Stephen Fry is set to address the reported rise in antisemitism in recent months as he delivers Channel 4’s alternative Christmas message this year.
The actor, comedian and writer follows in the footsteps of actor Danny Dyer, a deepfake Queen, The Simpsons and an AI robot, who have all delivered the speech in recent years.
Channel 4’s annual broadcast airs shortly after the official royal message on Christmas Day.
Fry, 66, will use his time on screen to talk of the “violence and destruction that’s unfolding” amid the Israel-Hamas conflict and address the reported rise in antisemitism in the UK, including shop windows being smashed and Jewish schools being forced to close.
Fry says he was driven to overtly claim his Jewish heritage in order to stand up to antisemitism and “hateful abuse”.
“There is real fear stalking the Jewish neighbourhoods of Britain,” he will say.
“Jewish people here are becoming fearful of showing themselves. In Britain, in 2023. Can you imagine, Jews afraid to be themselves in the open for fear of reprisal?”
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The former QI host will also talk about his sexuality and how it led to him believing he would see a “long, lonely line of Christmases” when he was younger.
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He will say: “Exclusion, exile and disgrace had been and surely always would be the fate of the homosexual.
“But, look, in my short lifetime – well, I think of it as short – Britain has moved towards an understanding and acceptance of gay love.
“All right, it’s not perfect of course, but what an improvement over the grim culture in which I grew up.”
First airing in 1993, the annual broadcast has served as an alternative to the monarch’s annual televised address and aims to bring viewers a message about the year’s events.