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Renai Belle jailed for murdering Josh McKay in front of his young son in Leyton barber shop
Renai Belle jailed for murdering Josh McKay in front of his young son in Leyton barber shop

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Renai Belle jailed for murdering Josh McKay in front of his young son in Leyton barber shop

An aspiring rapper who stabbed a charity worker to death in front of his young son in a barber shop has been jailed for life. Renai Belle murdered his former friend Josh McKay, 33, in the neck after he refused to fund his career, the Old Bailey heard. The 30-year-old carried out the pre-meditated attack in Leyton, east , on 6 July 2024. Belle spotted Mr McKay going into Hollywood Cuts on Lea Bridge Road and drove off with his former girlfriend, Tenika Parker, to get a knife and balaclava from another man, Daniel Cooper. Prosecutors said he returned to the scene, put on the face covering and stabbed the father-of-two. A struggle spilled out into the street and members of the public tried to help Mr McKay, but he couldn't be saved. The court heard Belle then headed to Parker's address to take a shower and get rid of evidence. However, he was arrested two days later following a manhunt. Traces of blood and the black sliders Belle wore for the murder were found when police pulled over Parker's car, despite her attempts to clean up the vehicle. Officers also found a YouTube video showing Belle threatening Mr McKay - who ran an enterprise helping young people leaving care get jobs and homes. The court heard he'd also helped Belle but his killer became angry and jealous when he refused to pay for a rap video. Mr McKay's mother, Bash Kehinde, said her son had helped more than 50 young men and had taken in Belle after he left prison, giving him clothes and a place to stay. Addressing him in court, she said: "You then asked Josh for more, you wanted him to fund your rap video. "Josh told you he wouldn't give you the money - £1,500 - that if you were serious about being a rapper then you would work hard to make your video." She said he became angry with her son - who ignored his threats. Ms Kehinde added: "While you would have seen Josh as being successful, having money to buy a flash car and fancy clothes - what you would never realise is that they were the rewards of hard work and dedication to others." Belle, from Edmonton, was sentenced on Wednesday to a minimum of 28 years after being found guilty of murder and knife possession last month. His ex-girlfriend Tenika Parker, a 39-year-old primary school teacher, was found guilty of perverting the course of justice and knife possession. She was jailed for two years and three months. Daniel Cooper, 22, who provided the weapon and balaclava, pleaded guilty to possessing a blade and was jailed for 30 weeks on a previous occasion. Speaking outside court, Mr McKay's mother described him as a "beautiful, happy, kind, man, and an active, loving father". Read more from Sky News: She also said the media's use of the term "knife crime" strips awful crimes of the "human cost" and allows people to "look away". "It's not knife crime. It's murder," she said. "And it happens to people like you and me. Innocent teenagers shot at parties, young men killed for their watches, fathers murdered while taking their son to have a haircut. "So stop calling it knife crime. Call it what it is. Call it murder. And start acting like it matters."

Emmerdale fans 'work out' Belle's new romance after huge clue
Emmerdale fans 'work out' Belle's new romance after huge clue

Metro

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Metro

Emmerdale fans 'work out' Belle's new romance after huge clue

Emmerdale fans are wondering if things are about to change for Belle Dingle (Eden Taylor-Draper) where the world of romance is concerned. Belle has been single following a horrific ordeal that saw her abused by husband Tom King (James Chase). When Tom and Belle got together, it wasn't long until we started to see signs of controlling behaviour from him. At first, Tom's actions were small, but he then became hellbent on isolating Belle from her entire family. Over the next year, Tom was responsible for installing security cameras in the house, tracking Belle's every movement, physically and mentally abusing her, as well as pretending her dog Piper had died in an attempt to get close to her again. Belle eventually reported Tom and he was sent to prison for three years. In February of this year, Belle decided she would begin divorce proceedings, but it meant visiting Tom in prison. Fortunately, strong-willed Belle was able to stand up to Tom and ignore his attempts at getting inside her head. Since then, she has worked hard on her healing journey, and has even started running Take a Vow in the wake of Leyla and Suzy's deaths. It's clear Belle is in a much better headspace after allowing herself time to recover from Tom's abuse. As a result of things being brighter for Belle, it of course gives her the opportunity to contemplate dipping her toe back into the dating pool. Just recently, Kammy Hadiq star Shebz Miah shared a picture of him and Eden Taylor-Draper sitting on a sofa together. They were smiling at the camera and wearing smart outfits. The post has got a lot of fans talking, and plenty of them are now wondering if this could be a clue that Belle and Kammy will share a romance storyline together soon. 'Kammy and Belle?? Could this be a future relationship', a follower said in the comments section. Another wrote: 'Omg, are they getting together on Emmerdale? If so, I saw it coming a mile away.' This fan echoed the hopes of Belle and Kammy (Kelle? Bammy?) being a thing and said: 'Beautiful photo pair of brilliant actors Get them together Emmerdale and don't spoil the relationship.' Kammy Hadiq made his arrival to the Emmerdale village in March of this year. Want to be the first to hear shocking EastEnders spoilers? Who's leaving Coronation Street? The latest gossip from Emmerdale? Join 10,000 soaps fans on Metro's WhatsApp Soaps community and get access to spoiler galleries, must-watch videos, and exclusive interviews. Simply click on this link, select 'Join Chat' and you're in! Don't forget to turn on notifications so you can see when we've just dropped the latest spoilers! He was introduced in a storyline that saw Sarah Sugden (Katie Hill) search for a distraction after being dumped by Jacob Gallagher (Joe-Warren Plant). More Trending Now though, Kammy has made friends with other members of the Dales, one of them being Vinny Dingle (Bradley Johnson). After Vinny attempted to kiss Kammy, he's been reluctant to talk about how it made him feel. View More » Kammy has been supportive of Vinny but with the resident confused, he is often seen snapping at his pal and pushing him away. MORE: Emmerdale favourite declares he and fiancé will be 'together forever' – but a secret is set to explode MORE: Vinny horrified as major Emmerdale legend overhears private moment with Kammy MORE: All Emmerdale spoilers for next week as two lives are on the line

More beauty than beast in new production at Perth's Crown Theatre
More beauty than beast in new production at Perth's Crown Theatre

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

More beauty than beast in new production at Perth's Crown Theatre

There was more beauty than beast represented in the Perth personalities who adorned the red carpet for Saturday's Beauty and the Beast premiere at Crown Theatre – and the same could be said for the show. At the final opening for a national tour attended so far by 1.2 million Australians, anticipation and nostalgia built right from the prologue voiced by Angela Lansbury (Miss Potts in the original Disney animated feature) and the opening glimpses of a jaw-dropping set that required 23 trucks to get to Perth and a team of 70 to unload them across thousands of hours. Faithfulness to the original continued; there is no danger of a modern reimagining in this saccharine-sweet production, which despite the vocal prowess of Belle (Perth-born Shubshri Kandiah) and the Beast (Brendan Xavier) unfortunately is slightly lacking in truly memorable numbers in the context of a 2.5-hour run time. The obvious exceptions are of course Be Our Guest, a showstopping number bringing all the production's technical might including projected backdrops of dancers' onstage patterns, milked to the max through an extended tap finale with 2400 lights; Belle, which shows off a French provincial town created with 30 tonnes of flying scenery and 50 tonnes of automation and staging; and Beauty and the Beast, simply and touchingly rendered by Jayde Westaby as Mrs Potts. The character of Gaston has more prominence than in the film and the charismatic Jackson Head brings excellent comedic value to it, with a ridiculous Jim Carrey vibe. To the extent that the gent on one side mentioned the resemblance at interval and the gent on the other was unable to prevent himself Googling Jim Carrey pictures during the performance, distracting us somewhat from Olivier Award nominee Matt West's excellent choreography displayed to full effect in Gaston (fun fact, the song's cast clink mugs 800-plus times). Despite being centred around the love story of Belle and the Beast the production's real emotional punch somehow comes not from them or even the relationship between Belle and father Maurice (Perth-raised Rodney Dobson) but from the enchanted castle objects whose attachment to humanity is, like the Beast's, dropping away with each petal from the magic rose. Lumiere (Rohan Browne), Cogsworth (Gareth Jacobs), Mrs Potts and Madame the wardrobe (Alana Tranter) are the heart of the show, providing pathos as well as laughs and magic (Lumiere's flames are real; Mrs Potts' spout smokes; Tranter's squeals are pitch-perfect comedy). Eason Ma was sweet as Chip the cup, head inserted into the side of the cup, body cleverly concealed in the stage furniture, though truth be told the disembodied head was at times striking me as a little on the weird side of cute. Particularly next to the larger-than-life Gaston, clearly an audience favourite, the Beast is somewhat disadvantaged. His role swings from suddenly roaring too loud and upsetting the other characters, to playing the fool for laughs, lacking the dark, conflicted tragedy this role could otherwise represent. Perhaps more height and bulk in the costuming would have made him a more imposing figure, but perhaps also would more attention given to parts of the show that feel rushed.

More beauty than beast in new production at Perth's Crown Theatre
More beauty than beast in new production at Perth's Crown Theatre

The Age

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

More beauty than beast in new production at Perth's Crown Theatre

There was more beauty than beast represented in the Perth personalities who adorned the red carpet for Saturday's Beauty and the Beast premiere at Crown Theatre – and the same could be said for the show. At the final opening for a national tour attended so far by 1.2 million Australians, anticipation and nostalgia built right from the prologue voiced by Angela Lansbury (Miss Potts in the original Disney animated feature) and the opening glimpses of a jaw-dropping set that required 23 trucks to get to Perth and a team of 70 to unload them across thousands of hours. Faithfulness to the original continued; there is no danger of a modern reimagining in this saccharine-sweet production, which despite the vocal prowess of Belle (Perth-born Shubshri Kandiah) and the Beast (Brendan Xavier) unfortunately is slightly lacking in truly memorable numbers in the context of a 2.5-hour run time. The obvious exceptions are of course Be Our Guest, a showstopping number bringing all the production's technical might including projected backdrops of dancers' onstage patterns, milked to the max through an extended tap finale with 2400 lights; Belle, which shows off a French provincial town created with 30 tonnes of flying scenery and 50 tonnes of automation and staging; and Beauty and the Beast, simply and touchingly rendered by Jayde Westaby as Mrs Potts. The character of Gaston has more prominence than in the film and the charismatic Jackson Head brings excellent comedic value to it, with a ridiculous Jim Carrey vibe. To the extent that the gent on one side mentioned the resemblance at interval and the gent on the other was unable to prevent himself Googling Jim Carrey pictures during the performance, distracting us somewhat from Olivier Award nominee Matt West's excellent choreography displayed to full effect in Gaston (fun fact, the song's cast clink mugs 800-plus times). Despite being centred around the love story of Belle and the Beast the production's real emotional punch somehow comes not from them or even the relationship between Belle and father Maurice (Perth-raised Rodney Dobson) but from the enchanted castle objects whose attachment to humanity is, like the Beast's, dropping away with each petal from the magic rose. Lumiere (Rohan Browne), Cogsworth (Gareth Jacobs), Mrs Potts and Madame the wardrobe (Alana Tranter) are the heart of the show, providing pathos as well as laughs and magic (Lumiere's flames are real; Mrs Potts' spout smokes; Tranter's squeals are pitch-perfect comedy). Eason Ma was sweet as Chip the cup, head inserted into the side of the cup, body cleverly concealed in the stage furniture, though truth be told the disembodied head was at times striking me as a little on the weird side of cute. Particularly next to the larger-than-life Gaston, clearly an audience favourite, the Beast is somewhat disadvantaged. His role swings from suddenly roaring too loud and upsetting the other characters, to playing the fool for laughs, lacking the dark, conflicted tragedy this role could otherwise represent. Perhaps more height and bulk in the costuming would have made him a more imposing figure, but perhaps also would more attention given to parts of the show that feel rushed.

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