Fleetwood Mac singer Stevie Nicks has been immortalised in plastic – with her very own Barbie doll.
Modelled on the outfit the Fleetwood Mac singer, 75, wore on the cover of the band’s 1977 album Rumours, Nicks said the doll brings back “all the memories of walking out on a big stage in that black outfit and those gorgeous boots”.
Complete with short blonde hair, full fringe and smoky eye shadow, the Barbie also carries the singer’s iconic tambourine draped in ribbons. It is an instrument she regularly played during her time in Fleetwood Mac and still uses in her ongoing solo career.
The singer said her first fear when first approached by manufacturers Mattel was that the doll would not look like her or “have her spirit”.
These concerns have now been reassured.
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“I see myself now in her face. What we have been through since 1975, the battles we have fought, the lessons we have learned together. I am her and she is me. She absolutely has my heart,” she wrote on X (formerly Twitter).
As part of the process, Nicks sent the original Rumours outfit, complete with the Italian-made boots, to Mattel.
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“When Mattel first sent her to me, I told them her eyebrows are a little too arched and my eye makeup… I said you need to raise that dark eyeshadow above the fold in her eye and that will fix it,” she told USA Today.
“Then when I got her on June 22, I opened her up and I went, ‘she’s just perfect’.
“If nobody else in the world got her but me, I’d almost be OK with that.”
The doll is set for release on 10 November, but stocks have already sold out during pre-sale since it started on Monday, according to comments left by disappointed Nicks fans on the Mattel website.
Image: (L-R) Members of Fleetwood Mac: Mike Campbell, John McVie, Stevie Nicks, Christine McVie and Mick Fleetwood. Pic: AP
Some eager fans even reported the doll being put up on auction website, eBay, for $100 (£82) nearly double the $55 (£45) retail price.
Nicks joins the likes of tennis star Naomi Osaka, Elvis, Elton John and most recently the star’s of the 2023 Barbie film, Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling, to have their likeness replicated in a figurine.
The winners of this year’s Screen Actors Guild Awards (SAG) have been revealed – a major predictor of the Oscars, with just a week to go.
Demi Moore continued her run of success to be named best actress for her performance in body horror The Substance, while Timothee Chalamet picked up the award for best actor for his portrayal of Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown.
Image: Demi Moore adds yet another tropy to her collection for her performance in The Substance. Pic: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
While not a complete shock, before this Adrien Brody had probably just nudged it as favourite for an Oscar win for his performance in post-war epic The Brutalist.
Now, the race is closer than it has been in years – and both Chalamet, 29, and Moore, 62, could be on course for their first Academy Awards.
Following a BAFTAwin earlier this month, papal thriller Conclave was honoured with the top film prize, for best ensemble.
Starring Ralph Fiennes, Isabella Rossellini and Stanley Tucci, the film follows the drama of the selection process for a new pope.
Image: Conclave stars (L-R) Sergio Castellitto, John Lithgow, Isabella Rossellini and Ralph Fiennes with the ensemble cast award. Pic: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
Elsewhere, the supporting categories were true to 2025 awards season form – Kieran Culkin and Zoe Saldanacontinued their runs of success with wins for performances in A Real Pain and Emilia Perez respectively.
‘I want to be one of the greats’
Image: Chalamet attended with his mum, Nicole Flender. Pic: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
The awards are voted for by members of the SAG-AFTRA union and are held as a celebration of actors honoured by their peers.
For the best male actor announcement, Chalamet looked visibly surprised as his name was called.
After being accompanied by girlfriend Kylie Jenner to the BAFTAs last week, this time round he was celebrating with his mum, Nicole Flender.
“The truth is, this was five-and-a-half years of my life. I poured everything I had into playing this incomparable artist, Mr. Bob Dylan, a true American hero,” he said on stage. “It was the honour of a lifetime playing him.”
Making no secret of his ambitions, he added: “The truth is I’m really in pursuit of greatness. I know people don’t usually talk like that, but I want to be one of the greats.”
Moore said joining SAG-AFTRA as a teenager in 1978 gave her meaning as “a kid on my own who had no blueprint for life”.
Image: Jane Fonda was honoured with a lifetime achievement award. Pic: AP/Chris Pizzello
Actress and activist Jane Fonda, 87, provided the ceremony’s most passionate political moment as she was honoured with a lifetime achievement prize.
“We are in our documentary moment,” she said. “This is it. And it’s not a rehearsal.”
The word “woke”, she added, “just means you give a damn” about others.
The TV winners
Image: Shogun stars (L-R) Tommy Bastow, Shinnosuke Abe, Moeka Hoshi, Hiroyuki Sanada, Anna Sawai, Tadanobu Asano and Hiroto Kanai. Pic: Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP
The SAG Awards also include TV categories, with Japanese historical drama Shogun picking up the gong for best ensemble and its stars, Hiroyuki Sanada and Anna Sawai, named best actor and actress.
Only Murders In The Building took home the prize for best comedy ensemble, with star Martin Short named best actor in a comedy series.
Jean Smart, who had previously called for cancelling the awards shows due to the wildfires that hit LA in January, was named best actress in a comedy, for her role in Hacks. She did not attend, but gave a recorded introduction.
In the limited series category, British star Jessica Gunning was named best actress for Baby Reindeer, while Irish star Colin Farrell was named best actor for The Penguin.
Louis Theroux will be honoured with the prestigious National Film and Television School (NFTS) fellowship next month.
The renowned interviewer – who has been working in the business for over three decades, and whose Weird Weekends were the stuff of legend – admits he initially felt like “a trespasser” and “imposter” in his front-of-screen role.
Image: Theroux with students at the National Film and Television School. Pic: NFTS
Never going to film school himself, the now world-famous presenter and documentarian got his first job as a print journalist in America after graduating from Oxford University.
His big break came on Michael Moore’s TV Nation series, as a roving reporter delving into offbeat culture, later striking up a deal with the BBC resulting in Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends.
A first-person storyteller, who disarms his subjects with charm, Theroux’s interviews frequently result in the unexpected.
Commenting on his upcoming award, Theroux said: “I came into the industry more than thirty years ago, feeling like a trespasser, an imposter, in a role meant for someone else, worrying that I would be found out, hoping I could keep going for a few more months, since I was enjoying it so much.
“All these years later, I’ve learned that ‘keeping going’ may be the best definition of success.”
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Admitting that like those just starting out in the field, he too is “still figuring things out”, he said he hoped the fellowship would give him the chance to “connect with younger people… sharing the few things I’ve learned, and more importantly learning from them”.
Image: Theroux at the Church of Scientology building in LA. Pic: BBC/BBCWorldwide
Theroux went on to interview a host of celebrities in When Louis Met…, including Jimmy Savile, who is now known to have been one of the UK’s most prolific sexual predators.
Haunted by the interaction, Theroux would go on to interview some of Savile’s victims in a follow-up 16 years later.
Theroux has also fronted various documentaries across BBC1 and BBC2 and released the 2016 feature-length documentary My Scientology Movie.
The author of several books, he currently hosts his own podcast series.
Image: Theroux and his wife Nancy Strang in 2019. Pic: PA
In 2019, he set up his own production company, Mindhouse, with his wife Nancy Strang and filmmaker Arron Fellows, producing documentary film and TV series, as well as his podcast.
Theroux recently revealed he was suffering from alopecia, initially resulting in the loss of his eyebrows.
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NFTS chair Sophie Turner Laing praised Theroux’s “immense contribution” to the world of factual filmmaking, adding: “His ability to connect with audiences and uncover powerful human stories makes him a true icon in the industry.”
Previous recipients of the honorary fellowship include James Bond producer Barbara Broccoli, Wallace And Gromit creator Nick Park, director Sam Mendes and children’s author Malorie Blackman.
NFTS graduates have gone on to win 15 Oscars and 166 BAFTAs since the school opened half a century ago, with current graduates’ work on show at the BFI Southbank from Monday 3 March to Thursday 6 March.
The fellowship will be awarded to Theroux during the school’s graduation ceremony on Friday 7 March.
Actor and comedian Chris O’Dowd has described moving back to London from the US, finding people in the city are “down” after a decade of cutbacks.
The IT Crowd star returned to London from Los Angeles with his wife Dawn O’Porter and their two children a year ago.
“It’s just gone through 10 years of austerity, and you can feel it off it,” he told Sky News.
“People are down, is the impression I’m getting. I don’t know if it’s because of the divisive political culture or whether it’s because people are broke as s**t because they haven’t put any money into public services for so long, and now they’ve said they’re not going to do it either because they’re not going to raise taxes, so I don’t know what they’re going to do. But everybody is… it would be hard to say it’s improved.”
Asked if he sensed any optimism that things would change for the better, he replied: “Not yet.”
O’Dowd said the decision to return to the UK “wasn’t because Trump got in or any of that crap”, but that he wanted to “get out before the political cycle starts, because it just gets a bit heated”. He added: “It actually didn’t this time, because he won so easily.”
The Irish star was speaking ahead of the premiere of his new Sky Original series Small Town, Big Story, which comes to Sky and NOW on Thursday 27 February.
Image: Chris O’Dowd and Christina Hendricks in Small Town, Big Story
Set in the fictional Irish border village of Drumban, the dramatic comedy follows Wendy Patterson, portrayed by Mad Men’s Christina Hendricks, a local girl who found success as a TV producer in Los Angeles. She returns with a film crew in tow and is forced to confront a secret from decades ago – visitors from outer space.
So does the show’s creator believe in alien existence?
“I find it hard to believe we’re it, we’re just too imperfect,” O’Dowd replied. He hails from Boyle, County Roscommon, which is considered a “UFO hotspot” in Ireland.
“In the vastness of the universe, or the multiverse or whatever we’re existing within, it seems highly unlikely that you and me are the best we can do, no offence,” he added.
Image: The cast of Small Town, Big Story
Patterson’s show-within-a-show, titled I Am Celt but described as Lame Of Thrones, appears to satirise Hollywood’s often inaccurate portrayal of Ireland.
“Some of them can be heavy-handed, or a little bit off-piste,” laughs O’Dowd. “I think the thing to remember is we’re guilty of it too.
“Whenever I hear Americans being depicted from Irish people, very often they’re stuffing themselves with cheeseburgers and they’re morons. There’s got to be a bit of give and take with that.”