Monday, December 23, 2024

Olivia Rodrigo donating more than $2m to women’s charities

Olivia Rodrigo is set to donate more than $2 million to women's charities from the profits of her 'Guts World Tour'.

Latest Posts

Paul McCartney working on new solo album

Sir Paul McCartney is working on a new solo album. The 82-year-old Beatles legend published a Q+A on his...

Charlie Puth to release new album at start of 2025

Charlie Puth is "contractually obligated" to release a new album in 2025. The 'How Long' singer's last studio effort...

The Libertines had their ‘best time’ this year

The Libertines had "unparalleled" moments of "unity" during their "best time" as a group this year, according to Pete Doherty.

Chic singer Alfa Anderson dies

Alfa Anderson has died. The singer - who was an early vocalist for Chic and appeared on the group's...

Mark Gatiss: ‘Fawlty Towers success due to John Cleese’s mental health issues’

It has been claimed that the success of ‘Fawlty Towers’ was due to John Cleese’s mental health troubles.
‘Sherlock’ writer Mark Gatiss, has claimed that John’s much-lauded portrayal of cynical and snobbish hotelier Basil Fawlty and the mishaps that occur at his Torquay-based establishment was positively influenced by John being "mentally ill" at the time.
Speaking to Radio Times, he said: "Watch the first episode of ‘Fawlty Towers’ and John Cleese is so visibly mentally ill, he’s got massive rings around his eyes and he’s so sick and the whole show is infused with his manic anger and that’s why it’s so brilliant.
"Then Cleese got better and you can’t deny that it’s not as funny."
Cleese, 78, and his then-wife Connie Booth wrote all 12 episodes of the show and the comedian previously revealed that TV bosses had to be convinced that the comedy would be a success.
He said: "When we handed the first script in, the guy in charge of evaluating it wrote a memo that I have framed.
"It says, ‘It is full of cliched situations and stereotypical characters and I cannot see it being anything other than a total disaster.’
"The show was good because we took six weeks to write every episode. Nobody takes that long now, most people take 10 days or a week. There was no temptation to do another series – we knew we would fail because we had set the bar too high."

Latest Posts

Paul McCartney working on new solo album

Sir Paul McCartney is working on a new solo album. The 82-year-old Beatles legend published a Q+A on his...

Charlie Puth to release new album at start of 2025

Charlie Puth is "contractually obligated" to release a new album in 2025. The 'How Long' singer's last studio effort...

The Libertines had their ‘best time’ this year

The Libertines had "unparalleled" moments of "unity" during their "best time" as a group this year, according to Pete Doherty.

Chic singer Alfa Anderson dies

Alfa Anderson has died. The singer - who was an early vocalist for Chic and appeared on the group's...

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