
Downton Abbey fans can meet one of the show's stars on this Caribbean cruise
Bonneville, famed for his roles as Lord Grantham in ITV series Downton Abbey and the beloved Mr Brown in the Paddington franchise, will join 2,000 guests aboard Queen Elizabeth on a 12-night roundtrip Eastern Caribbean voyage, which departs from Miami on 27 November.
The Emmy-nominated actor will offer guests a glimpse behind the curtain of his career in film, television, and theatre.
Bonneville will share anecdotes, reflections, and more during an intimate on board Q&A for Cunard's cruise passengers.
The sailing includes calls to Antigua, St Lucia, Barbados, St Maarten, and Tortola – as well as sea days to relax on the recently refurbished Queen Elizabeth.
Prices currently start from £1,049 per person based on two sharing a Britannia balcony stateroom.
Katie McAlister, president of Cunard, said: 'We're delighted to welcome Hugh on board Queen Elizabeth this year.
'He's one of the most respected actors in British film and television, and his talent, warmth and wit make him a wonderful addition to our award-winning Insights Speaker programme.'
Bonneville added: 'I'm absolutely thrilled to be sailing with Cunard in the Caribbean. There's something uniquely timeless and romantic about travelling by sea, especially when the ship is as elegant as Queen Elizabeth. I look forward to sharing a few stories, hopefully a laugh or two, and exploring the Caribbean with my fellow guests.'
The sailing is part of Cunard's insights speaker programme, which brings well-known personalities from the worlds of film, literature, science and beyond to sea for thought-provoking talks and exclusive events.
Other speakers include former special forces soldier James Fox of SAS: Who Dares Wins who will be on an Alaska sailing aboard Queen Mary 2 later this month, as well as astronaut Tim Peake who is joining a Queen Elizabeth sailing in Alaska on 20 July 2026.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
12 hours ago
- The Independent
Terence Stamp, British actor who portrayed General Zod in early Superman films, dies at 87
Terence Stamp, the British actor who often played the role of a complex villain, including that of General Zod in the early Superman films, has died. He was 87. His death on Sunday was disclosed in a death notice published online. The London-born Stamp started his film career with 1962's seafaring 'Billy Budd,' for which he earned an Oscar nomination. Stamp's six decades in the business were peppered with highlights, including his touching portrayal of the transsexual Bernadette in 1994's 'The Adventure of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert." Stamp also was widely praised for his lead in director Steven Soderbergh's 1999 crime drama 'The Limey.' But it will be his portrayal of the bearded Zod in 1978's 'Superman' and its sequel 'Superman II' two years later that most people associate with Stamp. As the Kryptonian arch enemy to Christopher Reeve's Man of Steel, Stamp introduced a darker and charming — more human — element to the franchise, one that's been replicated in countless superhero movies ever since.


Telegraph
12 hours ago
- Telegraph
Why Terence Stamp could have been as big as Michael Caine
The news that the actor, fashion icon and great survivor of the Swinging Sixties Terence Stamp has died at the age of 87 is somehow impossible to believe. Like another offbeat film star, Donald Sutherland, Stamp seemed to be as permanent a fixture in Anglo-American culture as it is possible to be, with his raffish, debonair personality (and famously high-profile love affairs) undercut by what could either be genuine menace or something almost otherworldly. Although Stamp did a vast number of films simply for the money, which he disarmingly confessed to have forgotten about as soon as they were completed, he was too much of a pro to be anything but interesting on screen; when he was good, there were few actors better. He played the devil, of course. Once, literally, in Pasolini's 1968 surreal psychological thriller Theorem, in which Stamp, at the peak of his good looks and dashing screen persona, visits an upper-class Italian family and not only seduces them, figuratively and literally, with his charm, but manages to make all of them dissolve into existential ecstasies brought on by the sheer force of his considerable personality. By the time that Stamp's so-called 'Visitor' withdraws from the family's lives, they are unable to cope without him and soon descend into chaos. So it will prove for many of Stamp's many admirers, especially his peers who first thrilled to his appearances in quintessentially Sixties pictures such as The Collector, Far From The Madding Crowd or – gloriously – Modesty Blaise. Or the new fans he won with his rather thankless appearance in one of the highest-profile films he ever made, the Star Wars prequel The Phantom Menace. Stamp memorably said of his inconsequential role as Supreme Chancellor Finis Valorum, an impotent would-be good guy left floundering by the machinations of Ian McDiarmid's steelier Senator Palpatine, that 'I didn't want to [play the part], but my agent leaned on me, and I wanted to meet Natalie Portman because I'd seen her in The Professional [aka Leon]. And I did meet her and she was absolutely enchanting.' In another, less guarded moment he lambasted the film's director George Lucas as '[not] a director of actors…[a man] more interested in stuff and effects', and called the experience of filming against green screens 'just pretty boring'. Of the then-18 year old Portman, he said: 'I must admit, I had a terrible crush on her'; such was Stamp's remarkable charm that this admission barely raised an eyebrow. It is incontrovertible that Stamp could have, and perhaps should have, been a bigger star. Michael Caine famously quipped of his one-time Wimpole Street housemate that 'I still wake up sweating in the night as I see Terence agreeing to accept my advice to take the role in Alfie.' Yet Stamp dealt with being a pivotal Sixties figure with a mixture of amusement and disinterest. When he was in a relationship with Julie Christie, they were immortalised by The Kinks as 'Terry and Julie', the couple in their great song Waterloo Sunset. But although Stamp dated many of the most famous women of the age, including the model Jean Shrimpton and, it is rumoured, Brigitte Bardot, he was never interested in becoming a tabloid fixture, or indeed a screen idol. He even once said 'I never imagined I was good-looking or attractive or anything like that.' Many of the first films that led to his success were both critically and financially successful, such as Far From The Madding Crowd – in which he starred opposite Christie as the dashing and fashion-forward but weak Sgt Troy – and his striking debut as the cherubic eponymous protagonist of Peter Ustinov's Herman Melville adaptation Billy Budd. Yet Stamp was always drawn to interesting source material and auteur directors rather than making bland and boring pictures. When he was suggested, inevitably, for the role of James Bond, it went badly: he later recalled that 'my ideas about [how the role should be portrayed] put the frighteners on [producer Harry Saltzman]. I didn't get a second call from him.' By then, Stamp was losing interest in mainstream cinema, and fled to an ashram in India for nine years, only making films very occasionally. Apart from two appearances as the arch-villain General Zod, fleetingly in the first Superman picture and more substantially in the second, he turned his back on blockbuster films altogether for nearly two decades. If you had been a fan of the dashing actor who had exhibited extraordinary swordplay-as-foreplay in front of an obviously impressed Christie in Madding Crowd, you would have to wait until 1984's The Hit, a cool-as-ice gangster picture in which Stamp was appropriately cast as an inexplicably calm informant, to see him in anything approaching a mainstream film. Yet for whatever reason – money, a wish to act more, boredom – he then became a prolific performer in projects that were often barely worth his time and effort. Sometimes, the films were good, as in Oliver Stone's Wall Street and the uproarious Steve Martin-Eddie Murphy comedy Bowfinger. More often, they were terrible. If you remember the likes of The Real McCoy, Genuine Risk or Red Planet, that is almost certainly more than their well-paid guest actor did. There were a couple of shining exceptions. Stamp often seemed like a grave actor, which is why his occasional forays into comedy were so welcome. When he played the stately transgender woman Bernadette in the uproarious 1994 farce The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, he gave what could have been a thin role dignity and charisma. He was just as good a few years later in Steven Soderbergh's terrific mob thriller The Limey, in which he channelled all the strangeness and intensity from his earlier performances into a superb, indelible lead as Wilson, an enigmatic Englishman who comes to Los Angeles to seek revenge for the death of his daughter years earlier. (Stamp's delivery of the line 'You tell him I'm coming! You tell him I'm f______ coming!' is simply magnificent.) It was not until his final on-screen role in Edgar Wright's Late Night in Soho that Stamp found another director who was similarly in awe of his warped, slightly askew charisma. With his mysterious character only known as the 'silver haired gentleman', the actor brought the authentic feel of Sixties London – half glamorous, half terrifying – to his supporting role. But by then, Stamp had been happy to coast along for years, giving interviews that only contributed to his sense of enigma. Talking to John Preston for this newspaper in 2013, he remarked that 'I don't really live anywhere. I stay with friends a lot, or just travel about from hotel to hotel.' When a bemused Preston asked where his home was, Stamp simply replied 'Oh, I don't have one. Haven't done for years.' Stamp wrote three volumes of memoir (one, brilliantly, entitled Stamp Album), a far-from-terrible novel, The Night, and a cookbook with recipes intended for those who were, like him, wheat and lactose-intolerant. He should be remembered not just as a great screen actor and inimitably eccentric man, but as someone who kept a healthy degree of scepticism about show business. He once confessed to being so poor in the Nineties that he was unable to afford a bus ticket, but had his own splendidly unusual means of making money. 'Fortunately I'd bought all this white wine, Chateau d'Yquem, in the Sixties. I hadn't drunk much of it, so, whenever things got tight, I could sell a case and that would tide me over.' Somehow, selling fine wine from that decade he helped define says far more about Stamp than any number of Star Wars blockbusters might. Long may this oddball wonder be remembered and celebrated. Terence Stamp's five greatest roles 1. Billy Budd (1962) It was somehow typical of Stamp that his film debut, in which he appeared at the age of 24, saw him nominated for an Oscar and Bafta, as well as winning him a Golden Globe for New Star of the Year. The awards boards were not wrong. Stamp's performance as the saintly, beautiful new crewman on board ship during the Napoleonic Wars, who arises first the lust and then the fury of the martinet John Claggart, is remarkable, bringing a strangeness and erotic tension to what may otherwise have been a relatively formulaic naval adventure. Benjamin Britten wrote a famous opera based on the same Melville novella a decade before, and could only have wished for a Budd of the same charisma as Stamp. 2. Far From The Madding Crowd (1967) Nicolas Roeg soon became best known as a director rather than a cinematographer, but it's his photography of Julie Christie and Stamp in this quintessentially Sixties Thomas Hardy adaptation that lifts what might otherwise be a dated picture into the realms of the sublime. Stamp always looked magnificent on screen – 'bone structure…my father had it too', he once explained, in a suitably offhand fashion – but what he does here is to turn Hardy's superficially seductive but weak and vacuous rake-sergeant into a figure of such gravitational draw that it's impossible not to imagine the entire cast, male and female alike, signing up to enlist if he'll be their officer in charge. 3. Superman II (1980) 'Kneel before Zod!' Whichever version of the Superman sequel you watch – the campier, Richard Lester-directed one or the reconstructed, statelier Richard Donner incarnation – there can be little doubt that Stamp's return to mainstream cinema proved to be well worth it. It was, of course, a payday gig, but the actor needed the work, remarking that, when he received the offer of the part, 'I remember opening the envelope, and there was a tremor in my hand. I think I knew that my life was about to change.' What Stamp does so well is to underplay the character of General Zod (in stark contrast to Michael Shannon in Man of Steel), giving him a curiously detached attitude to humanity that makes the comic-book villain seem just as inimitable a Stamp character as anyone else that he played before or afterwards. He acts everyone else – even Gene Hackman – off the screen. 4. The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994) Stamp expressed a certain degree of hesitation over playing the trans character Bernadette in the camp, outrageous comedy Priscilla, not because of any latent homophobia but because, touchingly, he was unsure that he was the right actor for a role that was miles away from anything that he had ever done before. The director Stephan Elliott's belief that the English thespian would do a magnificent job in the central part of Bernadette was swiftly vindicated. While his co-stars Guy Pearce and Hugo Weaving camp it up to high heaven – as the picture demands – as a pair of drag queens, Stamp's still, often very affecting performance counts as one of this fine actor's very best. It was once hoped that he would reprise the role in a sequel, but alas events have terminally intervened on that score. 5. The Limey (1999) Stamp appeared in two outstanding gangster pictures as a mature actor, this and Stephen Frears' masterly, enigmatic The Hit. Either could have appeared on this brief list, but while The Hit perhaps belongs ultimately to John Hurt, there is no doubt that in Soderbergh's full-throated homage to Sixties crime cinema, Stamp is the USP throughout. There were undeniably times in the Eighties and Nineties – and beyond – where it felt as if the actor was simply bestowing off-the-peg gravitas to projects that barely deserved him. But here, he was allowed to channel far more profound emotions, and his performance as a scrappy avenging angel, by times tender, feral and primal, has to rank as one of his very greatest.


Telegraph
13 hours ago
- Telegraph
Five things to know before you board a SeaDream Yacht Club ship
SeaDream, with its two 112-passenger ships styled like private yachts, was the vision of Norwegian entrepreneur Atle Brynestad, who began work at 16 making woollen sweaters. He founded Seabourn Cruise Line in 1986 and became chairman of Cunard when the companies merged 12 years later. But it wasn't until 2001 that he launched SeaDream Yacht Club after buying Seabourn Goddess I and II from new owners Carnival Corporation. The near-identical ships, now called SeaDream I and SeaDream II, retain their charm despite major modernisations. The line's slogan of 'it's yachting, not cruising' sums up a lifestyle at sea with high personal service, excellent food and al fresco dining where possible. SeaDream I and II sail mainly in the warm climes of the Mediterranean and Caribbean, giving passengers the chance to sleep on deck in complimentary personalised pyjamas. Every Caribbean cruise also includes a stop for uniformed crew to serve champagne and caviar from surfboards in the lapping waves just off a beach. Brynestad, a 71-year-old vegan whose empire also includes restaurants, hotels, a winery and a glassware maker, is still very much involved in SeaDream. A third, new-build ship was announced in 2019 and although that plan fell through, the line has confirmed it remains an ambition. 1. Where does it cruise? Both ships spend most of their time in the Mediterranean between April and October and the Caribbean the rest of the year. In summer, SeaDream I and II visit destinations such as the Greek Isles, the Amalfi Coast, the French and Italian Rivieras, Croatia and smaller islands such as Corsica and Hydra. In the Med, SeaDream also offers special wine cruises that include expert tastings and visits to vineyards. From 2025, the line is back in Northern Europe, with voyages to the British Isles, Norwegian fjords and overnights in 24-hour daylight above the Arctic Circle. If that leaves you wanting more, SeaDream is introducing grand voyages – two in 2025 and six the following year – ranging from 21 to 35 days, including one that sails along the Corinth Canal in Greece. The longest cruise, in November 2026, heads from Italy to Barbados, while another epic voyage earlier in the year will take 34 days to cross the Atlantic in the other direction from Palm Beach, Florida, to Oslo via ports such as Lisbon, Rotterdam and Copenhagen. In winter, SeaDream focuses on Caribbean destinations including the millionaires' playground of St Barts and the British and US Virgin Islands, as well as Barbados and less-travelled areas of the Bahamas. One highlight is the tiny island of Jost Van Dyke, population 300, where cruisers can be dropped at night to visit Foxy's or the Soggy Dollar Bar, followed the next day by champagne in the surf and a beach barbecue. When possible, crew will deploy an inflatable 23ft-long water slide from the pool deck directly into the sea – even in Norwegian waters for daredevils who want to test their endurance by plunging into chilly fjords. The swimming platform can also be used in the middle of the Atlantic when the ships transfer between the US and Europe. 2. Who does it appeal to? The vibe on SeaDream is casual elegance, with attentive service from the 95 crew and the freedom to do as much or as little as you want each day. Passengers typically range in age from their 30s to the late 70s with a strong base of couples, active pensioners and honeymooners. For romantics, crew will arrange an overnight double bed on deck strewn with rose petals. Other couples can sleep on Balinese beds at the stern – but, wherever they rest, all passengers receive personalised pyjamas with their name sewn on the pocket. Vegans can enjoy what's claimed to be the biggest plant-based menu at sea, though all tastes are well catered for in the range of food that extends from 24-hour room service to six-course dinner menus. Most meals are al fresco, with tables spread over three decks, and there is an opulent dining room if the weather turns. Dress code is relaxed, even in the evenings – think what you would wear on a private yacht. As well as the onboard jet-skis, kayaks and floating trampolines, active cruisers have the use of mountain bikes ashore or can join hikes and walking tours. Children aged one and above are welcome on the ships but there are no special facilities. 3. The SeaDream fleet SeaDream I and SeaDream II (112 passengers) The two ships are virtually identical with only the geekiest of cruisers able to tell them apart. Part of the appeal to regular customers is that they can choose either yacht and still feel at home. Built in the mid-Eighties, the sisters have been given multi-million-pound renovations with updated staterooms, teak decks and improved open-air spaces. Because of their size, none of the rooms have balconies but there is plenty of outdoor space for everyone from the Top of the Yacht bar, to the pool sunbathing area. With only five passenger decks, few people use the solitary lift. As well as the main lounge, holidaymakers can relax in the small spa or have a go on the virtual golf range. Drinks and tips are included in the fare, while nightly entertainment is provided by a piano player, singer and guitarist. Sails to: Europe, the Caribbean and transatlantic 4. Accessibility Both ships have a lift and offer adapted staterooms but accessibility is limited because of the small size of the yachts and the destinations they visit. Some beach landings are made by rigid inflatable zodiac boats. 5. Loyalty scheme After their first voyage, passengers automatically become members of the SeaDream Club reward programme which offers savings, on-board perks and advance notice of new itineraries. Insider tips Sweet dreams Once on board, get your request in early if you'd like to try the very popular romantic bed made up at night on deck at the front of the ship. Go with the flow Don't over-plan your days – meals are open for long periods with free seating and no fixed timing, but the early arrivals bag the best tables. Forget formal wear 'Yacht casual' is the norm even at dinner – but bring your swimsuit. Even though the pool is small, there might be a chance to try the water slide and the marina toys during your cruise Talk to the crew Most have been with SeaDream for years and have some great stories to tell, as well as valuable insider tips. Money matters Bargain hunters should book a transatlantic voyage, where 14 days – mainly at sea – costs from around £4,000 a person, much less than a week in the Caribbean.