UK Comedy Guide chortle.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chortle.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Why Tim Key’s poems are the only thing getting me through lockdown Matt Boytwitch, Rishi Perfect, Bohnson on a swing in the Downing Street rose garden – the comedian has produced some of the greatest political cartoons of the pandemic. The poet and comedian Tim Key is not a political man. He can express opinions on the government one-on-one, “when I’m on safe ground”, he tells me, but not, say, at a dinner party. Yet Key s poems are some of the greatest political cartoons of the pandemic. Those he wrote in the past year – roughly one per day
– fell broadly into two categories: the things that people were doing at home during lockdown, and the things being done on the 5pm broadcasts, every day, at No 10, in the room with the flowery carpet.