Temperatures rise steadily into this year. And just look at that peak. Now, of course, last month is part of a bigger picture. These squiggly grey lines you see here show the average temperatures across a calendar year. And this goes all the way back to before the industrial era began more than 200 years ago. The red line here represents 2016. That is the hottest year ever recorded. But look at this year from may youll see it here from may. Temperatures start to rise until they are way above the previous record. Little wonder that Scientists Say 2023 will almost certainly be the hottest year ever recorded. Diana urge vorsatz, a professor of the Central European university and vice chair of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change. Thank you for coming on the program. Those numbers sound startling. Should we be startled . We shouldnt be startled because should we be startled . We shouldnt be startled because unfortunately i should we be startled . We shouldnt| be startled because unfortunately we were expecting temperatures will keep rising if we dont take immediate, deep and sustained action to reduce emissions. Nevertheless, even compared to that these extremes are extreme and edges describe very well, even Climate Scientists are somewhat startled by this. Partially, fortunately this partly can be blamed by el nino and la nina, the ocean Current System in the Southern Hemisphere where if it changes the phase than it warms the entire world climate. Since we have for long been in the cooler phase and mentoring fast in the warmer days that means quite a sudden increase in temperature. What we can expect that this is still going to go out most probably because the most intensive phase of the El Nino Phase are going to be expected usually in december, january, february. The real bad impacts from this cam usually a year or even two years after the el nino event. [30 years after the el nino event. Do ou years after the el nino event. Do you think by a couple years time we will be breaking this record again . Unfortunately, thats the really important thing to understand. Even though hopefully, after probably this year is going to be the hardest in 2024 is even hotter than this year, hopefully after that we will have a little bit of decline in the Global Temperatures unfortunately, it is very likely that if we dont take more and stronger action on Climate Change that means that temperatures, global average temperatures, global average temperatures are going to keep rising in the extreme events we have seen this summer, which were really all the way from fires ravaging all around the globe, dams breaking, floods, storms, droughts, these are going to be even worse. Now we may be enjoying this mild september in most of the northern hemisphere, some wont have to turn our heating on that fast so we tend to forget that this is actually not good for civilisation to be so much warmer than before. Because what this summer showed us is were actually leaving the climate that civilisation has been built for, leaving the climate in which our infrastructure, our dams, our cities our systems have been built on and are headed towards a climate which we dont know how much infrastructure and our systems can survive. ~ infrastructure and our systems can survive. , ~ ,. , infrastructure and our systems can survive. ~ ,. , infrastructure and our systems can survive. , ~ i. ,. Infrastructure and our systems can survive. , ~ ,. , survive. Thank you very much for cominu survive. Thank you very much for coming on survive. Thank you very much for coming on the survive. Thank you very much for coming on the program. A theatre is claiming to have discovered a stage on which William Shakespeare performed as an actor. This would be the only known example in existence. St georges guildhall in kings lynn found the floorboards during renovations and believe they have the proof that shakespeare did indeed tread these boards. 0ur Entertainment CorrespondentColin Paterson has been for a look. The boards of the bard. We know that these were definitely here in 1592, and in 1592, we think shakespeare is performing in kings lynn. So this is likely to be the surface that shakespeare was walking on. Drjonathan clark was researching st georges guildhall in kings lynn as part of a council backed renovation project, when a discovery was made. We wanted to open up an area just to check, just to see if there was an earlier floor surviving here. And, lo and behold, we found this. Quite a thought that shakespeare could have stood right here. It is, isnt it . And its the only upper floor that weve got which is still in something of its original state, where he could have been walking, he could have been performing. The guildhall is the oldest Working Theatre in the uk with performances dating back to 1445. This wouldve been a level floor all the way back up the hall there. That is where the privilege people come to the wealthy wouldve sat. They would have been watching what was going on this end of the hall. If there was fox going on it wouldve beenin there was fox going on it wouldve been in this area. Shakespeare wouldve been on the spot. find been in this area. Shakespeare wouldve been on the spot. And when it comes to wouldve been on the spot. And when it comes to stages wouldve been on the spot. And when it comes to stages its wouldve been on the spot. And when it comes to stages its of wouldve been on the spot. And when it comes to stages its of course it comes to stages its of course something shakespeare wrote about. All the world is a stage in all the men all the world is a stage in all the men and all the world is a stage in all the Men And Women all the world is a stage in all the| Men And Women merely players. All the world is a stage in all the Men And Women merely players. But as for roof Men And Women merely players. But as for proof that Men And Women merely players. But as for proof that shakespeare Men And Women merely players. Emil ii for proof that shakespeare stood on this one. Weve got the Borough Account Books from 1592 93, which prove that shakespeares company was paid to play here in this venue. We know that shakespeare was on stage in 1592 due plus the london theatres were all shut that year due to the plague. So if shakespeare was playing anywhere in 1592 93, it was in this venue in kings lynn. Just watch out, mind your head. About the size of a tennis court, this floor is. 600 years old. Not just shakespeares trodden on it, but everybody else in between. And were trying to make that safe and share it with everybody for the next hundreds of years going forward. First up, a talk tonight in the theatre where their findings will be shared and debated and the future of the floor discussed. Joining me now is tim fitzhingham, who is Creative Director at st georges guidhall theatre. Hello, thanks for having me on. It seems absolutely remarkable. I know youve got a bit of a vested interest but are you convinced by the evidence . Its interest but are you convinced by the evidence . The evidence . Its pretty compelling. The evidence . Its pretty compelling. Weve the evidence . Its pretty compelling. Weve got i the evidence . Its pretty i compelling. Weve got the the evidence . Its pretty compelling. Weve got the Account Books from 1592, 93 which absolutely conclusively prove that William Shakespeares company, the company he was with at that point was paid by the borough of kingsland to come and play in the theatre in kingsland. We know this was the theatre because the first recorded performance is in 1445. Its quite that this was the player that shakespeares company was paid to play in. Secondly we know shakespeare was practising, wasnt just writing, he got a bad review in 1592 as well although not in kings lynn. It was her review describing him as a start crow for that we know he was acting on stage in 1592 for that we know the company he was acting with was paid to perform on this theatre in kings lynn. We also know that shakespeares comedian was born in kings lynn, possibly his closest collaborator in many ways. The comedian who players play the grave digger and the enforces in a scottish plate was born one street away from this theater. Im sitting backstage, and finally we know of an event that happened in the theatre, the Very Theatre Room today inspired shakespeare to change the course of the writing of the plot of hamlet. That occurred in 1592 93 the same time shakespeare was here. The event was a woman sitting in the front row watching the murder of Friar Francis, its told in two books published in shakespeares library, she was sitting with her second husband and at the point Friar Francis gets murdered she screamed out, i did it, i killed my husband it turns out she killed her first husband in order to marry her young second husband. And shakespeare were told here is this event that happened in 1592 93 the year we know shakespeare was in Kings Lynn Performing And Shakespeare writes us into hamlet in the oh what a rogue and peasant Slave Soliloquy for that where hamlet then says i hear that guilty creatures while sitting in a play see something that reminds him of what theyve done and likely to scream their guilt. Thats what moved hamlet to book the players for the players. That event happened literally in the theatre in kings lynn. Literally in the theatre in kings l nn. , literally in the theatre in kings lnn. ,. ,. Lynn. That is fantastic. I absolutely lynn. That is fantastic. I absolutely love lynn. That is fantastic. I absolutely love that. Stay bare. I want to bring in our panel. State they are. What did you think of all that . I panel. State they are. What did you think of all that . You think of all that . I think its remarkable you think of all that . I think its remarkable. I you think of all that . I think its remarkable. I am you think of all that . I think its remarkable. I am less you think of all that . I think its. Remarkable. I am less interested you think of all that . I think its remarkable. I am less interested in standing remarkable. I am less interested in standing where shakespeare stood, im more standing where shakespeare stood, im more interested in him standing where im more interested in him standing where were im more interested in him standing where were standing and telling us about where were standing and telling us about what he sees. I suspect he would about what he sees. I suspect he would have about what he sees. I suspect he would have something to say about power would have something to say about Power Corrupting and the deleterious effect Power Corrupting and the deleterious effect of Power Corrupting and the deleterious effect of willful ignorance. These are things shakespeare wrote a lot about are things shakespeare wrote a lot about if are things shakespeare wrote a lot about. If he could stand where were still or about. If he could stand where were still or he about. If he could stand where were still or he might have good advice for us still or he might have good advice for us i still or he might have good advice for us. I think its incredibly exciting for us. I think its incredibly exciting that this is been discovered. I wish we could have a conversation with the man. Absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond the absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond the fact absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond the fact of absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond the fact of knowing absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond the fact of knowing this absolutely fascinating. Same here, beyond the fact of knowing this is i beyond the fact of knowing this is where beyond the fact of knowing this is where he beyond the fact of knowing this is where he stood beyond the fact of knowing this is where he stood but beyond the fact of knowing this is where he stood but knowing beyond the fact of knowing this is where he stood but knowing that this particular where he stood but knowing that this particular place where he stood but knowing that this particular place had where he stood but knowing that this particular place had such where he stood but knowing that this particular place had such relevance. Particular place had such relevance in actually particular place had such relevance in actually shaping particular place had such relevance in actually shaping what particular place had such relevance in actually shaping what he particular place had such relevance in actually shaping what he wrote. | in actually shaping what he wrote. And what in actually shaping what he wrote. And what were in actually shaping what he wrote. And what were still in actually shaping what he wrote. And what were still seeing in actually shaping what he wrote. And what were still seeing and i and what were still seeing and reflecting and what were still seeing and reflecting on and what were still seeing and reflecting on hundreds and what were still seeing and reflecting on hundreds of and what were still seeing and reflecting on hundreds of years later~ reflecting on hundreds of years later~ its reflecting on hundreds of years later~ its not reflecting on hundreds of years later. Its not only reflecting on hundreds of years later. Its not only the reflecting on hundreds of years later. Its not only the fact reflecting on hundreds of years later. Its not only the fact thatj later. Its not only the fact that he was later. Its not only the fact that he was there later. Its not only the fact that he was there but later. Its not only the fact that he was there but the later. Its not only the fact that l he was there but the relationship between he was there but the relationship between him he was there but the relationship between him and he was there but the relationship between him and the he was there but the relationship between him and the theatre he was there but the relationshipj between him and the theatre and essentially between him and the theatre and essentially his between him and the theatre and essentially his legacy between him and the theatre and essentially his legacy which between him and the theatre and essentially his legacy which is essentially his legacy which is absolutely essentially his legacy which is absolutely incredible. Essentially his legacy which is absolutely incredible. Essentially his legacy which is absolutely incredible. Tim, i want to come back absolutely incredible. Tim, i want to come back to absolutely incredible. Tim, i want to come back to this absolutely incredible. Tim, i want to come back to this idea absolutely incredible. Tim, i want to come back to this idea of absolutely incredible. Tim, i want to come back to this idea of the l absolutely incredible. Tim, i want i to come back to this idea of the bad review that he got. What was it up start crow . What does that mean and what kind of reviews do we have of him as an actor . Brute what kind of reviews do we have of him as an actor . Him as an actor . We dont really have a lot him as an actor . We dont really have a lot for him as an actor . We dont really have a lot for that him as an actor . We dont really have a lot for that was him as an actor . We dont really i have a lot for that was shakespeare you constantly dealing with single documents that try and shed some light on shakespeare. Were dealing with Shakespeare Buying Grain at one point in his life. The bad review as i termed it is from Michael Greene born in norwich and it was published in 1592 for the Robert Greene says up in 1592 for the Robert Greene says up start crow, thats important for us because he refers to shakespeare as with his tigers heart wrapped in as with his tigers heart wrapped in a players hide. The reader is telling us shakespeare is a player, an actor notjust a writer. Of course that is a quote from one of shakespeares early plays as well where a quote from shakespeares early plays. Finally, he finishes it off with absolute, what we would call in 1592 Terms A One Star Review by saying that shakespeare is in his own conceit the only shake scene in the country say he is such a big head, look at him, hes an up start crow, he try to steal my thunder for the robert greens thunder. Its a Really Terrifying Review in 1592 terms. Really Terrifying Review in 1592 terms. ,. , Really Terrifying Review in 1592 terms. ,. ,~ Really Terrifying Review in 1592 terms. ,. , terms. I wish you could make a discovery terms. I wish you could make a discovery as terms. I wish you could make a discovery as important terms. I wish you could make a discovery as important as terms. I wish you could make a discovery as important as this i terms. I wish you could make a discovery as important as this every evening so we could have you on and listen to more wonderful stories. Thank you so much for coming on and talking us through that really appreciate that. Brilliant stuff. Brilliant thank you so much to him. Around the world and across the uk. This is bbc news. Bbc news bringing you different stories from across the uk. A stunning backdrop to the war memorial in abertillery. The cenotaph has stood here for decades, but now a new mural has got everyone talking. It was painted by the artist tea two sugars. The response of our office has just been astronomical. Its just been crazy. I think its because what it symbolises people giving their lives for what we have today. The man w