logo
Ian McKellen delights fans with surprise appearance at Scissor Sisters gig

Ian McKellen delights fans with surprise appearance at Scissor Sisters gig

Leader Live24-05-2025

The US pop group, who celebrated the 20-year anniversary of their debut album last year, have recently reformed and are playing a series of shows across the UK.
Fans at the O2 screamed and cheered as the 85-year-old actor took to the stage to recite spoken-word vocals for the band's hit song Invisible Light.
During his brief appearance the Lord Of The Rings star read out the monologue he performed on the recorded version of the track which was first released in 2010.
Sir Ian McKellen onstage at the O2 with the Scissor Sisters tonight #lgbt #scissorsisters #gigs #LGBTQI #actors #bbc pic.twitter.com/mSDWbCUkyU
— Dr Shaun Dellenty B'Ed/NPQH/FRSA/FCCT (@ShaunDellenty) May 23, 2025
Fans at the concert took to social media to share their delight at Sir Ian's cameo.
One fan wrote on X: 'Absolute mayhem as Sir Ian McKellen does a dramatic reading of his lines from Invisible Light, one of my favourite scissor sisters songs of all time.
'Cried a little, just so blessed to see this.'
Another wrote: 'A concert cameo like no other.
'Sir Ian McKellen has blown The O2 roof off at The Scissor Sisters' 21st anniversary tour.'
Sir Ian McKellen joins Scissor Sisters for Invisible Light onstage at The O2. Iconic tbh pic.twitter.com/s7vnCNmWE9
— Nick Levine (@mrnicklevine) May 24, 2025
Another surprise appearance was from Rebecca Lucy Taylor, known better by her stage name Self Esteem, who joined the group for a rendition of Take Your Mama.
The group – including lead singer Jake Shears, multi-instrumentalist Babydaddy and guitarist Del Marquis – are performing their first live shows in 12 years.
Singer Ana Matronic decided not to join the tour as she has 'other projects she is focusing on right now', according to a statement from the group.
The group have upcoming gigs at the Utilita Arena in Birmingham, the SSE Arena in Belfast and 3Arena in Dublin, as part of their UK and Ireland tour.
Scissor Sisters rose to prominence in the early 2000s with a colourful style blending multiple genres and pioneering LGBT+ representation in mainstream music.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sexy BBC drama star in the frame to play Elizabeth Taylor in blockbuster TV show about movie icon
Sexy BBC drama star in the frame to play Elizabeth Taylor in blockbuster TV show about movie icon

Scottish Sun

time25 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Sexy BBC drama star in the frame to play Elizabeth Taylor in blockbuster TV show about movie icon

The actress also won plaudits for her depiction of the late, hellraising singer Amy Winehouse TAYLOR MADE ROLE Sexy BBC drama star in the frame to play Elizabeth Taylor in blockbuster TV show about movie icon RISING Brit star Marisa Abela is in the frame to play Elizabeth Taylor in a blockbuster TV drama charting the movie legend's sensational life. The actress won a Bafta for playing sexy financier Yasmin Kara-Hanani in three series of the BBC's bonking-and-banking drama Industry. Advertisement 4 Marisa Abela is in the frame to play Elizabeth Taylor in a blockbuster TV drama charting the movie legend's sensational life Credit: Getty 4 Screen siren Liz Taylor is rumoured to have once had a threesome with President John F Kennedy and actor Robert Stack Credit: Getty 4 Marisa won a Bafta for playing sexy financier Yasmin Kara-Hanani in BBC drama Industry Credit: Getty Marisa, 28, also won plaudits for her depiction of the late, hellraising singer Amy Winehouse in the 2024 movie Back to Black opposite Jack O'Connell as her boyfriend Blake Fielder-Civil. An insider said: 'Bosses of the adaptation want someone who can capture the essence of the single-minded woman that married seven times and was said to have had a voracious sexual appetite. 'It's very early days for the project but the producers want to assemble formidable British talent with the aim of making this a blockbuster series.' Former EastEnders boss Dominic Treadwell-Collins is developing the drama — called Elizabeth Taylor Vs The World — with his production company Happy Prince. Advertisement The scripts are being written by Times columnist Caitlin Moran, a superfan who once said of her idol: 'She ate up life like a sexy glutton.' It is based on the book Erotic Vagrancy, written by Roger Lewis, about Liz's passionate love affair with husband Richard Burton. The London-born star of Cleopatra and Giant, who died in 2011 aged 79, was said to have had sexual needs as famous as her husband's. Legend has it that she once had a threesome with President John F Kennedy and actor Robert Stack. Advertisement Producers Happy Prince made the racy adaptation of Jilly Cooper's saucy novel Rivals that was shown on Disney+ last year and became one of the streamer's biggest hits. The company is part of ITV Studios, which means the drama could end up airing on ITV. Seven divorces, health drama & a public affair - Elizabeth Taylor's controversial life revealed as doc shares her side But it may end up in a bidding war among streamers with a hunger for quality British drama. 4 Marisa as Amy Winehouse opposite Jack O'Connell as Blake Fielder-Civil in Back to Black Credit: PA

EastEnders star slams critics after claims co-stars were booed at Soap Awards
EastEnders star slams critics after claims co-stars were booed at Soap Awards

Daily Mirror

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

EastEnders star slams critics after claims co-stars were booed at Soap Awards

A star of long-running BBC soap EastEnders has moved to deny allegations his co-stars were booed after winning a prestigious award at this year's Soap Awards in London at the weekend A star of EastEnders has "shut down" critics after claims some cast members were booed at the weekend's Soap Awards. As soap stars flocked to the Hackney Empire in London on Saturday, May 31, it's alleged a number of EastEnders actors were met with boos at the annual event. Rudolph Walker and Angela Wynter, who star as Patrick and Yolande Trueman on the BBC soap, won Best On-Screen Partnership on the night. And after an apparent mixed reaction, fellow star Colin Salmon has now had his say on the incident. ‌ Colin, who plays the role of George Knight in the long-running soap, voiced his opinion on X/ Twitter. Trying to explain exactly what had happened, he said: "Just want to clarify; No one was booing Rudi and Angela at the@SoapAwards we were singing RUUUDI , RUUUDI , RUUUDI. " ‌ He added the interaction had "obviously confused some people". "Appreciate some were concerned, as we should be, but it's all good," he added before signing off: "'#NoDrama#WeLovePatrickandYolande @bbceastenders." His clarity comes after fans had been calling the alleged booing "sickening". "Can't believe Swarla fans or whatever they're called booing Angela and Rudolph and them having to do a retake on their award," one wrote on Walford Web forum. "Disgusting," they added. Another said: "There are some tweets going about saying they were booing but now seeing mixed reports saying there was no booing." And others took to Colin's post to thank him for trying to explain what had happened. "Thank you for saying this Colin congrats on the win for Best Soap," one relieved user told him. EastEnders were big winners at this year's ceremony. They soap had been nominated for 13 nominations over 12 categories prior to the event. And they were crowned victorious of the top gong, being named Best British Soap. They beat Emmerdale, Coronation Street and Hollyoaks to the coveted accolade. ‌ In total, the show bagged eight awards. Other accolades included Steve McFadden picking up Best Dramatic Performance and Best Single Episode for Phil Mitchell's psychosis. The wins come in the soap's 40th anniversary year. Elsewhere, Hollyoaks were handed three awards, Emmerdale won two and Coronation Street walked away with one - the Outstanding Achievement Award to David Neilson, who has played Roy Cropper for 30 years. The biggest names in soapland dazzled on the glitter carpet at the glitzy event- with Hollyoaks actress Jorgie Porter and Corrie favourite Tina O'Brien both looking sensational in the same dress, a sparkly Oh Polly number. ‌ Speaking ahead of her win for scene of the year, EastEnders legend Anita Dobson gushed: 'It was just perfect.' When she was asked if she could return again, she added: 'I don't think so, although I should say never say never, it would have to be something extra special.'

‘Ridiculous' for Channel 4 to start making in-house TV shows, says Sony
‘Ridiculous' for Channel 4 to start making in-house TV shows, says Sony

South Wales Guardian

time34 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

‘Ridiculous' for Channel 4 to start making in-house TV shows, says Sony

Under a new strategy, launched in May, the broadcaster unveiled how it would start to develop in-house production capabilities with a separate company focused on 'entertainment, reality and entertainment genres with international potential'. Wayne Garvie, the president of international production at Sony Pictures Television, whose division's companies and partners have made Channel 4 shows such as Hullraisers and The Undeclared War, told the Media And Telecoms 2025 And Beyond Conference in London on Tuesday that the broadcaster's plan is 'ridiculous' and 'it won't work'. He added that those 'who run in-house production businesses' know that when you start 'you lose money for the first three years'. He claimed that Channel 4 is doing this without owning many intellectual rights or having an 'institutional knowledge of how to run a production business'. Mr Garvie said: 'It could be potentially disastrous for Channel 4, because it's got limited resources. It's got to adapt to a change in (the) broadcast market.' However, he did praise outgoing Channel 4 chief executive Alex Mahon with helping the broadcaster continue, but pointed out that even with 'good people' it is going to take half a decade to make money. Mr Garvie said the UK having multiple public broadcasters is 'unsustainable', and added: 'The future has got to be, surely, Channel 4 and the BBC coming together, and that should be the focus for a new chair of Channel 4 (who replaces Sir Ian Cheshire).' Responding later in the day, Ms Mahon said: 'Wayne was a bit excitable this morning, wasn't he?' She added: 'The good news is that Channel 4 has a sensible, modest, intelligent plan for in-house production, but I do agree with Wayne that it's not easy… to be a producer.' Ms Mahon also dismissed a 'coming together' of the BBC and Channel 4, saying the UK has 'such a strong public service broadcasting ecosystem' because of the 'plurality and competition'. She added: 'I think there are ways that we should all operate together, and Freely is the best example of that, but we also shouldn't believe that by popping us all together in one service, we would end up with more impact on the audience.' Netflix's vice president of content for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), Larry Tanz, dismissed that the streaming giant would not have commissioned Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, at the event, which is hosted by Enders Analysis and Deloitte at Convene Sancroft in the St Paul's area. '(Vice president of UK Content at Netflix) Anne Mensah, and her team in the UK, commissioned Adolescence, Baby Reindeer and Toxic Town for the UK audience first and foremost,' he said. 'Maybe I can finally put that to rest here and say we absolutely would have commissioned Mr Bates in the UK if we had the opportunity, we think our audience would have loved it.' It follows Wolf Hall director Peter Kosminsky, who has pushed for a levy on streaming companies to finance public broadcasters, which include ITV, BBC, Channel 4 and Channel 5. Mr Kosminsky told the BBC Two current affairs programme Newsnight that Adolescence, which explores themes such as incel culture and bullying and has been a global hit for Netflix, is a 'fantastic programme', but the streaming giant would not make the show if it was not successful outside the UK. He claimed that streamers would not make issue-led dramas such as Mr Bates Vs The Post Office and Hillsborough as they are too British-focused, and voiced concerns that public broadcasters do not have the money to finance such commissions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store