
EXCLUSIVE EastEnders star Martine McCutcheon is declared BANKRUPT... 11 months after ending her marriage
The 49 year old actress - who also appeared in Love Actually - filed a petition for her insolvency over a debt to a finance company, official public records reveal.
McCutcheon's financial woes follow soon after the very public split from husband Jack McManus, with whom she shares a ten-year-old son.
The couple, who had married in a lavish event at Lake Como in Italy in 2012, announced their split late last year.
And her bankruptcy was issued just two months after McCutcheon and musician McManus, 42, sold the family home they had shared, a five bedroom detached home in Surrey for £1,355,000, as they went their separate ways.
The bankruptcy order was made in her married name – Martine McManus - despite her being formally single by the then.
It was issued in March at the County Court in Guildford, Surrey following a petition filed by a company called LDF Finance to whom she owed an unspecified sum of money.
But that wasn't the only financial blow to strike her soon after the marriage split: her company Raven Music Ltd was also wound up just last month at the request of HMRC due to unpaid tax bills, MalOnline has learned.
The most recent accounts for the company reveal that it owed more than £175,000 to the taxman, payable in the 12month period after February 2022.
McCutcheon's total personal tax bill has not been revealed, and it is not known if the Official Receiver will apply for a public examination of her bankruptcy which would disclose her financial affairs to the world.
As Martine's finances were unravelling, the actress continued to put on a brave face in public: that same month that her music company was hitting the buffers, for example, she posted on social media about a day out with her son Rafferty and their dog.
She wrote: 'I love being by the water… ⛵️���� The Uk has SO many beautiful places and in the sunshine, it really does take some beating doesn't it? �� This is us on Hampton court river…. We booked a boat, and took a little picnic and it was gorgeous!! '
This is actually the second time that the actress - whose net worth was once estimated as being over £2 million - has been declared bankrupt, having previously endured the distressing legal process in 2013.
That earlier bankruptcy came after she reportedly racked up £187,000 of debts,which included £150,000 owed to HMRC.
But McCutcheon is believed to have been discharged from that previous bankruptcy in 2014, allowing her to get back on her feet financially.
She and her husband were certainly solvent enough to be able to splash out £1.3m on buying their dream detached home in Surrey in June 2022.
But the move to a dream home didn't save the relationship of the couple who revealed last August that they were splitting up last August after 18 years together.
And McCutcheon revealed last year that her husband had ended their relationship.
Sources close to the star indicated she desperately tried to save her marriage but eventually accepted her husband's decision to move on.
In her split statement, which she posted on Instagram, McCutcheon wrote: 'After much thought and consideration, Jack has decided it's best for us to separate after 18 years together and I accept his decision.'
She later added: 'I continue to send Jack, all the love, luck and happiness for the next chapter of his life.'
It later emerged that they had put their home on the market three months earlier in May last year with an asking price of £1.5m.
They later reduced the price to £1.25m – meaning they faced making a loss on the property – before securing a sale in January this year for £1,355,000, according to Land Registry records.
The actress has now downsized and is believed to live in a rented three bedroom Victorian terraced home in a nearby town in Surrey.
McCutcheon shot to fame in 1995 at the age of 18 when she played Tiffany Mitchell in EastEnders and stayed in the BBC1 show until 1998 when her character was killed off.
She went on to launch a pop career, and had a number one hit in 1999 with her song Perfect Moment.
McCutcheon went on to have a number of TV roles and won a Laurence Olivier Award in 2002 for playing Eliza Doolittle in the National Theatre's stage production of My Fair Lady.
She also starred with Hugh Grant, Keira Knightley and Colin Firth in the 2003 hit film Love Actually, and went to America in the wake of its success, but a Hollywood career did not materialise.
Her novel The Mistress became a top ten bestseller in 2009 and she went on to be the face of Dantone's UK advertising campaign for its Activa yogurt.
She was said to be earning just £1.50 an hour in Knicker Box before her EastEnders role which set her on the path to amassing a reported fortune of £1.5million.
McCutcheon has previously admitted she is 'materialistic' and has a love for the finer things in life.
She once said: 'I love nice things – I consider Ralph Lauren sheets to be a necessity, not a luxury – but I've known what it's like to be poor.
'I'm a Taurean, so I'm very passionate and determined and materialistic. Down the years I've spent a lot of money and saved a bit of money and had a lot of fun.
'And yes, if it all ended tomorrow and I could never afford another Gucci bag, then I think it's safe to say that I've got enough to be going on with.'
A source told MailOnline: 'Martine's had an incredibly tough few years, not just in her personal life, but her businesses too.
'Unfortunately the bankruptcy was unavoidable, but she's seeing it as a fresh start and will look to bounce back. She's done it before and she'll do it again.'
In an interview with BBC4's Woman's Hour, she admitted that she turned into a recluse when her marriage first came under strain.
She said: 'I didn't want to answer my phone. I didn't want to answer the front door, go outside and I would panic out of nowhere and have to pull over when I was driving because I felt this huge fear and couldn't breathe.'
The actress added: 'I genuinely felt I was losing my mind. I didn't know if I really was or if it was something that was perimenopausal.
'It would just come on out of nowhere and when I spoke to my specialist about it she said, 'You know this is sadly the case for many women.'
McCutcheon's health was also deeply impacted by the shock death in 2022 of her brother LJ (Lawrence John) who had a mild form of special needs and passed away with 'no medical explanation'.
The website designer had been due to get married a month before his death and McCutcheon was going to be a bridesmaid.
Following his death, McCutcheon who was already living with ME (chronic fatigue syndrome) admitted she had been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD).
Speaking on the A Gentle Star: The Showercast podcast, she admitted she had been in denial about having the condition.
She said: 'At first I went into I went into denial, completely into denial, because my brother had passed away.
'I've been diagnosed with ME, and I just thought, I can't take this diagnosis on and whatever it means. I need to just keep going at life the way that I am. And in a way, I was kind of right.
'And then when I did finally look at it, I cried, I cried, cried and cried, I grieved, and it was just for if only I'd known how different things could have been, how much more with ease I would have been able to have done things.'
McCutcheon added: 'I always felt there were certain things that I looked at differently, different things I struggled with compared to other people, but different things I found so easy, and I realised, when I got my ADD diagnosis, that I had spent so much time trying to be a square in a round circle, and it was exhausting.
'It was so draining. It was just so hard. And in a way, I feel like I wasn't meant to find out, as sad as it was, because I did lose a lot of things in my life.
'I did struggle with a lot of things that I don't think I would have done necessarily. I think that if I'd have known before those four years ago that I had ADD, I don't know if I would have been able to have coped with it the way that I do now.'
McCutcheon set up her company Raven Music Ltd in February 2017, according to Companies House records.
Its last accounts filed in February 2023 showed it had assets of £272,977 including more than £211,000 in cash in the bank in February 2022.
But at the same time, it had debts falling due for payment in the future for £255,693, including £110,000 in Corporation Tax and £64,790 in other HMRC payments
The company faced a notice for compulsory strike off in February last year, but it was suspended two weeks later before being wound up at the request of the HMRC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
4 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
New Match of the Day presenter Gabby Logan teased for 'embarrassing and cringeworthy' video begging Alexander Isak not to leave Newcastle as fans joke they 'thought clip was AI'
Gabby Logan has been teased on social media for her 'embarrassing and cringeworthy' plea begging Alexander Isak to stay at Newcastle this summer. Mail Sport first revealed earlier this week that the striker has told the club he wants to leave and Liverpool are preparing a staggering British record offer. Isak did not travel with his team-mates to Singapore after reporting a thigh injury and boss Eddie Howe has admitted the Magpies have a 'decision to make' over the ace. But Logan, one of three new Match of the Day presenters who will share the famous hot seat after Gary Lineker stepped away, has not given up hope that the frontman - who could go for as much as £150million - could change his mind. She spoke about the possibility of the Swede walking away from St James' Park on The Sports Agents podcast, declaring her words came 'from the heart'. 'The citadel of St James Park, that sits high and proud at the centre of the town, is like a cathedral of hope, of creativity, of joy,' Logan said. 'You know yourself: on match day, there probably isn't anywhere else in the world you'd rather play football.' "Don't leave, you're already at home!" 🏠 Gabby Logan makes an emotional call for Alexander Isak to stay at Newcastle United amid rumours he's asked the club for a way out. 🖤🤍 @GlobalPlayer | — The Sports Agents (@sportsagentspod) July 25, 2025 'It's a city that has grown champions and heroes. From Jackie Milburn to Alan Shearer, you have walked in the footsteps of some giants. You know the love and adoration that comes from being Newcastle's number nine.' Logan then concluded the impassioned video message by saying: 'Alexander, don't leave. Don't go anywhere else. You are already at home!' However, social media users were quick to brutally rib the presenter for the display. 'Wow. What on earth is this?' one account said. 'Embarrassing and cringeworthy.' Another simply said: 'This is absolutely pathetic.' 'Hahahaha what in the cringe is this. Embarrassing stuff,' a third wrote. A fourth added: 'I honestly thought this was AI ha, I mean seriously wtf?' Howe believes any decision over the wantaway Isak must be best for the club. When asked if he wanted a quick resolution, the Newcastle boss said: 'I wouldn't put a timescale on it. I think with these situations it has to be right for the football club, and everything then is taken into context below that. 'But the club will make the right decision with all the information that it has, and ultimately to try and move the club forward in whatever way that is. Then it's up to us to make good decisions the other way and try and improve the squad as best we can. That's what we're trying to do, regardless of Alex's situation. 'But I think there's a wider picture here. There's a whole football club that has to make the decision. The ownership, together with the board of directors, especially with the money involved in modern day transfers. The manager of course has an opinion, but ultimately the decision will rest with the board.'


The Sun
4 minutes ago
- The Sun
Chocolate lovers racing to Poundland to try new flavour of Nestle Milkybar scanning at tills for just £1.50
A BRAND-new Nestle flavour has hit the shelves and it's been spotted in Poundland for just £1.50. The Swiss confectionery giant's new Milkybar features a vanilla-flavoured biscuit centre and a milk chocolate base. Posting in the Facebook group New Foods UK, a shopper wrote: "Actually really enjoyed this new Milkybar Chocolate Crumble Bar. "The crunchy cookie pieces with the creamy chocolate works so well. Now available at Poundland." While many chimed in with enthusiasm, one user insisted: "Nothing should be mixed with Milkybar chocolate." The 84g Milkybar Chocolate Crumble was priced at £2.00 in Sainsbury's but now seems to be out of stock. It combines a vanilla-flavoured filling with biscuit pieces, layered on a milk chocolate base and coated in white chocolate. This crumbly twist has a crunchier texture compared to the classic Milkybar. The whole bar packs around 460 kcal, with each of the five segments containing about 92 kcal. A Nestle spokesperson said earlier in the year: "This year, Nestlé is set to introduce a range of exciting confectionery products. "Keep an eye on this space for delightful surprises in store." The company has been expanding its product range in 2025, introducing several new chocolate products alongside innovations in coffee. These chocolate bites are packed with a rich double chocolate brownie flavour and Aero's recognisable bubbly texture. They appear to be exclusive to Sainsbury's for now. It comes months after shoppers spotted another Milkybar flavour from Nestle on supermarket shelves. The Biscoff Milkybar is available at B&M for just £1 - much cheaper than the £2.99 price listed on iFoods UK online. When adding the £6.99 shipping fee, a single bar from iFoods costs nearly £10. Nestle - the world's largest food and beverage company - was founded in 1866 by German-born pharmacist Henri Nestlé in Switzerland. While it originally began with infant formula, its product range now extends from baby food and coffee to confectionery and pet care. The company owns well-known brands like KitKat, Milkybar, Nescafé, Perrier and Purina. 2


Telegraph
4 minutes ago
- Telegraph
European leaders are disrupting Trump's golfing holiday at their peril
When president Donald Trump stepped off Air Force One on to Scottish soil, he had one thing on his mind. 'There's no place like Turnberry,' he told his travelling press pool beneath the wing of his presidential jet. His Ayrshire golf course, he continued, was 'the best … probably the best course in the world'. Minutes later, he climbed into the Beast – his armoured limousine - to travel 35 minutes along country lanes and through Scottish villages, lined with supporters, protesters, and the merely curious, to Turnberry. Mr Trump may be determined to have a break, but European leaders have other ideas. Willingly or otherwise, Mr Trump faces a string of meetings in the coming days as the Continent's power brokers sit down with the unpredictable president. For now, though, he is secure inside a ring of steel. The historic course, home to some of the most exciting Opens in history, has been locked down. It now sits inside an eight-foot fence, its fairways dotted with burly men in dark suits and earpieces. Snipers watch over the course from a watch tower. Police officers – some on quad bikes – patrol the famous course and the dunes that flank it. Mr Trump arrived with his golf clubs for four days at his two Scottish courses but without some of the trappings of a travelling American president. He travelled with a stripped-down retinue of aides. There was no chief of staff, director of communications, secretary of state or other cabinet ministers, who might be expected on an important foreign trip. His public weekend schedule showed no planned events. Instead, it was a chance to spend time at his golf course with his sons Eric, who manages the family businesses, and Don Jr. Officials insisted that this was a 'working trip' including a meeting with Sir Keir Starmer on Monday, although they were vague on agenda items. Yet all that changed shortly before Mr Trump flew out of Washington, when Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission president, announced on X that she would be meeting Mr Trump on Sunday as she closes in on a trade deal: Following a good call with @POTUS, we have agreed to meet in Scotland on Sunday to discuss transatlantic trade relations, and how we can keep them strong. — Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) July 25, 2025 EU members have drawn up a retaliatory hit list. The plan is to impose 30pc tariffs on bourbon whisky, yachts, soybeans and other American products if a deal cannot be reached by August 1 to lift US levies. Mrs von der Leyen had better tread carefully. A diplomat who has prepared ministers for meetings with Mr Trump said she was playing a high-risk game. 'Very dangerous,' they said. Mr Trump's chat with reporters at Glasgow Prestwick Airport showed a president relaxed and looking forward to four days of golf, but one who was quick to bristle when it came to policy and politics. Mr Trump left Washington bugged by the drip, drip, drip of headlines about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, the billionaire paedophile who took his own life in a jail cell six years ago. He flashed irritation and lobbed sharp words at reporters who asked him how much he knew about the case on Friday, but relaxed as soon as he could talk about the love of his life: golf and the course at Turnberry. 'Sean Connery helped get me the permits,' he claimed after landing. 'If it weren't for Sean Connery, we wouldn't have those great courses.' There is a lesson for European leaders looking to muscle in on his tee times with their trade demands or for John Swinney, the Scottish First Minister, who is likely to tell Mr Trump that his tariffs are hurting the Scotch whisky industry. When the chat with reporters turned from golf to more substantial matters, he said he had a simple message for Europe. 'On immigration, you better get your act together,' he said in another flash of passion. 'You're not going to have Europe anymore... This immigration is killing Europe.' Anyone meeting with Mr Trump will remember the lessons of Volodymyr Zelensky's Oval Office row. The Ukrainian president was roundly chastised by Mr Trump and his vice president for daring to push back on the US position. And by hosting leaders at his Turnberry and Aberdeenshire courses, Mr Trump retains home advantage even while on foreign soil. Sir Keir may have got the memo. Mr Trump billed their meeting as little more than a chance to celebrate their recent trade deal. Although the Prime Minister does run the risk of upsetting Mr Trump over plans to raise the plight of civilians in Gaza, British officials played down the chances of any major diplomatic announcements. 'It's not like other meetings where we would go in with deliverables we planned to announce,' he said. On Saturday, all that was far from Mr Trump's mind. He spent the day golfing with son Eric, and his ambassador to London. The sound of Billy Joel's 'Uptown Girl' and 'Memories' from the musical Cats drifted out from the dunes on Saturday morning as Mr Trump's motorcade of golf buggies arrived at the fourth hole. Photographers huddled on a mound in the dunes, hoping to get a shot of the president on the course. Mr Trump, wearing a white USA cap and dressed in black, waved at the mound before teeing off in the direction of Turnberry lighthouse. Cheers from his baseball-cap-wearing entourage could be heard above the din of the speakers as the group wasted little time in rattling off their drives. A photographer camped in the dunes with a long lens later claimed to have witnessed the president cheat on the third fairway. He said Mr Trump had been handed a ball by a caddy, which he then dropped to the floor and pushed forward a little with an iron before taking a swing. The golf course has been surrounded by an eight-foot-high metal fence, while dozens of officers patrolled the entrances to the beach from Turnberry all the way down to Maidens, the next town along the coast. A temporary watchtower had been erected to monitor the Turnberry perimeter with a sniper rifle trained on the course below. A drone scanned from above, and police boats patrolled the coastal waters. Asked whether there would be a repeat of protesters taking to the beach in front of the golf club, an officer said the incident in 2018 had likely convinced the authorities to close off the entire beach to the public. Fears that the visit would be a magnet for protesters appeared unfounded. Matt Halliday, from Stranraer, said he had been driving around for two hours trying and failing to find protests to join. He said Mr Trump had 'stamped all over Scotland' with his grand golf resort plans, strong-arming local farmers and 'bullying' the council over wind farm plans. One of his signs bore a picture of the president with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. 'I think it is going to bring him down,' he said. However, supporters were easier to find than protesters. Two wearing red 'Make England Great Again' hats arrived shortly after the president had disappeared over the crest of a dune. 'We love Trump,' said Kay English, 37, wearing a face mask sporting the president's face. Tom English, a 38-year-old driver, said the pair had driven up from Liverpool last night to catch a glimpse of the president. 'We support Maga, Trump and what he is doing,' he told reporters, adding: 'I like the way he is, the way he speaks. It is comedy gold. 'He is putting the people first. He is trying to help the whole world to make peace - he is the president of peace.' Mr English said he would return on Sunday and hopefully get within 'shouting distance' to offer words of encouragement to the president and cheer on his cost-cutting Doge unit. He added: 'We love Doge, we are trying to get that here through Reform. There is so much being wasted.' Mr Trump has long blurred the line between family, business and public life. But any world leader intruding on his golfing getaway had better be ready for a possible sharp response.