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Meet the outrageous sisters constantly in the headlines

Meet the outrageous sisters constantly in the headlines

Daily Mirrora day ago

If you think your siblings are badly behaved, opinionated, unlucky, stubborn, unconventional, or just plain wrong – you ain't seen nothing yet.
New U drama series Outrageous tells the true story of the six aristocratic Mitford sisters, who couldn't have been more different, yet who each found fame – or infamy – in their own way.
Focusing on how the sisters navigated the gathering storm of the 1930s, the show dives into public scandals, political extremism, dangerous romances, and devastating betrayals.
Whether due to their political beliefs or private escapades, the sisters simply couldn't stay out of the headlines. Here's a taster of what the gossip columns of the time may have said...
While she may be the eldest and cleverest sister, Nancy can't half put her foot in it. But why exactly has her new novel – a takedown of fascism – so upset the family?
Not only that, she's fallen for a man who everyone else knows is gay. Might she finally get lucky in love and settle down with a husband who truly loves her? We'll see...
Indomitable stunner Diana gets whatever she wants, and just a few years back what she wanted was Bryan Guinness, heir to a brewing fortune.
Their home was once a haven for bright young things, but lately, we hear Diana has been setting her cap at a certain political kindred spirit with less-than-savoury connections – and ideas. There's just one problem: for her desires, she might have to pay a terrible price.
Don't be mistaken by the quiet-seeming Pamela. Sure, she may dodge the limelight, stay out of politics, and avoid any drama - much preferring to rear chickens or motor across Europe alone – but all is not as it seems.
Might her being wooed by a much older man - a physicist and amateur jockey - actually not be as surprising as it first seems, but rather a sign that her unflustered nature is hiding a discreet unconventionality?
Zealous misfit Unity seems to have been headed for trouble from an early age, managing to get expelled twice from boarding school.
And those who judge people by the company they keep might well find themselves looking on in horror at the 6ft 1in Mitford sister's recent life choices - what will be your verdict?
'Comrade Jessica' has a ring to it, doesn't it? And it's all too appropriate a moniker for the sister who has turned her back on the privileged world she was born into.
And just what is she now planning to get up to with her equally communist-inclined teenage second-cousin (and nephew of Winston Churchill) Esmond Romilly?
Ah, poor, sweet Debo. If any of the Mitford sisters deserve an uncomplicated love life, it's Deborah.
Yet, the youngest sibling – who is nothing but inordinately grateful and satisfied with life – has had the heirloom rug ripped from beneath her feet by her very own sister no less! Ever since Pam announced her engagement to the one Debo had her eye on, she has been devastated. The question now is: did Pam know?
is played by (Bridgerton, I Hate Suzie)
is played by (Crime, The Control Room)
is played by (The Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes)
is played by (The Jetty, Say Nothing)
is played by (Casualty)
is played by (Stonehouse, A Confession)
is played by (Belgravia: The Next Chapter)
is played by (The Veil, Malpractice)

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Meet the outrageous sisters who always hit the headlines
Meet the outrageous sisters who always hit the headlines

Daily Mirror

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Meet the outrageous sisters who always hit the headlines

If you think your siblings are badly behaved, opinionated, unlucky, stubborn, unconventional, or just plain wrong – you ain't seen nothing yet. New U drama series Outrageous tells the true story of the six aristocratic Mitford sisters, who couldn't have been more different, yet who each found fame – or infamy – in their own way. Focusing on how the sisters navigated the gathering storm of the 1930s, the show dives into public scandals, political extremism, dangerous romances, and devastating betrayals. Whether due to their political beliefs or private escapades, the sisters simply couldn't stay out of the headlines. Here's a taster of what the gossip columns of the time may have said... While she may be the eldest and cleverest sister, Nancy can't half put her foot in it. But why exactly has her new novel – a takedown of fascism – so upset the family? Not only that, she's fallen for a man who everyone else knows is gay. Might she finally get lucky in love and settle down with a husband who truly loves her? We'll see... Indomitable stunner Diana gets whatever she wants, and just a few years back what she wanted was Bryan Guinness, heir to a brewing fortune. Their home was once a haven for bright young things, but lately, we hear Diana has been setting her cap at a certain political kindred spirit with less-than-savoury connections – and ideas. There's just one problem: for her desires, she might have to pay a terrible price. Don't be mistaken by the quiet-seeming Pamela. Sure, she may dodge the limelight, stay out of politics, and avoid any drama - much preferring to rear chickens or motor across Europe alone – but all is not as it seems. Might her being wooed by a much older man - a physicist and amateur jockey - actually not be as surprising as it first seems, but rather a sign that her unflustered nature is hiding a discreet unconventionality? Zealous misfit Unity seems to have been headed for trouble from an early age, managing to get expelled twice from boarding school. And those who judge people by the company they keep might well find themselves looking on in horror at the 6ft 1in Mitford sister's recent life choices - what will be your verdict? 'Comrade Jessica' has a ring to it, doesn't it? And it's all too appropriate a moniker for the sister who has turned her back on the privileged world she was born into. And just what is she now planning to get up to with her equally communist-inclined teenage second-cousin (and nephew of Winston Churchill) Esmond Romilly? Ah, poor, sweet Debo. If any of the Mitford sisters deserve an uncomplicated love life, it's Deborah. Yet, the youngest sibling – who is nothing but inordinately grateful and satisfied with life – has had the heirloom rug ripped from beneath her feet by her very own sister no less! Ever since Pam announced her engagement to the one Debo had her eye on, she has been devastated. The question now is: did Pam know? is played by (Bridgerton, I Hate Suzie) is played by (Crime, The Control Room) is played by (The Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes) is played by (The Jetty, Say Nothing) is played by (Casualty) is played by (Stonehouse, A Confession) is played by (Belgravia: The Next Chapter) is played by (The Veil, Malpractice)

I hid in a bush to get bikini shots of pregnant Diana – it's the photo I regret most says The Sun's royal photographer
I hid in a bush to get bikini shots of pregnant Diana – it's the photo I regret most says The Sun's royal photographer

Scottish Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

I hid in a bush to get bikini shots of pregnant Diana – it's the photo I regret most says The Sun's royal photographer

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) GLANCING across the polo pitch, Arthur Edwards' eyes land on the golden 'D' hanging around the young woman's neck. He approaches the shy young girl and after asking politely she agrees to pose for a photo, an image that would later go down in history. 11 Arthur Edwards opnes up about his life photographing the royal family Credit: Lorna Roach 11 He admits he 'regrets' the photos he took of pregnant Diana in the Bahamas in 1982 Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 11 Arthur says he has changed his 'aggresive' approach from his early years as a photographer and is now very friendly with the royal family. Seen here with Charles on his 70th birthday Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd It was the Sun's royal photographer's very first photograph of Lady Diana Spencer, then 19. But rather than hitting the front page, the iconic portrait spent weeks in a drawer. 'Although I was told by royal equerries that Lady Diana Spencer was Prince Charles' new girlfriend, I had a hard time believing it,' Arthur says. 'He was 32 at the time and I remember thinking 'he's not running around with teenagers.'' However, six weeks later and by pure coincidence Arthur had their relationship confirmed. FURIOUS PRINCE Speaking as part of Life Stories, The Sun's YouTube series that features ordinary people who have had extraordinary lives, he explains: 'I was driving along the River Dee up in Balmoral to the Braemar Games and I saw Prince Charles fishing and next to him was Diana Spencer. 'So I jumped out of the car, grabbed the camera and rushed to snap a picture. 'She saw me, she rushed through the bushes. I managed to get a picture of him running up through the woods. 'Prince Charles was angry, god was he angry. He threw the fishing rod down and stormed off. 'The following day we ran the photo I had taken of Diana at the polo on the front page and underneath the headline was 'Lady Diana Spencer, all the qualities to be Queen.'' I was Diana's bodyguard - I know what she would have told Harry before he left & witnessed William's hate for fame It was a career defining moment for Arthur who in half a century on The Sun, Arthur has travelled to 120 countries, taking photos of not just the Royal Family but many of the world's biggest names. But unlike many paps the lorry driver's son, who left school at 15, was as much a hit with his subjects as he was with his editors. Diana once described him as her favourite royal photographer and he was among those who regularly joined Prince Harry for a drink following a royal tour. And last month he was congratulated by Queen Camilla personally when he picked up a Lifetime Achievement gong. Arthur, 84, says that the secret to getting his subjects on side has always been to 'ask nicely.' He explains: 'Most people are nice and if you're pleasant you'll get a similar reception back is what I have always found. 'One of the most iconic photographs I took of Diana in the see-through skirt in 1980 was taken because I travelled to the nursery she was working at and asked her nicely. 'I always say, you get more with sugar than you do with vinegar.' 11 Arthur, seen with Diana in Cairo, says that Diana 'wasn't offended' by the Bahamas pictures 11 This was the first photograph that Arthur ever took of Diana at a polo match in 1980 Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 11 He famously took the 'see-through-skirt' photograph of Diana while she was working at a nursery in 1980 Credit: The Sun 11 Arthur, seen here talking to Charles in 1977, says that initially the King was not his biggest fan Credit: The Sun However, Arthur is the first to admit that niceties weren't always part of his nature and that while starting out he took an 'aggressive approach.' 'AGGRESSIVE APPROACH' 'When I started doing the job, I wasn't bothered one way about the Royal Family,' he explains. 'The thing about the newspaper business is you can't come back empty handed, editors don't want excuses, they want pictures. 'So I was aggressive and some of the things I did then I'd be ashamed of today.' Arthur says there is one incident that he particularly regrets from his early career. 'I went to the Bahamas in 1982 while Diana was pregnant with William and photographed her in a bikini on the beach with Charles,' he says. 'There would be uproar over that now. 'It was probably one of the things I regret because they didn't see me as I was hiding in the bushes. 'I got great pictures of course but I got a lot of stick for it. 'The only person who was pleased with the photos was my editor, even the office driver was disgusted with what I had done.' QUEEN'S CONGRATULATIONS TO ARTHUR Our royal photographer, who still works full-time at 84, was presented with the first Lifetime Achievement gong at the British Press Awards in May. Arthur, who joined The Sun in December 1974, received it as the biggest names in journalism gathered to salute the best in the business. And Queen Camilla sent a congratulatory message on behalf of King Charles and herself. She said: 'I cannot think of anyone who deserves it more. "Not just for your decades of hard graft and talent, but in recognition of the enduring respect, admiration and affection that I know is felt for you across your whole industry — and indeed across the Royal Household. "For more years than either of us care to remember, you have brought your trademark charm, humour and outstanding skill to countless events.' However, Arthur says that Diana was able to have the last laugh when she eventually confronted him about the photographs on the royal couple's Australian tour the following year. 'During the tour Diana asked me how much I was paid for the pictures and I said, 'nothing, ma'am. I said, I just got expenses like I was doing a court case in Bradford',' he says. 'She smiled and said, 'pass me the Kleenex.' 'She wasn't offended, so I felt a lot better about it after that.' It wasn't just Diana who saw the funny side of some of Arthur's more controversial photos. 'I remember one occasion when I was photographing a young Charles leaving a polo match in the late 70s. I caught the back of his head which showed his bald spot,' Arthur says. While I was no superfan of the monarchy when I started out, as I spent more time with Charles I realised he was something very special Arthur Edwards 'The following Wednesday, I'm at another polo match at Windsor and his security told me that Charles wanted a word with me. 'He asked me if I was the man who had taken the photo and then asked me how many people had seen it. 'When I told him the paper readership was around seven or eight million he said 'oh my God, that's why everyone is taking a photo of the back of my head wherever I go!'' That was Arthur's first conversation with the now King, and the pair have gone on to have many more since with the photographer one of the monarch's greatest champions. KING'S CHAMPION 'While I was no superfan of the monarchy when I started out, as I spent more time with Charles I realised he was something very special,' Arthur says. 'Over the years I have observed him truly throw himself into his environmental and charity work with real passion. 'And so when he faced criticism from a government minister and Mr Murdoch asked me to write an opinion piece on our then future monarch I gladly did it. 11 Arthur has worked for The Sun for over 50 years Credit: Lorna Roach 11 He says he has become a great admirer of the monarch's charity and environmental work. Pictured: Charles in his favourite wildflower meadow, Wiltshire Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 11 Arthur says that Prince Harry, pictured in Bridgetown hospital Barbados in 2008, was a 'vital part of the royal family' Credit: The Sun 'I highlighted all the good he did and he must have seen it because our relationship changed over time. 'I became a tremendous supporter of him from that onwards and ultimately so did the paper. 'He was no longer the playboy prince who was ridiculed for talking to his plants but a real champion of the nation and one of the reasons I am still working today at 84.' Sadly, the same can not be said for the King's youngest son. HARRY'S CRUELTY Once one of Prince Harry's biggest supporters, Arthur says that he has been astonished by his 'cruelty.' 'When it comes to a reconciliation I never say never but I think the problem is the damage has been done,' Arthur says. 'While the Oprah interview might have been Meghan's doing, the tell-all Spare book was all Harry and that was pretty damn cruel. 'He mentioned that he wanted a reconciliation in his recent interview with the BBC but what he should have been saying was 'sorry.'' While he might think of himself as the 'Spare', Arthur says that his own experience proved that he was anything but. 'I think it's such a shame Harry calls himself that as he was far more than a 'spare', he was a vital part of the royal family,' Arthur explains. I think it's such a shame Harry calls himself that as he was far more than a 'spare', he was a vital part of the royal family Arthur Edwards 'He was by far as our readers were concerned, I thought he was their most popular member of the royal family. 'He was a super guy to work with and I loved working with him. 'At the end of every trip we would all go to the pub and they would close the bar for Harry and then we'd have an hour and a half where we'd chat. 'He would be candid too, Harry always told you when he didn't like a picture 'I remember him once telling me that he would do everything in his power to help us out, and he really did. 'Now it's hard to sort of say anything nice about him but in my heart, I hope one day, somehow he can come back and work for the country.' Meanwhile Arthur, who has worked for The Sun for over 50 years, plans to continue serving his own role for as long as he can. He adds: 'My job is a way of life and it's been a way of life for 50 years. 'I've enjoyed every bit of it and I plan to carry on as long as that's still the case. 'As Piers Morgan once said, 'treat every day as your last because one day you'll be right'.'

Meet the outrageous sisters constantly in the headlines
Meet the outrageous sisters constantly in the headlines

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Meet the outrageous sisters constantly in the headlines

If you think your siblings are badly behaved, opinionated, unlucky, stubborn, unconventional, or just plain wrong – you ain't seen nothing yet. New U drama series Outrageous tells the true story of the six aristocratic Mitford sisters, who couldn't have been more different, yet who each found fame – or infamy – in their own way. Focusing on how the sisters navigated the gathering storm of the 1930s, the show dives into public scandals, political extremism, dangerous romances, and devastating betrayals. Whether due to their political beliefs or private escapades, the sisters simply couldn't stay out of the headlines. Here's a taster of what the gossip columns of the time may have said... While she may be the eldest and cleverest sister, Nancy can't half put her foot in it. But why exactly has her new novel – a takedown of fascism – so upset the family? Not only that, she's fallen for a man who everyone else knows is gay. Might she finally get lucky in love and settle down with a husband who truly loves her? We'll see... Indomitable stunner Diana gets whatever she wants, and just a few years back what she wanted was Bryan Guinness, heir to a brewing fortune. Their home was once a haven for bright young things, but lately, we hear Diana has been setting her cap at a certain political kindred spirit with less-than-savoury connections – and ideas. There's just one problem: for her desires, she might have to pay a terrible price. Don't be mistaken by the quiet-seeming Pamela. Sure, she may dodge the limelight, stay out of politics, and avoid any drama - much preferring to rear chickens or motor across Europe alone – but all is not as it seems. Might her being wooed by a much older man - a physicist and amateur jockey - actually not be as surprising as it first seems, but rather a sign that her unflustered nature is hiding a discreet unconventionality? Zealous misfit Unity seems to have been headed for trouble from an early age, managing to get expelled twice from boarding school. And those who judge people by the company they keep might well find themselves looking on in horror at the 6ft 1in Mitford sister's recent life choices - what will be your verdict? 'Comrade Jessica' has a ring to it, doesn't it? And it's all too appropriate a moniker for the sister who has turned her back on the privileged world she was born into. And just what is she now planning to get up to with her equally communist-inclined teenage second-cousin (and nephew of Winston Churchill) Esmond Romilly? Ah, poor, sweet Debo. If any of the Mitford sisters deserve an uncomplicated love life, it's Deborah. Yet, the youngest sibling – who is nothing but inordinately grateful and satisfied with life – has had the heirloom rug ripped from beneath her feet by her very own sister no less! Ever since Pam announced her engagement to the one Debo had her eye on, she has been devastated. The question now is: did Pam know? is played by (Bridgerton, I Hate Suzie) is played by (Crime, The Control Room) is played by (The Hunger Games: Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes) is played by (The Jetty, Say Nothing) is played by (Casualty) is played by (Stonehouse, A Confession) is played by (Belgravia: The Next Chapter) is played by (The Veil, Malpractice)

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