Latest news with #ShepherdsBush


The Sun
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Sun
TV star reveals she's pregnant with her first baby with pic of her huge baby bump
TV STAR Ophelia Lovibond has revealed she's pregnant, sharing a picture of her huge baby bump. Ophelia, 39, best known for her roles in Guardians of the Galaxy and the BBC 's W1A, is expecting her first baby with her actor husband Henry Pettigrew, 41. 5 The actress, who met Henry while playing his lover on stage, shared the news on Instagram today, posting a black-and-white photo that revealed her growing tummy. In the beachside snap, Ophelia is seen barefoot in a bikini and open shirt, smiling as she gently cradles her belly, her face partly shaded by oversized sunglasses. She wrote in her caption: "Baby on the way!" The couple were quickly flooded with congratulatory messages from friends and fans. The pair first met in 2015 during their joint appearance in Lucy Prebble's play The Effect, where they played characters who fall in love. At the time, Ophelia was dating actor Tom Hughes, who later became romantically involved with Jenna Coleman after the pair starred as husband and wife in ITV 's Victoria. The couple later tied the knot in 2022. Who is Ophelia Lovibond? Ophelia grew up in Shepherd's Bush, in London. Feel Good - Official Trailer - Mae Martin stars as herself, a Canadian comedian living in London She grew up with her single mother, who worked as a psychologist at Wormwood Scrubs Prison. Lovibond was schooled at Latymer Upper on a scholarship and went on to study English at the University of Sussex, graduating with a first class degree. She landed her first ever acting job at the age of just 12 in the Channel 4 sitcom The Wilsons. Lovibond is now based in Hornsey, North London, where she lives with her sausage dog, Frank. Lovibond was also close friends with the late TV presenter Caroline Flack. What TV programmes has Ophelia Lovibond starred in? Ophelia is known for her role as Binky in comedy-drama television series Feel Good. She is also known for playing Erica in Andy Wolton's TV show Trying and Twenty Twelve spin-off W1A as Izzy Gould. Lovibond also played Kitty Winter in the US sitcom, Elementary - based on Sherlock Holmes. On the big screen, Ophelia played Carina in Thor: The Dark World and picked up the role for cult-favourite Guardians of the Galaxy. She also featured in Roman Polanski's Oliver Twist in 2005. The actress has also had some high-profile roles on stage, starring in The Bay at Nice alongside Penelope Wilton and in The Libertine at Theatre Royal Haymarket alongside Dominic Cooper. 5 5 5


Daily Mail
23-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
ITV downgrade as This Morning and Loose Women find budget new home amid 'major money-saving mission' - and 'it's a far cry from the plush life the stars are used to'
This Morning and Loose Women 's new home has been confirmed amid 'major money-saving mission'. Just last month fans were left shocked when it was revealed that the two programmes have been axed for half the year as ITV announced a big shake up to its daytime schedule due to cuts. The shows have been filmed at the well-known Television Centre in Shepherds Bush, west London, since 2018. But now it's time for change, because according to The Sun, This Morning, Loose Women and Lorraine will be filmed at The Hospital Club in Convent Garden. A source told the publication: 'ITV are on a major budget saving mission and have landed a new deal to film ITV Daytime at what was The Hospital Club. 'It's quite apt really as I'm sure they hope the move to the former hospital will breathe some life into their programme budgets. 'All three of their main shows, Lorraine, This Morning and Loose Women will be based there... in the basement where there's a state of the art studio.' 'The changes are needed to keep up with the ever evolving world of TV but it's a far cry from the plush life stars have become accustomed to at White City.' An ITV source added: 'We have always said that when the changes to our daytime schedule take place in 2026 that these programmes will find a new home. 'The new studio is not yet confirmed and when it is we will obviously communicate that news to our staff first.' MailOnline have contacted ITV for comment. ITV bosses announced huge cuts with job losses in excess of 220 in May. Good Morning Britain has taken Lorraine's slot between 9 and 10am for 22 weeks of the year. This means that Lorraine will present for the remaining 30 weeks of the year. The show will only last half an hour, meaning that it will start at 9:30am. And that host Lorraine Kelly will host all of those, meaning that her step-in hosts Ranvir Singh, 47, and Christine Lampard, 46, will no longer be needed. As of now, This Morning - hosted by Ben Shephard, 50, Cat Deeley, 48, Alison Hammond, 50, and Dermot O'Leary, 52 - remains untouched. Earlier this month it was revealed that Loose Women has also axed a vital part of the show - that there will no longer be a live audience. A TV source told MailOnline: 'The panelists are really upset over the decision to axe the live studio audience from the show. 'It's what sets the series apart from the rest of ITV daytime and now there are massive fears that viewers will switch off completely. 'The only concern now is to cut costs and having a live studio audience can be expensive, with the added need for security and a warmup artist. 'Presenters already know how it feels to broadcast the show without an audience because that's what happened during the pandemic, and they all know it creates low mood and lack of atmosphere.' And Loose Women star Nadia Sawalha has admitted that she's 'totally devastated' after revealing her 'dear friend' has been axed from the ITV show. Addressing the change on a recent episode of her podcast Coffee Moaning, alongside her husband Mark Adeley, Nadia said: 'From next year there will be no Loose Women audience. 'I am totally devastated by this fact, I can't get over it at all. Not only because the audience is so important for the show, but also my dear friend Lee who I work with every day.' Comedian, broadcaster and presenter Lee Peart has been part of the team after joining the programme as the warm-up act in 2017. An insider said: 'While there is a proposal to not have a studio audience for Loose Women from 2026, that doesn't necessarily mean that we'll never have a studio audience again, it just won't be in the same way as it is now.'


Globe and Mail
05-06-2025
- Business
- Globe and Mail
Savvy businesswoman Sandy Stagg helped spark a hip Toronto scene
Running her Antique Clothing Shop on London's Portobello Road in the 1990s and 2000s, Sandy Stagg was particular when it came to the touching of dainty vintage garments for sale. 'This is a two-handed shop,' she would tell customers in no uncertain terms. 'Be gentle and put your bags down. If not, get out!' The rule applied to all, dames included. The great actress Maggie Smith entered the store in 2002 in full film-star disguise: hat, silk scarf and huge sunglasses. When she pawed one-handedly at a rail of Victorian blouses, Ms. Stagg read her the riot act. To which Ms. Smith lowered her shades, uttered 'Indeed!' and walked straight from the shop. 'Sandy was so impressed she laughed for hours,' said her friend, Jo Headland, a seamstress and salesperson hired by Ms. Stagg. 'Sandy was infamous for being rude to her customers, in a way that only a fabulously dressed Englishwoman could be.' Ms. Stagg, from London's working-class neighborhood of Shepherd's Bush, had come to Toronto in 1968 with a lot of nerve, a sewing machine and a Canadian husband who would not be her partner for long. She would establish herself as a savvy restaurateur, pioneer trader in second-hand garb, model and beautiful muse of the General Idea arts collective, cutting-edge scene starter, skilled gardener, pale gamine about town, dog lover, enthusiastic party person and patroness of the arts. She returned to Shepherd's Bush in 1988 to look after her ailing mother, whose landlord wanted her out of a rent-controlled flat. Ms. Stagg was having none of it. 'I'm here and we're staying,' she told him. Ms. Stagg stayed until 2008, when she sold the Antique Clothing Shop and returned to Toronto to live out the rest of her life. She died from the effects of a stroke at Toronto Western Hospital on May 28. She was 84. Ms. Stagg was different things to different people in Toronto. Some shopped at her popular Amelia Earhart Originals, a small vintage clothing store on Charles Street off Yonge Street (and later in Yorkville). Others dined and hung out at her hip restaurants: Peter Pan (which helped spark the Queen Street West art and music scene of the late 1970s and early 1980s) and Fiesta. The grooviest people did both. 'She dressed a lot of the people who came to eat at her restaurants,' said artist AA Bronson, the last surviving member of Toronto's groundbreaking General Idea trio. 'I don't think one can simplify Sandy, but above all she was interested in people and helping people make things happen.' When the General Idea artists would throw ideas around the dinner table, Ms. Stagg encouraged and facilitated their audacious notions. 'Next thing you knew, you'd find yourself in Vancouver or New York or on top of the CN Tower doing something,' Mr. Bronson said. 'Sandy was a magnifying glass. She took whatever was going on and blew it up into something bigger and more interesting.' At her clothing boutiques in Toronto and London, Ms. Stagg elevated second-hand attire to high-fashion status. She had a magpie's eye for lovely, discarded things and the entrepreneurial flair to exploit the finds. While in London, she would visit Toronto on shopping trips. Once, she found a disassembled dress at a boot fair that was made by French designer Madeleine Vionnet. Ms. Stagg purchased it for $13 and took it back to London where she and her assistant, Ms. Headland, pieced it back together with traditional couture stitches and vintage silk thread. The reconstituted garment graced the cover of a Doyle Auctioneers & Appraisers catalogue and sold for $35,000, according to Ms. Headland: 'It was typical Sandy, saving something and building it back to money-spinning glory.' The reclamations of Ms. Stagg extended to cool eateries. She and two partners took the Art Deco greasy spoon Peter Pan Lunch, got rid of the grease and updated the spoon. The Globe and Mail restaurant critic Joanne Kates praised the just-opened place in 1976 for its rare marriage of trendiness and friendliness and its 'intelligently limited' culinary aspirations. 'It has obviously been very carefully put together by people who understand that the best way to exploit nostalgia is to avoid exploiting it,' Ms. Kates wrote. Though Ms. Stagg enjoyed vintage objects, old fashions and retro culture − she jitterbugged with the best of them − she hardly lived in the past. 'Sandy read about history for research purposes, not pleasure,' said her one-time romantic partner and longtime friend, the architect Paul Oberst. She not only listened to the new sounds of the day but supported and befriended the musicians. Ms. Stagg danced to disco, vibed to new wave, was pals with Rough Trade's Carole Pope and dated singers from influential Toronto punk bands the Diodes and the Viletones. 'She was interested in whatever was going on,' Mr. Oberst said. 'We went to see Roxy Music, Bob Marley and Elvis Costello, all at Massey Hall, I think.' The New York art rockers the Talking Heads were introduced to Ms. Stagg and the Peter Pan crowd through two influential Toronto modern art hubs, A Space and Art Metropole. 'Sandy took us under her wing and made us feel part of that world – a crazy and wonderful world that sadly no longer exists,' Talking Heads singer David Byrne said in a statement to The Globe. 'A reminder that a person, or just a handful of people, can be a catalyst that enables all sorts of people to come together and interact − at least for a while. What she did was special." In her later years, Ms. Stagg was a 'feisty old lady' devoted to her backyard garden, according to artist and close friend Charles Pachter. 'Sandy would beam and talk about her roses and peonies and the birds in her garden,' Mr. Pachter said. 'It made her happy.' Ms. Stagg cultivated scenes, friendships and flowers with a maestro's touch. Though a style icon, she believed that fashion should not be considered separate from food, furniture, music or politics. 'She takes an interest in observing how fashion functions as a code of being,' The Globe's David Livingstone wrote of her in 1984. 'Glamour, as a thing of the spirit; style, as a matter of soul.' She was born Sandra Penelope Newton on Oct. 3, 1940, in Dorset, England, at a manor converted to a maternity hospital for evacuated Londoners during the Blitz. Her parents were theatre carpenter Thomas Newton and seamstress Dorothy Newton (née Burke). They raised their only child − a much older stepbrother died in 1960 − in a rented flat in London that had a bomb shelter and a lemon tree in the backyard. Her dad was an air raid warden near the end of the Second World War. 'That is why they had a telephone, and she was always very proud of having one of the first telephones in Shepherd's Bush,' Ms. Headland said. 'Also, she loved sitting in the basket of her dad's bicycle and being taken to see the bomb sites.' She attended Godolphin and Latymer School, an expensive private day school for girls in Hammersmith, West London, that in 1951 became state-supported and ceased to charge fees to pupils. By 1960 she was married, in a gown she had made with her own hands, to John Stagg, a friend of her father's. 'He was much older and she only married him to keep her dad happy,' Ms. Headland said. They lived in the parents' flat in Shepherd's Bush until Ms. Stagg left her husband after four years of marriage. Though she would go one to enjoy a glamorous lifestyle, Ms. Stagg took pride in her gritty British upbringing and looked up to John Lennon, a lowly Liverpudlian who as a member of the Beatles became a celebrated person in a class-conscious society. Without him, she told The Globe in 1984, 'I would not be who I am today.' Though she is not known to have crossed paths with Mr. Lennon, the anti-establishment figure who released Working Class Hero as a solo artist was an inspiration to many of her generation. 'The world had changed somewhat in the 1960s,' Ms. Headland said. 'A working-class Brit could make their way in the world and not be ashamed of their roots.' In 1966, Ms. Stagg met and married a Canadian in London, Bud Petersen. Two years later, they moved to Toronto, where their suburb-dwelling marriage would dissolve. She headed downtown to begin her eclectic career. She made costumes for the maverick Global Village Theatre company and created one-of-a-kind shirts for the Brick Shirt House. At a flea market outside the Church of the Holy Trinity, now surrounded by the Eaton Centre, she sold clothing brought from London or bought cheaply at Salvation Army thrift stores. 'She could look at a huge mound of old clothes and spot a designer number from 50 yards,' General Idea's Mr. Bronson remembered. Gravitating to the city's nascent avant-garde art scene, she was a fashion designer for General Idea. Her image appeared in many of their projects. Ms. Stagg had a flair for the theatrical gesture. Intending to move her Amelia Earhart Originals boutique from Yonge Street to the ritzy Yorkville shopping neighborhood, she was informed by a city inspector that a bylaw prohibited the sale of second-hand goods in the former village of Yorkville. 'Sandy quickly made an appointment with the boss of the bylaws and went to his office on the 10th floor of City Hall,' Mr. Oberst recalled. 'She marched straight from the door to the plate-glass window, turned dramatically and said, 'I may as well throw myself through this window if I can't keep my business!' The stunned bureaucrat saw to it that the bylaw was changed. Her vintage clothing shop in London drew celebrity fashionistas John Galliano, Jean Paul Gaultier, Stella McCartney, Alexander McQueen and model Kate Moss. Fashion designer Paul Smith was chased down the road by Ms. Stagg as he left with his purchase. Because his credit card didn't work, she grabbed back the bag containing a pair of men's brogues. 'He had to send someone the following Friday to pay and pick them up,' Ms. Headland recalled. 'I think he was terrified of Sandy.' In her final days, Ms. Stagg, who had no children, was looked after by a group of friends − dubbed Team Sandy − that included Mr. Oberst and Erella Ganon. One of the visitors was the great Toronto singer Mary Margaret O'Hara. 'She came to the hospital and the two of us sang songs to Sandy at her bedside,' Ms. Ganon said. 'It was beautiful.' You can find more obituaries from The Globe and Mail here. To submit a memory about someone we have recently profiled on the Obituaries page, e-mail us at obit@


The Sun
22-05-2025
- The Sun
We live on hellhole street in shadow of posh town loved by celebs – yobs lob chairs & POO in gardens but no one cares
RESIDENTS in a hellhole street say it's crime ridden with yobs lobbing chairs and people defecating in their front gardens. They claim the council has "neglected" the area and they don't feel safe anymore. 3 3 3 Shepherds Bush locals report that drug use is rife and crime has soared on Uxbridge Road. Resident Nigel Singh, 65, told MyLondon: "This is a bigger issue that we need tackling so that we can live in a decent, peaceful area and feel safe. "We don't feel safe in this area now. "It's gone downhill over the years, and it's been neglected by the council.' But he did admit he found living in the area "fantastic". Another resident said "it's really gone downhill" in the last two years. They said: "The things that we see and the things we have to live with in the 21st century, one of the richest capitals in the world, it's just unbelievable the way we live, the things we see. "We have people defecating, urinating in our front gardens.' Another said her three-year-old was slapped in the face by someone "off their face" while on the school run. Noor, who has started a petition, moved to Shepherd's Bush two years ago and was "shocked" at the number of drug addicts on the streets. She said: "They'd be swinging in office chairs outside of news agents and no-one stopping them, people coming up to me in quite an intimidating manner. "Just the level of loitering and the level of dereliction…it just felt like almost, other than the criminal behaviour, all of the loitering, that it was a forgotten street that no-one wanted to do anything to.' The petition was launched in a bid to fix up Uxbridge Road, a key highway running from Shepherd's Bush towards Uxbridge in Hillingdon. It has drawn 2,200 signatures where only 250 are needed for it to be debated by the council's cabinet. They are claiming limited investment and enforcement from Hammersmith and Fulham Council is to blame for Uxbridge Road's decline. But the council has pointed to the work put in place to improve Uxbridge Road. This includes regular patrols by its Law Enforcement Team (LET) which amount to an average of 2,400 patrols a year. These patrols have seen the removal of 96 graffiti tags and 68 flyposters since April 1. The council has also made improvements to shopfronts, including paying for two businesses to have artwork painted onto their shutters. A spokesperson for the council has argued it is taking "real action" and is "determined to work with local residents and businesses to make Uxbridge Road an even better place to live, work and socialise." A spokesperson for the Met also said: "We want people to feel safe and secure in their communities, which is why our neighbourhood policing teams regularly patrol residential areas to deter antisocial behaviour. 'So we can tackle this behaviour we ask residents to report any criminal activity they witness, so we can act accordingly and help keep communities safe.' The petition calls on the council to take "urgent action" and address "the environmental decline that fosters criminal activity and makes residents feel unsafe." It requests a three, six and 12-month plan be developed by the council for improvements to the road. But residents have also shown concern over the 5,000 signature threshold for the petition to be debated at Full Council, branded by one as "unnecessarily high". To address concerns, the council has also removed defunct phone boxes, deep cleaned the entire road, revamped waste collections and say they are working with local businesses. They said: "We're giving the Met Police unprecedented support to tackle crime and anti-social behaviour in the area. "As a council, we now have the largest Community Safety team in London." It added that the Law Enforcement Team were making 33 patrols of Uxbridge Road every day with the aim of stepping them up alongside the Met. There's also been an investment of £4.5 million in a "ground-breaking" CCTV network to share incidents in real-time with the police. It also called on help from residents and businesses to report crime to the Met to better "deter, prevent and fight crime". Uxbridge Road isn't the only area seeing decline in the shadow of more expensive areas either. The leafy neighbourhood of Pimlico, home to a number of millionaires, has seen many living in poverty a well as a high rate of homelessness. .


The Independent
15-05-2025
- The Independent
Jury in trial of man accused of two suitcase murders discharged
The jury in the trial of a man accused of decapitating a couple before taking some of their remains in suitcases to the Clifton Suspension Bridge has been discharged. Yostin Andres Mosquera, 35, was on trial for the murders of Albert Alfonso, 62, and Paul Longworth, 71, on July 8 last year in the flat the two shared in Scotts Road, Shepherd's Bush, west London. The prosecution opened its case at the Old Bailey at the end of last month but on Thursday Mr Justice Bennathan discharged the jury. He said there had been problems identifying the accurate times of searches made by Mosquera on his laptop, which had been used as evidence in the trial. The judge told jurors that the trial 'simply cannot continue'. 'We simply have to resolve this before we have a fair trial,' he added. Mr Justice Bennathan thanked jurors for the service and said he was sorry for where the trial had 'ended up'. Mosquera has admitted the manslaughter of Mr Alfonso by way of loss of self-control, but denies both charges of murder. A provisional retrial date has been fixed for June, where a new jury will be selected.