Connect with us

Published

on

Sir Lenny Henry has called for the teaching of black history to be incorporated into the curriculum as “a seam all the way through” children’s education rather than a topic only touched on during Black History Month.

Speaking to Sky News about his new post-Windrush drama Three Little Birds, the comedian-turned-writer reflected on the importance of the month – but said there needs to be education outside of it, too.

“Black History Month is great for kids in school in this country, you know, it’s a ring space where they absolutely have to focus on all of these things,” he said.

Three Little Birds stars Rochelle Neil, Yazmin Belo and Saffron Coomber, with writer Sir Lenny Henry. Pic: ITV
Image:
Three Little Birds stars Rochelle Neil, Yazmin Belo and Saffron Coomber, with Sir Lenny Henry. Pic: ITV

“But I’m black all year round, black kids are black all year round, they need to have a sense of what’s been going on running as a seam all the way through their education, not just one month a year.”

Changing how we think about our shared history is about acknowledging how Britain has changed, Sir Lenny said.

“Everybody has contributed to this country and making it what it is. Our favourite dish in Britain? Chicken tikka masala. Second favourite? Curry goat and rice. Third? Kebabs. Come on, you can’t tell me that migration hasn’t contributed to this country.”

Read more entertainment news:
Meryl Streep and husband of 45 years have separated

Cher hits out at AI after fake version of herself on Madonna track
Striking actors told not to dress up as film characters for Halloween

More on Lenny Henry

Set in 1957, Three Little Birds takes viewers on a journey from the Caribbean to the West Midlands, following three women who decide to make the epic move to start a new life overseas. While the drama, according to Sir Lenny, was inspired by some of the tales his mother used to tell him, he’s keen to stress the characters themselves are made up.

“This isn’t my mother’s story, okay? Because my family is very litigious,” he jokes. “They will come and they will sue my backside.

“This is lots of people’s stories… if you move from over here to get away from poverty and starvation and war or whatever, to come somewhere safe and hoping to be accepted, then you will relate to this story. It’s not just for five Jamaican people in the Midlands, it’s for all of us.”

Rochelle Neil and Bobby Gordon as Leah and Shelton in Lenny Henry's Three Little Birds. Pic: ITV
Image:
Rochelle Neil and Bobby Gordon star as Leah and Shelton. Pic: ITV

From talent contest winner to Tiswas, primetime comedy regular to Comic Relief founder, Sir Lenny’s hugely popular career in entertainment has seen him cemented as a national treasure. And for decades, he has pushed for greater diversity behind the cameras.

“When my first production company happened I was able to say to my managing director, ‘It’d be really good if this was a diverse crew, wouldn’t it?’, and she’d look at me and go, ‘Okay darling, I’ll try’. And then you show up at work on the Monday and there’s people there who look like you… it comes from the top.

“If it’s not diverse people at the top, nothing is going to trickle down… they always say that we’re, you know, a little bit behind America and we’ve still got a lot of catching up to do… and it will happen, you know.”

Click to subscribe to Backstage wherever you get your podcasts

While Sir Lenny hopes in this latest work to bring to life both the struggles and the joy experienced by the generation who raised him after they came to Britain – it’s best not to get him started on politics nowadays.

When the subject of Home Secretary Suella Braverman’s decision to ditch key commitments made during the wake of the Windrush scandal, he emits a noise akin to a human car alarm going off mid-question.

“You’re not allowed to talk about her!” he shouts, cutting off a second attempt at the subject of politics by launching into Whitney Houston’s Greatest Love Of All, singing: “I believe the children are our future…”

While Sir Lenny Henry is now a serious writer, that trademark sense of humour is clearly never too far away.

Three Little Birds starts on Sunday 22 October on ITV1 at 8pm and ITVX

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Malcolm-Jamal Warner, who played The Cosby Show’s Theo, drowns in Costa Rica

Published

on

By

Malcolm-Jamal Warner, who played The Cosby Show's Theo, drowns in Costa Rica

Malcolm-Jamal Warner, who played The Cosby Show character Theo, has drowned in Costa Rica, according to authorities.

The country’s Judicial Investigation Department said the 54-year-old actor drowned on Sunday afternoon off a beach on the Caribbean coast.

It is understood he was swimming at Playa Grande de Cocles in Limon province when he was pulled underwater by a current.

“He was rescued by people on the beach,” according to the department’s early report, but emergency workers from Costa Rica’s Red Cross found him without any signs of life and he was taken to the morgue.

Warner was on holiday with his family at the time, according to US celebrity news site People.

The Cosby Show aired from 1984 to 1992 on NBC in the US and is regarded as a groundbreaking show for its portrayal of a successful black middle-class family. It was also shown on Channel 4 in the UK at around the same time.

 Malcolm-Jamal Warner in September 2017
Image:
Malcolm-Jamal Warner in September 2017. Pic: Reuters

Its star, Bill Cosby, played a doctor named Cliff Huxtable, with Warner in the role of Theo, his only son.

The NBC sitcom was the most popular show in America for much of its run between 1984 and 1992.

Warner played the role for eight seasons in all 197 episodes, winning an Emmy nomination for supporting actor in a comedy in 1986.

For many, the lasting image of the character, and of Warner, is of him wearing a badly-botched mock designer shirt sewn by his sister Denise, played by Lisa Bonet.

Warner ‘proud’ of show despite Cosby claims

The legacy of The Cosby Show has been tarnished after Cosby was jailed in 2018 following a conviction for sexual assault.

He was released in 2021 after his conviction was overturned.

Dozens of women had accused Cosby of sexual assault or rape before the trial.

Pic: Getty
Image:
Warner, back centre, with the rest of the cast of The Cosby Show. Pic: Getty

Following his release from prison, Cosby was found liable for sexually assaulting a woman at the Playboy Mansion in 1975 when she was a teenager.

Warner told the Associated Press in 2015: “My biggest concern is when it comes to images of people of colour on television and film… We’ve always had ‘The Cosby Show’ to hold up against that. And the fact that we no longer have that, that’s the thing that saddens me the most because in a few generations the Huxtables will have been just a fairy tale.”

In 2023, Warner told People in an interview: “I know I can speak for all the cast when I say The Cosby Show is something that we are all still very proud of.”

Read more entertainment news:
Danny Dyer on Mr Big Stuff
Scuffle breaks out on Royal Opera House on stage

Malcolm-Jamal Warner, left, on stage with singer Stevie Wonder, centre, and Bill Cosby, at awards show in 2011. Pic: AP
Image:
Warner (left) on stage with Stevie Wonder and Bill Cosby at an awards show in 2011. Pic: AP

Warner wins a Grammy

Following his career on The Cosby Show, Warner later appeared on the sitcom Malcolm & Eddie, co-starring with comedian Eddie Griffin in the series on the UPN network from 1996 to 2000.

In the 2010s he starred opposite Tracee Ellis Ross as a family-blending couple for two seasons on the BET sitcom Read Between The Lines.

He also had a role as OJ Simpson’s friend Al Cowlings in American Crime Story and was a series regular on Fox’s The Resident.

Films he has appeared in include the 2008 rom-com Fool’s Gold with Matthew McConaughey and Kate Hudson.

A poet and a musician, Warner won a Grammy for best traditional R&B performance for the song Jesus Children with Robert Glasper and Lalah Hathaway. He was also nominated for best spoken word poetry album for Hiding In Plain View.

Warner was married with a daughter, but chose to not publicly disclose their names.

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Danny Dyer on Mr Bigstuff, Oasis, and his surprising screensaver

Published

on

By

Danny Dyer on Mr Bigstuff, Oasis, and his surprising screensaver

From Human Traffic and The Business to his critically acclaimed performance in the raunchy TV adaptation of Rivals, via a stint as Queen Vic landlord Mick Carter in EastEnders, Danny Dyer has been on our screens for more than 30 years.

But it was his performance in the TV comedy Mr Bigstuff that earned him his first BAFTA win – and one of the ceremony’s biggest cheers from the audience – earlier this year.

Danny Dyer in Mr Bigstuff
Image:
Danny Dyer as Lee Campbell in Mr Bigstuff

Now, he returns to his prize-winning role for the second series of the Sky show, which tells the story of two estranged brothers – Glen (played by creator Ryan Sampson), an anxious carpet salesman living his ideal suburban life with fiancee Kirsty (Harriet Webb), and Lee (played by Dyer), an alpha male who struts back into his brother’s life carrying their father’s ashes.

The Campbell brothers in the Bafta-winning series
Image:
Ryan Sampson (right) created the series and stars alongside Dyer

Several EastEnders alumni feature, including Nitin Ganatra, Victoria Alcock and Linda Henry, who played Dyer’s on-screen mother, Shirley Carter.

Reflecting on some of Albert Square’s most famous characters and who would work well in Mr Bigstuff, Dyer says he would have loved to see the late June Brown, who played the chain-smoking hypochondriac Dot Cotton for 35 years, taking on a role.

“Absolute legend,” he says.

Sampson suggests the late Dame Barbara Windsor, who played the formidable Queen Vic landlady Peggy Mitchell, but has a clear pitch if season three gets the green light.

“It could still be a possible, it would be amazing,” he says. “You want your Pat Butcher, don’t you? You want Pam St Clement. Why hasn’t she played a mafia boss yet? She’d be amazing. She’d be incredible at it.”

Danny Dyer in the press room after winning the Male Performance in a Comedy Programme Award for 'Mr Bigstuff' during the 2025 BAFTA Television Awards with P&O Cruises at Southbank Centre's Royal Festival Hall, London. Picture date: Sunday May 11, 2025.
Image:
Dyer at the BAFTAs earlier this year. Pic: PA

Dyer reveals his screensaver

After his long career on screen, Dyer is now enjoying playing a variety of roles alongside the Cockney geezer types that became his bread and butter in the early noughties.

His nuanced performance as awkward entrepreneur Freddie Jones in Rivals brought him praise from fans and critics alike, and Mr Bigstuff his BAFTA.

But Dyer always had range. After small TV roles in shows including The Bill and A Touch Of Frost, he grew close to the Nobel Prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter in 2000 after auditioning and earning the role of a waiter in his play Celebration at the Almeida Theatre in Islington, north London.

“I’ve got Harold Pinter as a screensaver on my phone,” he says. “I always feel that he’s sort of looking down on me or close to me, so I like to just feel that he’s around me.”

Dyer continued the role in Celebration both in the West End and on Broadway, with Pinter becoming his mentor in the process.

Read more:
Police taking no further action on Kneecap at Glastonbury
Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner of Swansea football club

In 2020, he presented a Sky Arts documentary, Danny Dyer On Pinter, which explored the life, career and impact of the playwright and screenwriter, who died in 2008.

He also has plans to develop a stage tribute to his friend, currently titled When Harry Met Danny.

Reflecting on his entry into the industry, he says theatre was quite inaccessible at the time, but Pinter opened it up to him.

“I think it’s even worse now, which I feel is a sad state of affairs,” he says. “I don’t know why that is. Everything’s become quite elite. All the elite f****** looking after themselves, so that needs to change.”

‘Love in the air’ at Oasis gig

But Pinter isn’t his only big influence – Dyer was one of the thousands of fans to see Oasis make their return to the stage in Cardiff earlier this month.

“It was really emotional seeing them come out,” he says. “There was a lot of love in the air, a lot of good energy.

“You know, there’s a lot of f****** shit going on. I think people, of my age as well, just want to jump around and sing them songs at the top of their lungs. So I’m still recovering, I’m not going to lie.”

Mr Bigstuff returns for season two on Thursday, on Sky Max and NOW

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Scuffle breaks out on stage of Royal Opera House after performer unfurls Palestinian flag

Published

on

By

Scuffle breaks out on stage of Royal Opera House after performer unfurls Palestinian flag

A brief scuffle broke out at London’s Royal Opera House after a performer unfurled a Palestinian flag during a show.

The incident took place during a performance of Il Trovatore on Saturday.

During the final night of the 11-night run of the show, a performer held up the flag on stage.

In video footage, shared online, someone backstage could be seen attempting to take it off the performer. The performer grabs it back following a brief scuffle.

A spokesperson for the Royal Ballet and Opera said: “The display of the flag was an unauthorised action by the artist.

“It was not approved by the Royal Ballet and Opera and is a wholly inappropriate act.”

The reaction to the flag was mixed, with some people heard applauding and cheering, while another audience member was heard saying “oh my God”.

One poster on X, who claimed to have been a member of the audience, said: “Extraordinary scenes at the Royal Opera House tonight.

“During the curtain call for Il Trovatore one of the background artists came on stage waving a Palestine flag. Just stood there, no bowing or shouting. Someone off stage kept trying to take it off him. Incredible.”

Performers show support for Palestinians

A number of performers have shown support for Palestinians amid the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.

Read more from Sky News:
At least 34 dead after tourist boat sinks in Ha Long Bay
Migrants jailed in El Salvador released in prisoner swap

During Glastonbury Festival, numerous acts offered messages of support during their sets, including Kneecap, Bob Vylan, Wolf Alice, and Amyl And The Sniffers.

During her band’s set, Wolf Alice singer Ellie Rowsell told the crowd at the Other Stage: “Whilst we have the stage for just a little bit longer, we want to express our solidarity with the people of Palestine.

“No-one should ever be afraid to do that.”

Following their performances, both Kneecap and Bob Vylan faced investigation by Avon and Somerset Police.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

BBC ‘regrets’ not pulling Bob Vylan live performance

Bob Vylan were widely criticised after leading on-stage chants of “death to the IDF” (Israel Defence Forces).

The performance was live-streamed by the BBC, sparking a backlash against the broadcaster – which later issued an apology.

The investigation into Kneecap was later dropped, with the police saying there was insufficient evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction for any offence”.

Continue Reading

Trending