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In roles from Bond Girl to Medicine Woman, Jane Seymour s luxuriant hair has almost become a star in its own right. Now the actress has shared how she keeps her locks looking so fabulous. ....
Share This all sounds very Californian for someone who was born in Uxbridge, West London, still has the cut-glass accent she acquired at drama school here and is regarded by many Americans as the quintessential English rose, but that’s just the first and tiniest surprise of many in my conversation with Jane Seymour. She has lived an extraordinary life and is ready to talk freely and frankly about everything from playing a Bond girl at 20 to posing for Playboy at 67 – ‘I just thought they were crazy to ask!’ She’ll also reveal the heartbreaking secrets her parents kept, the startling out-of-body experience that changed her life and how she found the courage to confront a Hollywood predator. ‘That was the best acting I ever did in my life.’ Oh, and the spat she had with Robbie Williams about a country manor house, obviously. ‘His wife keeps telling me he’s very, very sorry.’ ....
I remember the buzz around Johnny Vegas at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1997. Everyone knew a star was being born â but a star of what, exactly? No one had ever seen anything quite like this overweight northern Englishman, screaming and sobbing at his audience, raging at lifeâs injustices â then breaking off for another bout at his potterâs wheel. Was this comedy, ceramics or a man on the verge of a breakdown? But the oddity â that defiance of categories â couldnât sustain a career. A handful of years after becoming the first newcomer to be nominated for the Edinburgh comedy award, Vegas went mainstream as a man with a monkey sidekick in an ad campaign for the pay-TV service ITV Digital. People shouted âmoonkehâ (Lancashire accent not optional) at him in the street. He became â and remains â a well-loved household name, albeit for a brand of (hoarse, boozy) comedy that partly obscures what made him extraordinary ....
Overflowing litter bin beside Regent’s Canal - Credit: Nicola Baird On a recent Grayson Perry’s Art Club, filmed in Barnsbury, Grayson’s co-host Philippa Perry stitched a cushion cover with the words “Nurture Nature”, riffing on her role as psychotherapist who unpicks people’s problems. It’s a reminder for us all as we start to emerge from a year of lockdowns into a decade which needs to see Islington reach net zero carbon by 2030. Clearing up rubbish doesn’t cut carbon or tackle climate change. But watching stewards take nearly two hours to collect and sort the picnic rubbish left all over Highbury Fields after the hottest March day (24.5C) in half a century you’d be forgiven for thinking that few of us nurture either place or planet. ....
Group founder Deborah Hancock A poem sent in by Adele Cordner Sarah Searle shared this lockdown poem, which she wrote at the very beginning of the pandemic “Grayson Perry got all this art and put it together, and it was just so powerful it brought a tear to my eye. “I thought it was something we needed here at the moment, and it’s gone down beautifully. I’ve been amazed at how quickly we have got a group of more than 150 together sharing art. It’s become a little ray of sunshine in my life.” Ms Hancock says she has been inspired to paint for the first time by the group, which she has shared on the page. ....