Huddersfield Daily Examiner

HIGHLIGHTS IT’S TOFF AT THE TOP

-

Georgia ‘Toff’ Toffolo thought she had no chance of winning I’m A Celebrity... but proved herself wrong. Now she’s busier than ever. The Made In Chelsea star talks to about new challenges, self-confidence, and why she’s opening up about her ongoing battles with her skin speaking out about something really important to her – her ongoing battles with her skin.

Having suffered from acne and red marks since her late teens, she’s started a self-confidence campaign, and plans to go into schools to talk to young people about the issue. It kicked off with Georgia showing her face bare of make-up on TV for the first time. BY MOST measures, Jim Davidson has enjoyed a hugely successful career. The comedian hosted Saturday night favourites The Generation Game and Big Break in the 1990s and early 2000s, and is still popular with many viewers, as he proved when he won Celebrity Big Brother in 2014.

Yet he remains one of Britain’s most controvers­ial comedians, with critics accusing him of racism and homophobia. Now, he’s talking to Piers Morgan about those claims as well as his turbulent personal life.

He also opens up about his arrest under Operation Yewtree, for which he was cleared, and his

“I got very emotional, because it’s something that I’ve tried to mask for years,” she confides, adding the “perfect life” she portrays on reality show Made In Chelsea played a part in her hiding her acne.

“I needed a bit of a gentle nudge, but gosh, it really is just one of the most empowering, liberating things I’ve ever done.” ON AUGUST 18 last year, Britain’s showbiz world was rocked by the death of Bruce Forsyth. Although he was 89 and had been in poor health, it still came as a surprise because he’d always appeared to be so full of life. Sir Bruce’s Strictly Come Dancing sidekick Tess Daly hosts this programme, recorded at the London Palladium, which features many of his famous friends who offer their memories via anecdotes and musical performanc­es. AFTER a 10-year absence, Bafta-winning film-maker Molly Dineen is back with an intimate portrait of Jamaicanbo­rn reggae producer, businessma­n and Brixton community pillar, Steve ‘Blacker Dread’ Burnett-Martin.

Four decades after featuring in Dineen’s first film, Blacker invites his old friend to film his mother’s funeral, thus opening the door to his life at a time of great personal crisis. THE case of Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be hanged in Britain, has fascinated the public and has caused a great deal of controvers­y – it arguably contribute­d to the abolition of the death penalty in Britain and the introducti­on of the defence of diminished responsibi­lity. However, the crime for which she was convicted, shooting

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom