logo
Red Nose Day 2025's best moments from TV mash-ups to Davina McCall's moving speech

Red Nose Day 2025's best moments from TV mash-ups to Davina McCall's moving speech

Yahoo21-03-2025
Red Nose Day 2025 was a special one, as Comic Relief turned 40.
The BBC fundraiser marked the milestone by throwing it back to the 80s, opening with a musical performance from Roachford, T'Pau and Limahl from Kajagoogoo on a stage that was pure 1985.
There was a look back into the Red Nose Day archives, with favourite sketches like Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders' take on Mamma Mia and James Corden's pep talk for the England footballers getting another airing. There was also a TV show mash-up, an Oasis spoof and a message from Red Nose Day legend Lenny Henry.
We round up some of the highlights of this year's show, which raised over £32 million.
Strictly hosts Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly had a tongue in cheek giggle about inclusivity in a sketch that saw the BBC ballroom show hiring "amateurs" as pros. Filmed in mockumentary-style, the skit saw Winkleman explaining that the current pros were "not representative enough of the British public", with Daly agreeing that they were all "highly athletic", "super glamorous" and "extremely good at dancing".
So in a bid to make things more inclusive, they had to add a couple of amateurs to the mix.
Enter comics Russell Kane and Rachel Parris as Johnny and Melissa, who pranced in full of fighting talk to Eye Of The Tiger, before shocking the pros with their ropey dancefloor skills.
There were more laughs when they met judges Shirley Ballas, Craig Revel Horwood, Anton Du Beke and Motsi Mabuse, as Melissa introduced herself as the "head pro". And, in a nod to judge Du Beke's career path, she teased: "Give me a season or so and I'll probably do an Anton and level up as judge!"
In what some viewers said was the "highlight" of the show, popular BBC series Not Going Out and Beyond Paradise came together in a brilliant mash-up.
Actor Sally Bretton was the one tying it all together, as in sitcom Not Going Out she is the wife of Lee Mack, and in crime drama Beyond Paradise she's the girlfriend of Humphrey (Kris Marshall).
All of the characters were in the sketch, along with some others from the programmes. They all rubbed along together as some mysterious things started happening in Cornwall.
The crossover ended up being a madcap and slightly baffling sequence of mistaken identities and general confusion - but viewers loved it. "Not Going Beyond Paradise has so far been the best part of the night," one person said on X, as another said it was "the highlight".
Comedian Chabuddy G from sitcom People Just Do Nothing had his work cut out for him when he 'joined' the Gladiators.
Hosts Bradley and Barney Walsh thought he was a new contender, but Chabuddy was convinced he was actually the new Gladiator and that his show name could be Girth, Wind and Fire.
Having slipped into his Spandex and a leopard print robe, he sneaked backstage to hang out with the others as if he was one of them and offered Bionic a high five. But when the Gladiator snubbed him with a withering glance, he bragged: "I'll probably take your bloody arm off knowing my strength."
However, his smirk disappeared when he ended up on the Duel platform with Bionic. Insisting he needed to pause for a toilet break, he looked up at the Gladiator towering over him and asked the hosts: "I'm not going to have to fight him am I?"
"Bradders you absolute snake mate!" he sniped.
In a shock twist Chabuddy did end up knocking Bionic off the platform, but the show bosses discovered foul play and he was slapped with a Gladiators ban.
Red Nose Day stalwart Lenny Henry made everyone's night when he appeared in a pre-recorded video to reflect on the years of Comic Relief.
The comedian co-founded the charity and hosted the programme for decades, but fronted his final show last year. Announcing he was stepping down, he told the BBC: "I think it needs new blood, and I'm definitely old blood."
"I can't believe Comic Relief is turning the big 40," he said in the video. "In some ways it feels like 1985 was like, yesterday."
Read more: Comic Relief
Jamie Laing's Red Nose Day ultra marathon challenge so far
Billy Monger gets pep talk from Gordon Ramsay ahead of Comic Relief challenge
Inbetweeners duo to team up for Comic Relief Oasis sketch (Manchester Evening News, 2 min read)
"A lot has changed," he went on. "A lot of it for the better - me, you, us, we've been on quite the journey."
He told viewers: "I said something in 1993 that I am going to say again because it's as true today as it ever was. The point is, forget geography, these are your neighbours and this is your doorstep."
Host Davina McCall broke down in tears as she talked about her brain tumour.
The TV presenter underwent surgery last year after a colloid cyst, a benign tumour, was discovered during a health check.
Addressing viewers, she said: "I had a pretty mad year this year. Doctors found a benign brain tumour by chance and after a lot of deliberating I had it removed and it's been quite possibly the hardest thing I have ever been through."
Tearful, the star said the entire experience "made me really think deeply about what life is all about and about what really really matters when things get tough".
McCall said she needed the "brilliance and the skill" of experts, as well as love and support. "There are so many people who are scared, they are in trouble, they are in danger, so many... and they don't have the friends or the money or the support that I did," she said. "I know I was so lucky."
The star stressed the importance of the fundraiser and how it could turn so many people's lives around, thanking the "wonderful strangers" who stepped up and supported others.
"I love you guys, we love you," she said. "You show up for people when they are really up against it."
Oasis' feud and reunion tour got the parody treatment in a sketch starring James Buckley as Liam Gallagher and his Inbetweeners co-star Joe Thomas as his brother Noel.
The spoof charted the band's rise, 2009 row (which was put down to someone treading on a tambourine and saw both stars unleash a volley of expletives) and the 2024 announcement of their comeback tour.
Poking fun at the long waits for tickets, it saw one poor Oasis fan looking dismayed when his computer told him he was about 10 million in the queue. When we revisited him he was number five, but just a skeleton remained in his chair.
There was also a nod to the ticket drama, where prices rose because of dynamic pricing. Piers Morgan had a role as a "Ticket Master", who told the Gallaghers: "Let me reassure you personally, everyone will be treated completely fairly."
At the end of the night, the hosts announced that so far over £32 million had been raised.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Weekly quiz: Why were Italian restaurants in a rage about pasta?
Weekly quiz: Why were Italian restaurants in a rage about pasta?

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Weekly quiz: Why were Italian restaurants in a rage about pasta?

This week saw Donald Trump order the National Guard onto the streets of Washington DC, the publication of a searing new biography about Prince Andrew, and the BBC announce the stars set to take part in this year's Strictly. But how much attention did you pay to what else happened in the world over the past seven days? Quiz collated by Ben Fell. Fancy testing your memory? Try last week's quiz, or have a go at something from the archives.

Review: 'Mamma Mia!' on Broadway reminds us that this was the original jukebox musical
Review: 'Mamma Mia!' on Broadway reminds us that this was the original jukebox musical

Chicago Tribune

time7 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Review: 'Mamma Mia!' on Broadway reminds us that this was the original jukebox musical

NEW YORK — ABBA sold hundreds of millions of records but they would have been even bigger if they'd paid more attention to the United States. Benny, Björn, Agnetha and Anni-Frid at some point decided they were happy with being the rich dancing queens of Europe and that the tough Stateside nut was just not worth the work to crack. So in the U.S., they were widely seen as a Swedish novelty act, a fad band. Even the arrival on Broadway of 'Mamma Mia!' in 2001 didn't immediately change that. The show went cautiously to Toronto (ABBA was bigger in Canada) after London for its North American premiere. New York still worried everybody. No reason. It ran on Broadway for 14 years. Almost a quarter century later, anyone sitting in the Winter Gardens Theatre, or merely reading the boffo grosses of the musical during the preview performances these last few weeks, can see that U.S. audiences are as hungry as ever for 'Mamma Mia!,' thanks in part to the movies and maybe the uptick in vinyl and disco nostalgia. All that the producers did this summer was stick the touring production on Broadway to fill an empty theater. It's the same diminutive set I saw in Chicago, the cool jetty that arrived at the show's climax got cut years ago and has not returned. Why waste the money? For those of us who've seen that tour half a dozen times, the only surprise is the addition of more live musicians for Broadway, union minimums being a helpful thing in this case. Actual acoustic sounds have replaced some pre-programmed tracks. Awesome! Benny Andersson's synth work on the Yamaha GX1 and the Moog Polymoog is legendary but 'Mamma Mia' combined the original sound with Martin Koch's clever theatrical arrangements, and it needs lots of humans in the pit. Happily, that touring cast starred Christine Sherrill as Donna, a star who lacks only name recognition. Sherrill's massive but vulnerable belt is ideally matched for this material. She's the best Donna of all time, in my book. Never has a Donna better nailed 'The Winner Takes It All,' the show's brilliant idea for its 11 o'clock number, rehabbing a tragic break-up song that had been rendered weirdly up-tempo in ABBA's original recording. The rest of the cast is just fine; the oldsters give the material respect while having fun and the kids all seem delighted just to be there. Doing this. I remember vividly seeing 'Mamma Mia!' at London's Prince Edward Theatre just prior to its opening. People went berserk with delight. The whole concept of a jukebox musical — with an original story that included songs people already knew backwards, used in a fresh storytelling context — was unknown back then and people giggled with excitement as they wondered how, say, 'Does Your Mother Know' would be used since the order of the songs was hidden in the program. (With a clever gender switch to avoid any creepiness.) Back in 1999, the all-female team of writer Catherine Johnson, producer Judy Craymer and director Phyllida Lloyd crafted a brilliant ABBA delivery mechanism, nothing more, nothing less — a simple story about a single hippy mom (British in the U.K., Irish-American in the U.S.) who had slept with at least three guys on the beach in Greece and later had a daughter, Sophie (Amy Weaver), who was getting married at her mum's taverna and invited all three of her potential dad candidates to the nuptials. Add in two sidekicks for Donna (Jalynn Steele and Carly Sakolove) and two for Sophie (Haley Wright and Lena Owens) and you had a story that understood sooner than anyone else that emotional mother-and-daughter stories are a goldmine in musical theater, because that is who likes to go. 'Mamma Mia!' has the youth POV (well, it did) and also lots of songs of parental regret ('Slipping Through My Fingers' and so on). I can't overstate my respect for the show; it's a masterpiece of its populist kind, much imitated but never equalled. Sure, the chronology doesn't make sense any more. If the 'dot dot dot' shenanigans were happening in 1979, as they say, Donna would be 70 now, which she's clearly not. But then maybe 'Mamma Mia!' is still happening in 1999, given that no one has phones or taverna websites or knows much about DNA tests. But no book refresh was forthcoming; 'Mamma Mia!' remains timeless, stuck in the eternal ABBA timewarp, much like the group's A.I. avatars who entertain in London, cheating aging and mortality. The big takeaway for me is that even as the U.S. underestimated this band, so Broadway underestimated this brand. It's a one of a kind. Just watch how many people will come and have fun. Limited run? We'll see.

Who is Strictly's Thomas Skinner? The Apprentice star with a criminal conviction who posed in a MAGA hat
Who is Strictly's Thomas Skinner? The Apprentice star with a criminal conviction who posed in a MAGA hat

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Who is Strictly's Thomas Skinner? The Apprentice star with a criminal conviction who posed in a MAGA hat

The outspoken TV personality is one of the more controversial contestants on the BBC show this year. Former Apprentice star and social media personality Tom Skinner has been confirmed as one of the latest celebrities to be taking part in the upcoming series of Strictly Come Dancing. Skinner said he was "beyond excited" to be joining the BBC's flagship entertainment show. 'I've tackled the boardroom and some big breakfasts in my time, but stepping onto the dance floor under that glitter ball is next-level stuff," he said. Skinner is one of the more controversial characters to appear on Strictly (you can read the full line-up here), with his appearance already prompting a mixed reaction. On Thursday, he posted a link to comments in the BBC Strictly Instagram feed, with many criticising the decision to put him on the show. Skinner's support of Donald Trump drew ire, though some comments were also supportive of him. "They say don't read the comments on social media," he posted on X. "But I couldn't help myself. I've had absolute pellets all day on my Instagram.... Have a look at some of these on Instagram …. Why are some people so angry that don't even know me." Who is Strictly's Thomas Skinner? Born in Romford, east London, the 34-year-old started working as a local market trader at the age of 16. He found fame in 2019 as a contestant on the BBC business-based reality show The Apprentice and has since gone on to appear on TV regularly, including on 8 Out of 10 Cats, The Wheel, Michael McIntyre's Big Show, Good Morning Britain, Faking It and Celebrity Masterchef. Skinner, who runs several small businesses, released his debut book Graft – How to Smash Life in 2023. He has also amassed a huge social media following of hundreds of thousands of people, to whom he shares regular videos, including motivational messages. His social media videos are often shared from Skinner's favourite cafe, featuring large breakfasts, and his catchphrase of 'BOSH' regularly appears. What are his political views? Skinner has made a number of politicised comments, with right-wing voices in particular drawn to his views - most notably when he urged people to "stop bending over backwards for the woke brigade" in a since-deleted post on X. In June, he appeared alongside senior Conservative Party MP Robert Jenrick in a video about ending tool theft. In July, he appeared on a panel of right-wing voices at a conference called 'How to save England' alongside Tory MP Danny Kruger and former Reform UK MP Rupert Lowe. Addressing the crowd, Skinner said in a speech: "Young people in this country feel lost. Too many of us feel we're being left behind in our own country. We've got kids being taught to be ashamed of their flag, It's bloody mental. People scared to say they're proud to be English in case someone kicks off or is offended." His love of the English flag came to the fore when he appeared on Good Morning Britain, waving a St George's cross after he received criticism for a post celebrating St George's Day. He recently claimed on X that "London has fallen", adding on X: "I still believe in its people. And I believe it can rise again. But we need change. Real change. We need safety. We need pride. We need leadership that understands the streets, the markets, the working cI'm not right wing." Interpreted by some as a criticism of London mayor Sadiq Khan, Skinner seemingly distanced himself from having any political allegiance, saying: "I don't vote. I've been invited to the houses of parliament by Labour to talk about small businesses." "The problem we have about the political parties in the UK is the people behind them are normally failed business people or they have worked in the political sector they're whole working life and don't understand the real world. We need more people with a backbone in politics. Who understand the real world. Who understand real problems." On Thursday, following criticism of his appearance on Strictly, he told the Daily Mail: "I'm not right wing. Some people will hate you without ever really knowing you." Nonetheless, Skinner has previously declared support for Donald Trump, posting a picture of himself in a Maga hat recently. And in November last year, Skinner reportedly posted on X: "I love Trump I think he is brilliant, that's my opinion. I think it's good he is back in charge." The post no longer appears to be live on his X profile, though Skinner acknowledged his comments at the time, asking: "How on earth has this tweet made the national papers?" Indeed, such is his rise in right-wing circles that Skinner was even invited to meet US vice president JD Vance for a barbecue and drinks during his recent holiday to the UK. Skinner described the event as 'once in a lifetime'. Skinner says his online presence has resulted in him receiving "death threats" and 'vile comments about my children', while his inclusion in the Strictly line-up for this year also prompted criticism from those who said he should not have been featured. But Skinner has always firmly denied holding objectionable, racist views, saying in another recent post: "I find it mad how much hate I get on here from people on the far left. "All I ever try to do is spread positivity. I'm not a racist. I'm not far-right. I'm not political. I love this country more than anything and want it to improve." What was he convicted of? Skinner has also spoken openly about a previous conviction for handling stolen goods, having been sentenced in 2011 in relation to dishonestly handling 4,992 tubes of Body Shop cleansing gels worth nearly £40,000 and having 2,000 diazepam tablets. In February this year, Skinner referred to his conviction, which was brought up by critics when he posted online about witnessing a crime in Greggs. At the time, he posted on X: "Still finding it mad that people are actually having a go at me on Twitter because I pointed out that Greggs got robbed whilst I was in there. And then bringing up my past. "Yes I did get arrested when I was younger, in fact I get arrested several times. And been charged and paid the price for my convictions. I wrote a book about it. 'I never had my own bedroom at one point when I was younger and slept on a pull-out bed on the floor. "I never had any money or had anything given to me on a plate, yet I turned my life around. I go around schools/colleges/universities telling my story hoping I can inspire others."

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