logo
EXCLUSIVE Don't call my Joe a nepo baby, says Amanda Abbington - as son, 19, she shares with Martin Freeman lands major role in new Stephen King series 'all on his own'

EXCLUSIVE Don't call my Joe a nepo baby, says Amanda Abbington - as son, 19, she shares with Martin Freeman lands major role in new Stephen King series 'all on his own'

Daily Mail​24-04-2025

Amanda Abbington and ex husband Martin Freeman have insisted their son Joe is 'not a nepo baby ', as the Strictly star demanded 'he got it all on his own'.
The actress, 51, and the Sherlock star, 53, who split in 2016 after a 16-year relationship, share son Joe, 19, and daughter Grace, 16.
Despite his very famous parent's successful acting career, Amanda has strongly defended her son and claimed he hasn't had a helping hand in showbiz.
Joe is set to make his acting debut in a new show called The Institute, an adaption of Stephen King's novel.
Amanda told Daily Mail's Richard Eden: He's just done a massive Stephen King show called The Institute, which comes out next year.
'He spent four months in Canada playing the lead in that. He got it all on his own, without anyone's help - there was no nepotism there, which was good. None at all.'
In 2023, Joe was a cast member in the production of Everybody's Talking About Jamie in Tunbridge Wells.
While Martin may be happy his son is taking after him, he previously admitted to struggling with the prospect of his children flying the nest.
The star acknowledged it is 'totally natural' for the teenagers to want to spend time without him but it's difficult not to get upset about it.
Asked about his kids flying the nest, he told the Radio Times: 'Me and their mum [Amanda] don't live together so there are times where they're inevitably going to not be with you, or when they say, "Maybe not this weekend."
'It's hard not to feel hurt when they start doing things that don't involve you, even though you understand it and welcome it because it's totally natural.'
Martin and Amanda's lookalike children recently shared a glimpse into the family's life at home.
Last year, Grace took to TikTok to share some insight into her and Joe's festivities with dad Martin at the home he shares with girlfriend Rachel Benaissa and their two sausage dogs.
The hilarious clip showed the family lip-syncing to the boyband song from Martin's iconic Christmas film Nativity, called She's The Brightest Star.
It gave fans a small glimpse into the actor's lavish home, as he and daughter Grace danced in front of a grand fireplace and huge patterned rug.
In another part of the video, Martin was seen relaxing on an expensive-looking blue quilted velvet couch as he petted one of his dachshunds and lip-synced along to the track.
A particularly funny part of the video saw Grace standing in front of a glittering Christmas tree as she lip-synced, before her brother Joe and dad Martin popped into frame to be her backing singers.
Martin's French actress partner Rachel, 31, was seen getting fully involved as she sang and danced with his son Joe as they both cuddled the dogs.
Martin and Amanda met on the set of the film Men Only in 2000 and went on to play formidable duo John and Mary Watson in Sherlock.
He has since gone on to date French actress Rachel, who has featured in many roles including BBC 's smash hit Normal People.
Meanwhile Amanda is now in a relationship with former daredevil Jonathan Goodwin. The couple were friends for years before they began dating.
However they were only together two months before Jonathan became permanently paralysed when he was crushed during a stunt - leaving him in a wheelchair.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lara Pulver on Fiddler on the Roof: 'this show is always heartbreakingly relevant'
Lara Pulver on Fiddler on the Roof: 'this show is always heartbreakingly relevant'

Evening Standard

time33 minutes ago

  • Evening Standard

Lara Pulver on Fiddler on the Roof: 'this show is always heartbreakingly relevant'

Pulver immediately strikes you as very alive, if that's not a silly thing to say, but it's just the way her eyes take up most of the room as she seeks to accommodate you - 'I'm a Jewish mother, a feeder, you can't come to my house without someone trying to put food in your mouth,' she'll say later - and how you can just imagine how she grabbed the attention back in that village hall, and has continued to do throughout her stellar career on stage - Olivier award-winning for Gypsy in 2016 - and starring in nation TV treasures like Spooks and Sherlock.

Two NYC restaurants just cracked the World's 100 Best Restaurants list for 2025
Two NYC restaurants just cracked the World's 100 Best Restaurants list for 2025

Time Out

time37 minutes ago

  • Time Out

Two NYC restaurants just cracked the World's 100 Best Restaurants list for 2025

New York City just added two more reasons to flex its culinary muscle: César and Le Bernardin have landed spots on the World's 50 Best Restaurants extended list for 2025, which ranks restaurants around the world from 51 through 100. Released ahead of the main awards ceremony in Turin, Italy, on June 19 (where the top 50 dining destinations of the year will be announced), this year's 51–100 list spans six continents and features standout kitchens from 25 territories. Of the eight North American entries, two are right here in Manhattan and both are masters of the sea. Making a splash at No. 98 is César, the elegant, seafood-focused restaurant from chef César Ramirez. Located in a century-old space at 333 Hudson Street, the sleek dining room, which has both counter and table seating, gives a front-row view of the kinetic open kitchen. Ramirez, best known for his Michelin-starred work at Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare, serves a 13-course tasting menu built on Japanese precision, French technique and impeccable ingredients from around the world. Highlights include Norwegian langoustine with shiso and caviar, and sawara paired with yuzu kosho. It's made for a confident debut for a chef known for holding himself to impossibly high standards—and meeting them. Also holding steady is midtown's beloved Le Bernardin, coming in at No. 90. A mainstay of fine dining since 1986, the Midtown temple to seafood continues to reel in global acclaim under the stewardship of Chef Eric Ripert. The menus, which range from a vegetarian tasting to a chef's selection of greatest hits, strike a delicate balance of French sophistication and Asian influence. Nearly 40 years in, the restaurant remains one of the city's most consistent fine-dining experiences, with service and flavors as polished as ever. This year's list welcomed 12 new entries from cities like Tulum, San Francisco and Queenstown, reflecting the evolving diversity of global dining. North America's strong showing also included Atelier Crenn in the Bay Area and Huniik in Mérida, Mexico.

Manhattan's West Village Girl plague has already spread to Scotland
Manhattan's West Village Girl plague has already spread to Scotland

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Manhattan's West Village Girl plague has already spread to Scotland

The West Village Girl, dissected by journalist Brock Colyar in the latest cover story for New York Magazine, is a new generation that has taken over Manhattan's West Village, the old stomping ground of Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw. There are attributes that set her apart from her Glasgow sister, but they are minor (there's no Aritzia in Glasgow from which to buy a Super Puff). The rest of her defining characteristics are shared, so let's hereby refer to her as the West End Girl: Blank Street, dachshunds, Pilates, sweatshirts from Adanola, Sambas, slick ponytails, Aperol spritzes, Sabrina Carpenter, contrast therapy, TikTok, queueing for croissants. You get the gist. Thanks to social media, it may seem like I'm describing the well-heeled Gen Z girl. The 'I'm not an influencer, I'm a content creator' girl. The gym-instead-of-pub, no-makeup-makeup girl. But the stereotype that has flooded Byres Road and beyond has roots. Millennial roots, actually. Does it really belong in Glasgow, though? Will it last? Is this Glasgow culture now? (Image: Gordon Terris, Newsquest) You see, a decade ago, when I moved to Glasgow from Vancouver, the land of Lululemon, passive aggression and orthorexia, I was this girl. I bemoaned the lack of bars I frequented at home: matcha bars, Pilates bars, smoothie bars, salad bars, trendy bars. At the time, Glasgow was mostly pubs, chippies, burger joints, betting shops and Gregg's. People eyed my culture of rampant individualism and optimisation suspiciously. The culture here was unpretentious. It was awkward to take oneself so seriously. Friends mocked my affinity for salads mercilessly (some still do). Their faces contorted with disgust at the mention of going for a run on the weekend. Weekends were for spending time with your friends and family. Socialising. Over pints. Within two years, I had all but abandoned my fragile wellness persona. I started drinking beer again. I let beige food back into my diet. I must admit, I felt holistically better in Glasgow, not striving for perfection. Though I subtly relished slipping back into my old ways whenever I returned to North America, giddy at the thought of slurping down an iced matcha latte the size of my head after a barre class. READ MORE MARISSA MACWHIRTER Then, a few years ago, something funny happened. Little echoes of the past started cropping up throughout the city. A hip salad bar here. A chic fitness studio there. Thanks to TikTok, the wellness girlie plague spread to Glasgow, a place I never thought it would touch. Reformer Pilates studios, boutique wellness spaces offering ice baths and infrared saunas, and running clubs. And then, bang! The pièce de résistance. This spring, not one, but two Blank Street Coffee locations opened within a few weeks of each other. One on Gordon Street, one on Byres Road (two Edinburgh locations opened in January and February). The brand was founded in Brooklyn in 2020, but a cup from the coffee chain is as ubiquitous in the manus of a West Village Girl as a Cartier Love Bracelet. And now, thanks to the brand's confidence in the Glasgow market, our West End Girls can have them too. No need to board the Global Airlines Airbus A380 to JFK. Blank Street was so confident in Glasgow's West End Girls that the chain opened up on the corner of Ruthven Street and Byres Road just shy of two weeks after the council refused planning permission for the site. A spokesperson for the brand said they didn't really need approval anyway and are able to operate 'under the previous tenant's use'. One local called it 'absolutely brass-necked'. A comment on the application from the Architectural Heritage Society of Scotland and an objection from Friends of Glasgow West alluded to resistance in the area for a Blank Street, and perhaps the type of Gen Z-coded customer it attracts? Blank Street Coffee is now ubiquitous The erosion of originality on Byres Road has been in the post for years. The new Blank Street unit was previously occupied by Greggs. Chains were perverting the affluent boho ethos of the West End long before Blank Street came along. Can the pushback be simplified as a resistance to the new monoculture? This exercise and health obsession that characterises mainstream Gen Zers trickled in from America. It's far removed from the European-adjacent culture of the Glasgow that I came to in 2015. If you speak to people in the nighttime industry, they will tell you this new culture has upended nightlife in the city. Queues for designer iced drinks have replaced queues for the Berkeley Suite. Pubs and bars losing their status as our first choice, third place is a shake-up of Glasgow's cultural identity. Each time I passed the Blank Street queue, my brain nearly exploded. At first, I saw a flashing recession indicator warning that matcha making its way to Glasgow was a grave sign we were one step closer to an atomised society. We better get those Gen Zers on the pints, fast, before it's too late, I thought. Then, milky green with envy, I saw a generation younger than me, healthy like I once was, glossy with youth and languishing in the sunny queue for a cute little beverage, not a care in the world. I would like to be her again. Maybe if I get in line behind the sea of Hayley Bieber lookalikes and buy myself an Iced Daydream Matcha, I can turn the clock back a few years. There is, after all, nothing wrong with caring about your health. It's good for you, in fact. Questioning whether the affluent West End Girl mentality belongs in Glasgow is redundant. She is clearly already here. And will it last? I've always thought American wellness culture was rooted in the country's cruel and costly privatised health care system. So if the weekly warnings about the dire state of Scotland's NHS are anything to go on, I reckon we could see a few more Blank Streets in the city this year. Marissa MacWhirter is a columnist and feature writer at The Herald, and the editor of The Glasgow Wrap. The newsletter is curated between 5-7am each morning, bringing the best of local news to your inbox each morning without ads, clickbait, or hyperbole. Oh, and it's free. She can be found on X @marissaamayy1

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