logo
EastEnders star Lacey Turner celebrates lookalike daughter's 6th birthday after stepping away from soap

EastEnders star Lacey Turner celebrates lookalike daughter's 6th birthday after stepping away from soap

The Sun15-07-2025
LACEY Turner celebrated her eldest daughter Dusty's sixth birthday with a sweet Care Bares-themed party - and shared a peek inside on social media.
The EastEnders star, 37, took to Instagram to post photos from the day, revealing the impressive set up and her little girl's huge birthday cake.
4
4
Another snap showed Lacey and husband Matt Kay standing with Dusty as she blew out her candles.
Lacey, who also shares Trilby, three, and Gypsy, six months, with 36-year-old Matt, wrote alongside her upload: 'Happy 6th birthday to the one who made me a mummy!
'I love you more than you'll ever know! Thank you to all the people that made her day so special.'
Lacey recently opened up on motherhood and its challenges.
She said: "The world today leads you to believe that the most expensive option is the best option, but that's not the case.
"I want people to know that being frugal is nothing to be ashamed of, it's a skill.
"We don't dress our children in designer clothes, it's perfectly okay to dress your children in high street clothes.
"It's crazy in the world we're living in that people are saving up to be parents.'
In May we revealed how Lacey is set to take some time off from EastEnders to focus on family life and other projects.
Lacey told the Sun: 'It's time for myself and Stacey to take a rest and who knows what Stacey will get up to in her time away? Knowing Stacey, it will never be boring."
A soap insider said: "Lacey made the decision last year to take some time out from the show, she's had a busy year both on and off screen, so it feels a good time to give Stacey a rest.
"Lacey loves EastEnders, and it's no secret how much EastEnders love Lacey, so it's not a question of if she will be back, but when.'
Just weeks after giving birth, she returned from maternity leave to play her part in Martin Fowler's exit scenes in the show's live episode.
And Lacey's character Stacey Slater left fans in tears as she said an emotional goodbye to Martin in February.
In heartbreaking scenes he proposed and planned the next 40 years of their lives before the paramedics told Stacey that he would likely not survive his injuries.
4
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Famous Sheffield club has been gutted in act of ‘wanton destruction', says owner
Famous Sheffield club has been gutted in act of ‘wanton destruction', says owner

The Independent

time12 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Famous Sheffield club has been gutted in act of ‘wanton destruction', says owner

The owners of the building which housed Sheffield's famous Leadmill music venue say they have found a scene of 'wanton destruction' as they took possession after a bitter eviction battle. Electric Group said it moved in to the premises on Wednesday evening, weeks after it was successful in its long legal battle against the operators of The Leadmill. In a statement, the firm said: 'The Leadmill, one of Sheffield's most iconic music venues, has been returned to its owners in a wrecked state – stripped of fixtures, vandalised, and left wide open to the elements. 'Electric Group, which took possession of the building late on Wednesday evening, were met with a scene of destruction, even the front doors had been taken.' It said: 'The stage where world-famous bands once performed has been ripped out, the sprung dancefloor torn up, bars and lighting removed, and the venue stripped back to bare brickwork.' It said the reusable materials have been 'all dumped rather than being recycled, reused, or donated to community projects'. The firm also criticised attempts which have been made to remove a well-known Mike Disley frieze sculpture from the frontage of the building – which has been halted by Sheffield City Council. Electric Group co-founder Dominic Madden said: 'It's devastating to see the building like this. It's so important to people.' He said: 'Stepping into this building and seeing the wanton destruction that has taken place is the sum of all my fears. 'What has happened these last few weeks behind closed doors is devastating, how anybody can do so much damage is beyond belief. 'We knew they'd take their belongings, but we also thought they valued this place. Their treatment of it proves otherwise.' Mr Madden said he was now 'even more determined to do whatever it takes' to re-open the building as the Electric Sheffield music venue in February 2026. The existing Leadmill venue closed at the end of June, with a final gig by indie favourite Miles Kane, after losing a long-running eviction battle with Electric Group. After it lost an appeal in May, The Leadmill described the decision as a 'heartbreaking moment not just for our team but for the entire Sheffield community' which 'feels like a betrayal of the cultural fabric of our city'. The appeal ruling came three months after a judge ruled in favour of Electric Group, which owns the building and runs Electric Brixton in London plus venues in Bristol and Newcastle. The Leadmill opened its doors 45 years ago and played host to countless bands including Pulp, Coldplay, Arcade Fire, Muse, Oasis, Stone Roses, The White Stripes, Jorja Smith and Michael Kiwanuka. A plaque on the building marked Pulp's first gig, which was at the venue in August 1980. Ian Lawlor, general manager of the Leadmill Ltd, told the Sheffield Star they had been open with Electric Group about their plans to remove their belongings, adding that 'any claims by them on the contrary is just fiction to make us look like the bad guys'.

Petrassi: Concertos for Orchestra Nos 7 & 8 album review – dramatic power from rarely heard Italian master
Petrassi: Concertos for Orchestra Nos 7 & 8 album review – dramatic power from rarely heard Italian master

The Guardian

time12 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Petrassi: Concertos for Orchestra Nos 7 & 8 album review – dramatic power from rarely heard Italian master

Though his music is rarely heard in the UK these days, Goffredo Petrassi was one of the most significant and influential Italian composers of the mid 20th century. Born in 1904, just a few months after Luigi Dallapiccola, Petrassi's early works were firmly neoclassical, but after 1945 he began to incorporate elements from his younger contemporaries in the European avant garde. He was also a distinguished teacher; among the many who studied with him were Ennio Morricone, Peter Maxwell Davies and Cornelius Cardew. Petrassi's eight concertos for orchestra are at the core of his orchestral output, and Naxos has now released recordings of all of them. The pairing of the last two, composed in 1964 and 1972, are typical of his later music, trenchantly argued, with fierce contrasts between strings and wind. It's music of great resource and dramatic potency, even when the musical ideas themselves are not especially memorable. The performances from the Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma under Francesco La Vecchia feel utterly secure, and as a bonus they add the Sonata da Camera, for harpsichord and 10 instruments, which Petrassi composed in 1948. This article includes content hosted on We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as the provider may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'. Stream it on Apple Music (above) or on Spotify

Strictly star Alex Kingston's VERY racy start to her career revealed: Actress was a nude life model before starring in raunchy roles that saw her strip off for the camera
Strictly star Alex Kingston's VERY racy start to her career revealed: Actress was a nude life model before starring in raunchy roles that saw her strip off for the camera

Daily Mail​

time12 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Strictly star Alex Kingston's VERY racy start to her career revealed: Actress was a nude life model before starring in raunchy roles that saw her strip off for the camera

Alex Kingston's raunchy start to her career has been revealed after she became the third star to sign up for this year's Strictly Come Dancing. Her journey from butcher's daughter to internationally acclaimed actress and the latest star to sign up for the BBC 's flagship show began almost 30 years ago. And it certainly was a risqué beginning to stardom, with Alex, 62, earning extra cash as a nude life model for artists before going on to star in the 1996 romp The Fortunes and Misfortunes of Moll Flanders. The series was an adaptation of the novel Moll Flanders by Daniel Defoe and charts the bed-hopping antics of the criminal's daughter brought up in society. And the show was Alex's springboard to fame and brought her to worldwide attention, not least for the number of bodice-ripping scenes she featured in. Since then, Alex, who has starred in Doctor Who and EastEnders, has never been shy about stripping off in front of the camera. It certainly was a risqué beginning to stardom, with Alex, 62, earning extra cash as a nude life model for artists before going on to star in the 1996 romp The Fortunes and Misfortunes of Moll Flanders. Two years later, she appeared alongside Clive Owen as Jani de Villiers in the gambling flick Croupier, where movie fans could bet on getting more than a glimpse of her impressive curves. In 2000, in the film Essex Boys, came more raunchy scenes with her leading man. The film is loosely based on events in December 1995 that culminated in the murders of three drug dealers in Rettendon, Essex, UK, and she played femme fatale Lisa Locke. And in the 2011 series Marchlands, Alex was seen in the buff yet again when she played Helen Maynard in a supernatural drama following the lives of three families who live in the same remote house in different time period, and in the 2019 series The Widow, she locked lips with co-star Siobhan Finneran. But in a recent interview with The Telegraph, she said she had managed to avoid the horrors of the Harvey Weinstein-style casting couch predators. She grew up the daughter of a butcher and an art teacher, making her screen debut aged 17 as Grange Hill bully Jill Harcourt. She told the publication last year: 'Casting couch culture still existed when I came out of drama school. If you were a young girl, you'd likely encounter something at some point – I have friends who did – and, if you were on the up, people might question how you got there. 'I was too naive to read the signs and in a weird way that protected me, because I never went for "the drink in the pub".' Her role in Moll Flanders earned her a Bafta nomination and a fruitful new career path as ER's Elizabeth Corday. Nowadays, such demands would require intimacy coordinators and, while she is relieved such provisions are in place for her drama-student daughter Salome ('although she's very ballsy, she can look after herself'), she regards her own blasé attitude with fondness. 'I was a life-drawing model so I was very used to being naked around people. After one of Moll's earliest sex scenes, the first AD [assistant director] jumped into bed and the three of us had a post-coital fag together because we thought it was funny. You couldn't do that nowadays, which is probably a good thing', she added. But she did infamously bite the tongue of a male co-star in a stage play – leaving him needing stitches in his tongue. She was unhappy when the unnamed lead used his tongue in their kissing scenes and issued a warning to him to stop the saucy smooch. The actor refused, and Alex bit his tongue while they were mid-performance - and it was only the next day she realised the severity of what she had done. She told The Graham Norton Show in 2011: 'Interestingly, and I'm not going to mention the actor's name... I did do a job once. I did a play and at the end of the play there was a kiss and we'd been doing this for a long time, a long run, and this actor, every time we did this kiss, he would stick his tongue down my throat... 'So I said, "If you do that again I will bite your tongue", and I think he thought I was joking so the next performance he did it again and I bit his tongue and clung on for a while, and didn't think anything of it. 'And then the next day, when we were backstage and I bumped into him, he was just having soup and I couldn't understand why he wasn't eating anything more substantial, so I said, "You're only having soup?" and he said, "I've got four stitches in my tongue". 'I had actually bitten through his tongue! I warned him!' Alex's very colourful career comes as she's set to add another string to her bow - as a Strictly contestant. Speaking to The One Show hosts Roman Kemp and Alex Scott on Monday about her upcoming stint, the actress teased: 'My hips don't lie'. Alex notably appeared in US drama ER from 1997 to 2005 alongside George Clooney. She also took on a recurring role in Doctor Who, playing River Song - the love interest of Matt Smith's incarnation of the Doctor and the daughter of Amy (Karen Gillan) and Rory (Arthur Darvill). Alex briefly reprised her role during Peter Capaldi's stint on the BBC sci-fi show and has also leant her voice to a number of audio releases in the franchise. Alex has previously spoken about her desire to sign up for Strictly, revealing she and her close friend Sarah Hadland - who competed last year - had discussed it. 'Sarah Hadland and I talked about how much we'd like to do Strictly Come Dancing,' she said in 2019.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store