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Telford United's women's football team will no longer pay to play
Telford United's women's football team will no longer pay to play

BBC News

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Telford United's women's football team will no longer pay to play

AFC Telford United has confirmed its women's first team will not have to pay to play next season. The players, who compete in the West Midlands Regional League Division One North, the sixth tier of women's football, previously paid up to £200 each season, in order to cover the cost of training and match venues. The club's Tom Lewis said the team had gained "significant prize money", about £10,000, following their performance in this year's FA Cup run where they reached the first round. He added that their efforts had helped the women's set-up to become "sustainable" and enabled the fee to be removed. Mr Lewis said the team's "biggest financial burden" was the cost of hiring Telford College where they play, and added that it had been "unavoidable" to raise the money through players fees in the past. He said players had previously chosen to play for other clubs which didn't charge, and in recent years the club had encouraged the women to find sponsors to cover the fees."We're fighting in a pool where instantly if you say to them you have to pay, it becomes less attractive."However, Mr Lewis added that in recent years FA Cup prize money had "almost trebled". 'Help to secure promotion' The removal of the charge had made the team "competitive" and "opened up the talent pool", he said. "For a number of years we've been in the same league, we've been second and third fighting for promotion. "Hopefully by opening up interest around the club and strengthening the squad with new players will go a long way into securing us that elusive promotion," he Lewis said the club "looked where possible" to bring footballers in through their youth development programme, however he hoped the new setup had made the team an "attractive proposition". Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Aberdeen dancer Hayley lands star role as body double for Hollywood actress Vanessa Hudgens
Aberdeen dancer Hayley lands star role as body double for Hollywood actress Vanessa Hudgens

Press and Journal

time17-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Press and Journal

Aberdeen dancer Hayley lands star role as body double for Hollywood actress Vanessa Hudgens

Not many people can say they've been a body double for one of the most famous Hollywood stars in the world. But that is exactly what happened to Aberdeen dancer Hayley Brown. After being booked as a backing dancer for the film The Princess Switch 3, the 34-year-old suddenly found herself as a body double for the American actress Vanessa Hudgens. 'I was thrown in at the deep end as I'd danced before but I'd never done stand-in work,' says Hayley. 'So I was sitting there looking around the room and there were all these famous actors and I just thought, 'why am I sitting here'. 'But it was an amazing experience and I'm so glad I just went for it.' So how did Hayley become a stand-in for a Hollywood megastar? It all begins when Hayley was just a toot. 'I've danced since I was three years old,' says Hayley. 'I used to love performing at school or in my own back garden, copying dances from music videos at the time. 'I even made my dad make a stage for me to perform on.' Despite having a love of performing, it wasn't until Hayley was a teenager when she really got into it. 'When I was about 15/16, some of my friends were doing the local pantomime with Attic Theatre so I got involved with that,' says Hayley. 'Sharon Gill, who was organising the panto at the time, then encouraged me to join her cheerleading group so I randomly fell into that.' Unbeknown to Hayley at the time, cheerleading was like a springboard into the world of performing. 'As part of the cheerleading group we went to Disneyland to perform,' says Hayley. 'It was an amazing experience to compete against cheerleading teams from across the world.' But although Hayley was performing on the global stage she still doubted herself. 'I still didn't really have the confidence to pursue dance as a career,' says Hayley. 'Also, there wasn't really further education in Aberdeen, I thought you always had to move away to Edinburgh or Glasgow.' But everything changed for Hayley, who worked in childcare, when she saw one of her friends perform in a show. 'I remember going to watch my friend's dance show and I thought 'oh that's what I should be doing',' says Hayley. 'So I went on to study dance at Telford College in Edinburgh and Morningside Advanced training. 'I can't thank the teachers from Morningside dance school in Edinburgh enough for everything they taught me.' Hayley's first big break into the film industry happened when she got a part as a dancer in the hit Scottish film Sunshine on Leith starring Peter Mullan. 'I was in the big dance scene at the end,' says Hayley. 'It was quite lucky as apparently, they had finished the film but the directors weren't happy with the ending so they decided to do this big dance scene at the end.' After completing her training in Edinburgh, Hayley moved back to Aberdeen where she became a dance teacher. It was during lockdown when Hayley got her next big break. 'Everything stopped during lockdown but people who worked in TV and film could get a permit and still work,' says Hayley. 'So my dance agent put me forward for a couple of films.' Hayley ended up landing a role as a backing dancer for A Castle for Christmas, a romance/comedy film starring Brooke Shields, Drew Barrymore and Carl Ewes. 'It was filmed at Dalmeny House in Edinburgh and in other locations across South Queensferry,' says Hayley. 'I was in a scene where they have a little ceilidh dance. 'Brooke Shields was lovely, she had a sore ankle but she powered through. 'And Carl Ewes, who was in Stranger Things, was keen to practice his Scottish accent so he remained in character the entire time.' And just when Hayley thought things couldn't get better, she landed a role as a dancer in The Princess Switch 3: Romancing the Star, a film starring Vanessa Hudgens. 'Initially I was hired as a dancer but then I was asked to stay on as part of the crew and ended up body doubling for Vanessa,' says Hayley. 'I had a similar height, hair colour and skin colour as Vanessa so I was a stand-in for her. 'So basically, I would watch her do a scene as they rehearsed and then when Vanessa went into hair and make-up, I would I stand there and pretend to be her so the crew could set up all the lights and cameras. 'I would also sometimes be her hand double.' So what was it like to work alongside the High School Musical star who boasts 50.3 million Instagram followers? 'Vanessa was really lovely,' says Hayley. 'I actually don't know how she did it as she played three characters in the film so it must've been mentally and physically exhausting. 'Also, all her characters had different hair colours too so she had to go and sit for hours in hair and makeup. 'I definitely respected the graft that she put into the film.' Reflecting on the experience, Hayley says it's great to see more films being shot in Scotland as it opens the doors for local performers. 'The Princess Switch 3 was filmed in locations in Edinburgh including Hopetoun House, near South Queensferry as well as at Gosford House in East Lothian and Newbattle Abbey in Midlothian,' says Hayley. 'I always thought you had to go down to London to do these things so it's great know that there's jobs in Edinburgh and Glasgow. 'To be able to get experience in front and behind the camera made me realise that there is a film world out there which is not so far away.' One of the most surreal experiences Hayley had was when she was a dancer on the third season of the hit BBC programme The Traitors as well as a The Traitors US celeb version. 'The Traitors is filmed in Inverness so we were very lucky that they were looking for people for that,' says Hayley. 'So I was in the most recent series, the third one. 'I was one of a group of clowns with balloons who did a dance as part of one the contestants' tasks. 'It was a surreal experience because I watch the Traitors. 'After filming it was difficult as I knew who was in the final but I couldn't say anything.' And although working in TV and films may sound glamorous, Hayley says it's far from it. 'While filming The Traitors, we were outside in the mud and the rain for a long time waiting around as they set up the cameras and check the angles,' says Hayley. 'There's a lot of waiting around so you know to take your snacks and a book.' Most recently, Hayley has worked on Half Man, a forthcoming British and American television series written, created and starring Richard Gadd who starred in the hit Netflix show Baby Reindeer. And when she's not on film sets, Hayley loves nothing more than working as a freelance dance teacher in Aberdeen. She can also be found modelling or performing in many local pubs, clubs or corporate events and fundraisers. 'I love making people feel good and seeing their confidence grow,' says Hayley. 'I also love getting to meet new people all the time, travelling and being involved with amazing projects and talented people and of course, all the fun costumes.' With so many exciting projects coming her way, Hayley is embracing this period of her life. 'I'm just enjoying life right now,' says Hayley. 'When I was younger I used to lack confidence and now I just don't care. 'If an opportunity comes up I just go for it. 'It's good as I can inspire younger people now and show them what you can achieve.' For more information on Hayley, check out her Instagram page @hayleycbrown1 And if you liked this story, you may also like: I was an extra in a new Aberdeen movie — here's what it was like on set at the Blue Lamp

'Lockdown was announced while doing clients' hair'
'Lockdown was announced while doing clients' hair'

BBC News

time24-03-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

'Lockdown was announced while doing clients' hair'

"The lockdown was announced mid-way through doing clients' hair, and it was all a bit frantic."It was like: 'What do we do? Do we finish the clients or have we literally got to chuck them out of the door and shut the shop and off we go?'"On 23 March, 2020, during the Covid-19 pandemic, the then Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the first lockdown in the UK, ordering people to "stay at home". Former Shrewsbury hairdresser Jodie Allen thought it would last for two it lasted several weeks but led to an epiphany which saw her pursue a career in teaching. "I went back into the salon and I was just a bit like: "Oh, I don't know that this is what I want to do any more, forever'" she said. "The stars aligned… it was about half 3 in the morning… I looked on Telford College website and there was a job advertised for a hairdressing lecturer."She got the job, working at the salon two days per week, and teaching for three was put through university, got a teaching qualification and eventually became the learning manager for hair, beauty and catering at the college."I think the time out of doing the normal really made me think about what I wanted to do," she said. Although much of the country ground to a halt, that year could not have been a busier time for teacher and former midwife Sarah administered vaccinations at Ludlow Racecourse as well as doing her college teaching job."I felt like it was my duty, I should use my qualifications and my experience to give something back," she said."I would teach my lessons in the morning online and then in the afternoon I would pick up the afternoon shift at the racecourse. "It's probably one of my proudest achievements in all of my career… I think there's not many people who will be able to tell their grandchildren that that's what they did during Covid," she Davies said if she could go back, she would tell herself that it would be okay."We have all come out the other side, and there were many many negatives and we're still feeling the negatives, but we can take some positives." Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

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