
EastEnders legend 'much happier' since quitting after 30 years
She also has a podcast, Life With Nat, and in a recent episode she chatted with fellow EastEnder Kellie Bright, who plays Linda Carter in the BBC soap, and opened up about her own feelings about leaving the show.
Natalie left EastEnders earlier this year, after playing the role of Sonia Fowler for 32 years. She joined the soap in 1993 and over the years was part of some of the show's most memorable storylines.
In a statement at the time she said it was time to move on to pastures new. 'EastEnders is in my bones so I will never forget where I started my career and I will continue to love the show,' she said.
Now, speaking to Kellie in the podcast, she said that she has no regrets about the decision.
'I don't miss it, I don't. I miss the people. It's full on,' she told her former colleague.
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'I do feel happier doing the things I'm doing now. I always feel like I have to say it, I loved it, I'm grateful for it but I did fall into it and that was that, and that's what I did for 30 years, I don't know if I was meant to do that.'
Kellie insisted that she thought Natalie was meant to do exactly that. 'I grew up watching Sonia, like the rest of the nation, and I loved you in the show all the way through. I loved your character, what you created. You're a brilliant actress, Nat.'
With many more strings to her bow, Natalie's book Happy Days will be released in October. The book promises to cover a lot of ground, 'taking her readers on a journey through the highs and lows and the changing seasons of life. From yo-yo diets to raising strong girls, coping with grief to getting acting lessons from June Brown.' More Trending
She's also fronted a consumer rights show on Channel 4 called What's The Big Deal: Britain's Best Buys, while Cooking With The Stars sees her competing against stars including Jordan North, Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu and Hugh Dennis to showcase her culinary skills.
Despite all this there's an element of life on EastEnders that Natalie does miss.
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'I loved the prep, getting the scripts,' she recalled. 'I never got bored of getting a script. I never felt bored or thought, 'Oh, here we go, we've got to undo it all and do it my way and see what's happening.' I never lost that in all of those 32 years.'
If you've got a soap or TV story, video or pictures get in touch by emailing us soaps@metro.co.uk – we'd love to hear from you.
Join the community by leaving a comment below and stay updated on all things soaps on our homepage.
MORE: Suspended EastEnders star Jamie Borthwick enjoys day out with co-stars amid slur scandal
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New Statesman
2 hours ago
- New Statesman
Dua Lipa, the people's critic
I don't think it's too much of a reach for me to assume that, if you're reading this, your preferred method of consuming literary criticism is in the pages of an esteemed 122-year-old magazine, perhaps alongside the weekend newspaper supplements. That's not to say you don't do other media. Perhaps you were a fan of Radio 4's Open Book before the BBC shuttered it at the end of last year. You might never miss an episode of the much-loved Backlisted podcast. It's likely you get to the Hay or Cheltenham festivals when you can. But the foremost champion of books right now, you might be surprised to hear, is a pop star. Dua Lipa's Service95 Book Club, for which the global pop powerhouse interviews acclaimed authors, has been a regular fixture on YouTube since 2023. In that time, Lipa has spoken to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Hernán Díaz, the Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk and the novelist-turned-public intellectual Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Clearly, Lipa has taste. The singer's love of books extends beyond this platform: she often posts pouty Instagram portraits where she holds up a recommended title, and has for several years been associated with the Booker Prize, speaking movingly at its 2022 ceremony about how reading the works of the novelist Ismail Kadare as a teenager helped her connect with her family's Kosovan-Albanian heritage. 'I often wonder if authors realise just how many gifts they give us,' she said then. Now, Service95 Book Club is available in podcast form. It delivers, for all intents and purposes, a classic author interview format: Lipa introduces a writer, and together they discuss the major themes of one of their books. She asks about the origin of the tale, as well as their linguistic and formal choices. Across 40-45 minutes, the episode becomes a thorough exploration of the text in question. Lipa's podcast isn't revolutionary. It doesn't imagine a new critical form altogether in the way BookTok did five or so years ago. But it nonetheless marks a significant shift in the landscape of mainstream literary media. As many publications' literary pages have steadily decreased in number and readership, book coverage on the radio has thinned and decent literary programming on TV remains a fantasy, a new approach has emerged: here is a glamorous, 29-year-old chart-topper taking a break from headlining stadiums around the world to lead the charge for books. The book snobs won't want to hear it, but for the most part Lipa is a satisfying interviewer. She chooses quality texts, not just the obvious latest bestsellers. In recent months her guests have included Max Porter, the author of Grief Is the Thing with Feathers, and Guadalupe Nettel, the Mexican writer whose novel Still Born has found acclaim in English translation. Lipa selects books published by independent presses as well as the 'Big Five', is unafraid of tackling weighty political themes, and isn't confined by the publishing cycle, often choosing titles that appeared years ago. Like any good critic, she thinks deeply about each of the texts she discusses. Her recent episode with Vincent Delecroix, the French author of the International Booker-shortlisted novel Small Boat – a story of 27 migrants who die while crossing the Channel, told from the perspective of an onshore operator who refuses to provide help – is a showcase in close reading and moral clarity. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Admittedly, not all of the episodes are stellar: Lipa's chat with the American novelist Ocean Vuong gets a little soppy and self-congratulatory, and I have once too often heard her perform a real bugbear of mine: answering her own question in the question, therefore assuming a response rather than leaving it open for the author. But there is no doubt she is championing literary culture among a generation – hell, a population – for whom reading has become passé compared to screen addiction. Last year the National Literacy Trust found that only 35 per cent of children over the age of eight enjoy reading in their spare time, the lowest figure ever recorded, while more recent polling by YouGov has found that 40 per cent of Britons have not read or listened to a book in the past year. Lipa's podcast alone is never going to solve the calamitous demise of reading for pleasure. But even if a sliver of her listenership buy or borrow a book they otherwise wouldn't have, it's unquestionably a worthwhile project – for her, for those readers, and for all of us who love literature. Ellen Peirson-Hagger covers education as senior writer at 'Tes', and music and books as a freelance writer [See also: Long live the solar power revolution] Related This article appears in the 07 Aug 2025 issue of the New Statesman, Summer Special 2025


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Ozzy Osbourne leans on wife Sharon in one of their last photos together as part of first glimpse at moving new documentary
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The wife of the music legend also revealed how Ozzy was blown away by the support at the concert. She explained: 'He [Ozzy] turned around and he said to me that night, he said, 'I had no idea that so many people liked me'.' Ozzy took to the stage for his farewell concert at Villa Park stadium in his native Birmingham less than three weeks before his death - reuniting with his original Black Sabbath bandmates for the first time since 2005. The concert was to raise money for three charities: Cure Parkinson's, Birmingham Children's Hospital, and Acorns Children's Hospice. More than 42,000 fans packed into the venue for the Back To The Beginning show, during which he told the crowd in his final speech: 'You've no idea how I feel - thank you from the bottom of my heart.' A message on screen then read: 'Thank you for everything, you guys are f***ing amazing. Birmingham Forever,' before the sky lit up with fireworks. 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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
MasterChef loses nearly 1MILLION viewers as new series airs after both presenters Gregg Wallace and John Torode were sacked
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