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Body Count review – dark laughs in a tale of Bonnie Blue-style sexual extremes

Body Count review – dark laughs in a tale of Bonnie Blue-style sexual extremes

The Guardiana day ago
'I would love you to rearrange my insides.' It's a shocking line that would stand out in an Edinburgh fringe show but belongs to OnlyFans content creator Bonnie Blue, whose invitation to more than 1,000 men to have sex with her over 12 hours is the subject of a Channel 4 documentary. In actor-writer Issy Knowles' monologue, the setup is similar: on a stage dominated by a bed and littered with condoms, Pollie arrives in a blue silk dressing gown to meet a thousand subscribers as she grants them each a freebie.
Pollie is given her own queasy lines of enticement to her fans. But how do you satirise a phenomenon – sex as competitive sport – that is already so extreme in nature? Knowles humorously deadpans Pollie's insistence that she finds her enterprise erotic, saying how sexy it is to oversee hundreds of legal waivers for the men. Pollie's discovery that her first visitor is above the age of consent is played as comic frustration, though the question of the character's predatory behaviour is not deeply pursued. Wearing fake plastic buttocks and breasts, Knowles trains a steely gaze and fixed smile on the audience, who are given the choice to wear balaclavas, like the men queueing for their turn, yet the scattering of masked theatregoers adds little to the atmosphere.
Knowles considers Pollie's religious upbringing and first boyfriends but also how society creates and reacts to such sexual extremities. This is done through a voiceover of interview-style questions, many of which are more probing than in Channel 4's documentary. Pollie compares her 'liberating' work with her past career as a consultant, the office tasks choreographed as sex acts. The movement direction is frequently bold to match the bluntness of the script.
The flashbacks can be indistinctive but Knowles also delves into the minds of the men in the queue, generally less held to account than OnlyFans stars, and their parasocial relationships with Pollie. She plays an incel spouting conspiracy theories whose violent fantasies are followed by erectile dysfunction. The writing balances dark humour with serious assessment of the men's discontent, anger and desire for control, recognising the role, too, of ragebait in Pollie's success ('hate is money … money is power'). She is always compelling in the troubling encounters with expectant subscribers who believe they are not just 'only' fans.
At Pleasance Courtyard, Edinburgh, until 25 August
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Bonnie Blue Instagram mystery as star vanishes hours after Ibiza Final Boss video
Bonnie Blue Instagram mystery as star vanishes hours after Ibiza Final Boss video

Daily Mirror

time15 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Bonnie Blue Instagram mystery as star vanishes hours after Ibiza Final Boss video

Controversial adult star Bonnie Blue vanished from Instagram just hours after posting an awkward video with 'Ibiza Final Boss' Jack Kay - and it's not the first time she's vanished from the platform Bonnie Blue vanished from Instagram just hours after posting a video with 'Ibiza Final Boss' Jack Kay. ‌ The controversial adult star - who has so far been banned from OnlyFans, a football stadium and Australia over her extreme and potentially dangerous sex stunts - went dark on the social media platform today, with her once verified account unavailable for hours. ‌ It's not the first time Bonnie has disappeared from Instagram. Earlier this year, her account on the Meta-owned platform went dark, as well as her TikTok page. The star's page has now dramatically returned, but it's unclear whether the Instagram account was banned or removed. It comes as 'Ibiza Bob' launches his music career with a cheeky single. ‌ The sex worker is notorious for using rage bait as the cornerstone of her marketing strategy, making any move away from social media a shock decision. She recently admitted in a divsive Channel 4 documentary about her life that she uses multiple different accounts on each platform to spam users with content designed to outrage viewers and drive engagement. She also boasted about mocking and belittling women in her posts. PR expert Sophie tells The Mirror of her social media scheme: "Her use of rage-baiting and hostility towards other women may also point to internalised misogyny or a competitive survival strategy in a space where attention equals power. "Publicly belittling others can offer a temporary illusion of control or superiority – especially when self-worth is closely tied to external validation, views, or notoriety." The mystery Instagram snub comes shortly after Bonnie's strange meet-up with viral Geordie raver Jack Kay. In a wince-worthy video from the Ibiza get together, Jack is seen with his arm draped around Bonnie as he faces away from her. Another moment shows the duo awkwardly making conversation, stood noticeably far away from each other. Following their encounter, Bonnie said in a now-deleted clip: "It was my shortest video yet. I was shocked how nervous he was." ‌ Bonnie has become notorious for taking part in extreme sex stunts, including sleeping with 1,057 men in the space of just 12 hours. And in recent months, her troubling career ambitions escalated to the point where OnlyFans, the site where she made a name for herself, decided she was no longer a good fit. The final straw came in June, when the 26-year-old announced her plans to hold a human "petting zoo challenge". 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‘I knew my job was to fulfil a man's fantasy': Elizabeth McGovern on Downton, early fame and co-starring with Brad Pitt
‘I knew my job was to fulfil a man's fantasy': Elizabeth McGovern on Downton, early fame and co-starring with Brad Pitt

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘I knew my job was to fulfil a man's fantasy': Elizabeth McGovern on Downton, early fame and co-starring with Brad Pitt

For the maudlin among us, the final Downton Abbey film should perhaps come with a warning. Everything in it is tinged with wistfulness – a goodbye to cherished characters and a farewell to a stately home that was a sturdy presence in a transient world. When the ITV series started in 2010, wasn't life … better? Did Elizabeth McGovern feel this too, the sense of time passing? After all, her character, Cora, is now ageing out of custodianship of Downton along with her husband, Lord Grantham, in favour of a younger generation and a changing era as the 1930s dawn. 'No!' says McGovern, snapping me out of my melancholy. 'I feel very excited that I'm going into a gratifying new phase in my career.' As well as reviving Cora, there is the play she has written, Ava: The Secret Conversations. Starring McGovern as Hollywood actor Ava Gardner, it will run in New York, Chicago and Toronto, having made its debut in London in 2022. There is also a new album of her folk-inspired music. 'I feel like I'm just beginning,' she declares as we meet at her publicist's London office. At first glance, McGovern, fine-boned and composed, seems delicate – but if you only go on first impressions, you'll miss her rebellious spirit. Not that making Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale wasn't emotional. 'You don't have to work very hard, as a film-maker, to touch on that depth, because we've been working on it for so many years,' she says. McGovern worried that the absence of Maggie Smith – who died last year after giving the show the brilliantly scathing Dowager Countess – would feel like too big a loss to the Downton world. But she says Smith's presence 'permeates' it. 'She's still very much in the atmosphere. I don't feel there's a big hole. In fact, in some ways, it sort of freed up the rest of the narrative to have a flow, because it's not stopping for her moments. But everything she represents is there. She's in every room, in every interaction, so it's not like she's not there. It's a weird thing.' The women of Downton, whether the steely Lady Mary or spirited young cook Daisy, are gratifyingly tough, but Cora, usually quietly supportive in the background, never seemed that robust, even though it was her money – as an American heiress – that was running everything. Was that difficult to play? 'At times, yes,' says McGovern. 'I think as a contemporary woman, it is hard to feel the straitjacket of that period.' Did she ever fight for Cora to have more agency? 'I wish at times she could have had more interesting stories,' says McGovern, but adds that it wouldn't have been appropriate for her to have had 'any more political or social power, because it just wouldn't be accurate to the time'. Cora, though, is a vision of an exciting America; the daughter of a Jewish immigrant installed at Downton with her bags of new money and her progressive outlook. 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This was followed by a part in Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in America, opposite Robert de Niro. 'I think I did feel like, 'Gosh, this isn't as hard as people say.'' She smiles. 'Until I later experienced how difficult it is. My experience early on was just trying to keep my head on straight, do job after job, and do what most people are doing at that age – try to grow up. I only realised later how difficult it is to sustain a career.' Hers wasn't a showbiz family: her parents were teachers. And although she has loved acting since she was a child, it was never about becoming a star. As a young woman in an often dangerous industry, this probably protected her. 'I was never desperate, so I could always just walk away. A lot of young women didn't feel they could. I think I was very lucky.' It also made her see the downsides of fame. 'I think I did manage to avoid it myself, but the price you pay for fame is that it becomes really hard to have any relationships of intimacy, because you are collateral. Your whole being has sort of been sold, and that creates a tension about what people want from you.' A lot of McGovern's early roles were as the girlfriend to the male lead. Then, she says: 'I went from being the girlfriend to the perfect wife, and that I found frustrating. Most movies, television – it's always the man's point of view. It's such a deep, subliminal thing that audiences are not even aware of it. I wasn't even particularly aware of it. I knew my job early on was to fulfil a man's fantasy of the woman they wanted. It never occurred to me to even question it.' Brad Pitt played McGovern's boyfriend in the 1994 comedy The Favor. We joke – bitterly – that were she to be in a film with him now, she would probably be cast as his mother. This says a lot about what's still considered desirable in a woman even though, at 64, McGovern is only three years Pitt's senior. 'I really don't think that, just because society is viewing something that way, we have to. I try to have this discussion with my daughters. We can have a feeling independent of the consensus in society. I've just done my own thing and just kept doing it.' She bristles, not unreasonably, when I point out that her embracing her silver hair seems rare in her business. Was that a political decision? 'Not really. But once again, I feel like a woman my age – that's what we're asked to talk about. I regret that about society.' There is something bracing about the way McGovern carves her own path. She left Hollywood and moved to London to start a family; she has two grownup daughters with her husband, the film-maker and producer Simon Curtis (who directed The Grand Finale). Approaching her 40s, she started a band, Sadie and the Hotheads, and started releasing music. 'I have to remind myself,' she says, 'that people will either like it or they won't – and whatever they feel is fine with me. It's about doing it.' In her 50s, she wrote her play about Gardner, drawn to the actor's independent spirit. Now in her 60s, she is writing a screenplay, although she won't say what it's about. 'It's my next obsession. I really want to write stuff. I'm really excited about that.' Doing so is partly a way to create interesting work for herself as an older actor. There has certainly been plenty of talk about this – does she think the situation has improved? 'Not that I've noticed.' She loved the recent show Dying for Sex, in which Michelle Williams plays a terminally ill woman in her 40s who embarks on a last attempt at sexual exploration. 'It's such a female story. I found that to be really encouraging, but it's not going to be about someone my age.' Why? Is it because society considers the thought of older women having a sex life shocking? 'I think possibly, yes. I mean, what can we do as women, except just keep going and not buy into it? We have no other choice.' If it takes a bit of effort, the pay-off is surely worth it – if McGovern and her outlook are anything to go by. 'It's a daily exercise in getting your head tuned into the right thing. It's not that I blame anyone for accepting the status quo, but it doesn't mean I have to. No way.' She laughs. 'No way.' Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale is out on 11 September in Australia, and 12 September in the UK and US. Ava: The Secret Conversations is at New York City Center until 14 September.

Four bedroom home looks normal from the outside… but wait until you see what's hidden behind closed doors
Four bedroom home looks normal from the outside… but wait until you see what's hidden behind closed doors

The Sun

time15 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Four bedroom home looks normal from the outside… but wait until you see what's hidden behind closed doors

THIS four bedroom home may look completely normal from the outside - but there's a hidden secret inside. The Grade-II listed house that was once home to Lord Byron has hit the market for £850,000. 6 6 6 Centrally located, the Nottingham residence is hard to miss. It boasts four bedrooms spread across 3,287 square feet and is steeped in local history. Since Byron's days there, the building has been "sympathetically restored" and has all the modern amenities a family could need. This includes a bespoke kitchen, two reception rooms and four bathrooms. The home is decorated in neutral tones with stylish finishes throughout and is flooded with natural light, according to Luxury Property News. Accessed via a driveway with gated access, its based in the historic St James' Street in the city centre. Meanwhile the outside space consists of a courtyard with patio decking and raised planters for a 'low maintenance' garden space. The house is currently available with Savills who described it as a 'magnificent property full of light'. But while it may have many impressive features, underneath the house is every bit as note-worthy. A stunning labyrinth of caves lurks beneath the historic property. We moved into a caravan in my mother-in-law's garden for a year, sure it was cramped but we saved £20k They're used as cellars that spread across two basement levels beneath the main living spaces above. The space has lighting, electrics and heating too and can be used for multiple purposes. The property was home to Lord Byron between the ages of 10 and 12 before he became one of Britain's most celebrated poets. A plaque adorns the front of the house dedicated to Byron explaining that he lived there between 1798 and 1799. Other homes with hidden secrets aren't uncommon either - although some are more impressive than others. The Sun recently reported on an eccentric home in Shropshire with a peculiar feature within. The home comes complete with an exposed toilet at the top of the stairs providing a live studio audience experience on the loo. While another home in Blackpool has undergone a jaw-dropping transformation even though it looks entirely ordinary from the outside. The owners spent nearly two years converting the modest semi-detached property into a high-spec holiday home complete with a private nightclub and cinema room. It even has space for 24 guests with nine en-suite bedrooms and 15 beds. 6 6 6

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