Category: Celebrity Stories

  • Opinion: Is it ever too late?

    Living (2022) stars Bill Nighy as Mr Williams, a stuffed-shirt who appears to be sleepwalking through his dull paper-shuffling life. Trapped within endless rounds of bureaucracy in a local government department, each day seems very much the same as the last. Until a terminal cancer diagnosis leaves him with just one year to live. This triggers a sequence of out-of-character events and the narrative suddenly shifts up a gear.

    Nighy is skeletal, scraggy, thin-lipped and softly spoken. He actually looks quite poorly. His character, Mr Williams, is reserved to the point of suffocating silence. Stilted questions, and answers, emerge very slowly, if at all. Emotional and physical pain are etched all over his face, it’s a little uncomfortable to watch. But this is nicely offset by a pleasant, rhythmic slowness to the film which seems to accurately reflect the dull, ploddy pace of Mr Williams’ day to day life. Following the diagnosis, and a short season of hedonism, Mr Williams seems to wake up from the municipal trance he’s in. He begins to focus on completing a task which actually matters and, perhaps more importantly for the philosophically minded among us, is within his power to achieve.

    Suddenly his life has meaning, purpose and direction. Or, more accurately, with his change of heart he has discovered a purpose which was right under his nose the whole time. It’s a modest purpose to be sure, but one which will benefit the local children. A small play area, to be built on a former bomb site, a stand against the overwhelming tide of departmental bureaucracy. Mr Williams works with considerable urgency and energetically draws his bewildered team members into the work at hand.

    Friendless, lonely and shy, the newly awakened Mr Williams also attempts to strike up the beginnings of a connection with two young colleagues. Miss Harris (Aimee Lou Wood) and Mr Wakeling (Alex Sharp). He relates to them both quite warmly, in a displaced fatherly kind of way. The whole story has been gently steeped into a sort of milky warm post-war 1950s sadness. Every reel oozes with the lingering unspoken regrets which must have drenched that era. For me, the biggest sadness was Mr Williams lack of connection with his biological son and daughter-in-law. And as if the viewer hasn’t already suffered enough, the clever film-makers round things off with a further topping of searing disconnection and acute sadness, by leaving these key family relationships painfully unresolved.

    But I must not, and will not, judge Mr Williams for this apparent fatherly failure. Because, the truth is until we’re faced with it, most of us really don’t know how we would respond to such a serious diagnosis. We simply don’t know how strong or how vulnerable we might feel, or how much head space we might have left to work with. We don’t know what our priorities might be and whether they would shapeshift when death looms large. Most of us don’t know these things because we can’t possibly know them. Because we haven’t had to face up to that reality, not directly, because in order to get on with the job of living a lot of us manage our own death as an abstract concept, something which happens to other people.

    In those long slow, impeccably shot scenes, in the painful pauses, in the divine piano pieces, we are invited not just to sit with Mr Williams, but to become Mr Williams. In essence Living is a work of art which invites us to sit and rest within the theatre of our own mortality for a while. We are invited to imagine that scenario, not to panic but to ponder, to ask and to consider, our own questions around how we could best use our allotted time. To review what we want to give ourselves to, and to whom we want to be given.

    In yet other scenes Living takes us gently by the hand and asks us to examine the dead and dying parts of our own hearts, the bits of us that we have given up on, it asks us to consider how we might wake up to the world around us and live better. The awareness of death and the numbering of our days, is carefully framed as a gift which holds the potential to switch on the lights. Living demonstrates how new possibilities may still emerge, though little time is left, through exercising the power of free will.

    Living is available to watch on Prime TV, we have a pretty big telly but in reality, even though there are no car chases, explosions or special effects, I actually wish I’d seen this movie at the cinema. That would have been a pleasant evening. The costumes, the scenery, the settings, the cinematography by Jamie D Ramsay, the whole 1950s vibe is really quite exquisite and fully deserving of the immersive big screen experience. Transported to another era by the rich musical score, which was so delish, I was almost tempted to close my eyes and forget the film. Living is an absorbing slow burn movie with a meaty universal theme now available to watch, if you have the courage, on Prime TV.

  • Faith: “I am with you always”

    A brilliant Head of Philosophy at Birkbeck College, University of London, C E M Joad, was not always a man of faith, but when he was asked on a radio programme which one historical figure he would most like to meet and ask just one question, he didn’t hesitate: “I would meet Jesus Christ and ask him the most important question in the world, ‘Did you or did you not rise from the dead?’”

    You see, if Jesus Christ really is risen from the dead, it changes everything. It means that every word, every claim, every statement He ever made is true:


    ■That He came to bring life, to save the lost, to bring us all home.
    ■That He came to set us free from religion and rules.
    ■That He wants us to live lightly.
    ■That we can move mountains and heal the sick.
    ■That we are all His children. And that, ultimately, He won’t let harm come to us.

    But it all hinges on His resurrection. If He didn’t rise again, then His claims about Himself were not true. In the words of C. S. Lewis, “A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic, on the level with the man who says he is a poached egg, or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse.”

    But if He did rise again, then how? The compelling evidence for the resurrection is hard to argue against. I have tried. Many of the greatest minds of our time have tried. The evidence is so stacked toward it being the truth that many scholars have found faith after setting out to discredit it.

    So if He did rise again, it means this also is true: “I am with you always” (Matthew 28:20). And if He is right here, right now. beside us, for us, and within us, then our day really should be full of joy and assurance! Jesus with us. Truth. Soak it in.

    Extract taken from Soul Fuel by Bear Grylls published by Zondervan in the US and Hodder Faith in the UK. Available here Soul Fuel by Bear Grylls | Free Delivery at Eden | 9781529387063

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of The Chosen (thechosentv.co.uk)

  • New series: The Chosen in the Wild with Bear Grylls

    Longstanding friend of Sorted Magazine, Bear Grylls, ventures into the wild with cast members of The Chosen.

    The Chosen in the Wild with Bear Grylls is a six-episode unscripted adventure series. It is produced by The Natural Studios in association with 5&2 Studios. Celebrity survivalist and adventurer Bear Grylls (Emmy®-nominated Running Wild with Bear Grylls and You vs. Wild, Man vs. Wild) takes an immersive journey with the cast and creator of The Chosen. This provides a unique exploration of the global hit series.

    In each episode, Grylls ventures into the wild with one cast member. Their is an exploration of their personal stories and in depth look into their own perspectives on the series and the characters they portray.

    Bear Grylls said: “This show allows viewers to discover what the real people behind the phenomenal The Chosen series are actually like. The wild opens people up in a way nothing else does, and it challenges us to dig deep and find our true selves. This adventure series pushes The Chosen actors like never before whilst also discovering their own personal stories of life and faith. That’s the magic of this new series, bringing new insight and revelation to some of TV’s most loved and watched characters.”

    Main Photo Credit: The Chosen TV

  • Film: New Children’s series, The Chosen Adventures

    Creator of The Chosen Dallas Jenkins’ new independent studio 5&2 Studios is currently working on a New Children’s Animated Series called The Chosen Adventures.

    The Chosen Adventures follows nine-year-old Abby in the Galilean city of Capernaum, circa 30 CE. Inquisitive young Abby is bursting at the seams with questions and feels she doesn’t have the kinds of answers she’s looking for. When she and her best friend, Joshua, meet Jesus will all that change?

    The 14 episode animated series features the voice talents of Emmy® winner Paul Walter Hauser(Black Bird, I, Tonya), Emmy® nominee Yvonne Orji (Insecure) and two-time GRAMMY®-nominated artist Jordin Sparks. In addition there well loved cast members from The Chosen, including Jonathan Roumie, Paras Patel, Elizabeth Tabish, Noah James, Joey Vahedi, Yasmine Al-Bustami, Brandon Potter and George H. Xanthis.

    Ryan Swanson, Creator/Executive Producer of The Chosen Adventures and Executive Producer of The Chosen said: ;“I’m thrilled to welcome Paul, Yvonne, and Jordin into The Chosen family as we continue to produce more incredible content for our fans. We were surprised and encouraged to discover that children have been watching The Chosen alongside their parents, so we wanted to continue the family co-viewing experience by creating an animated series that is full of humour, heartfelt life lessons, and loveable characters.”

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of The Chosen TV.

  • Film: Dallas Jenkins announces new venture

    Creator of The Chosen, Dallas Jenkins (pictured on the left above) embarks on his next chapter with the formation of 5&2 Studios, a new independent studio that will now oversee production of The Chosen franchise in addition to a future line-up of film and television projects set in the biblical world. The announcement was made during the first day of the ChosenCon fan convention in Orlando.

    Dallas Jenkins is Chairman and Chief Creative Officer at 5&2 Studios and Creator and Executive Producer of The Chosen. Jenkin’s is also Director of Lionsgate’s upcoming film The Best Christmas Pageant Ever. Jenkins explained: “Nearly every time I encounter a viewer, they say something about wanting more Bible content from us. I always say we need to not get ahead of ourselves and remain focused, but now we’ve got a robust enough team to expand our efforts. I’m very excited to bring our ‘Chosen way’ to more great stories from the Bible, and it’s awesome that we get to first announce it to the fans who helped get us here long before we were popular.”

    Over 5,000 fans of The Chosen gathered at The Chosen Insiders Conference (ChosenCon) for the two-day fan convention in Orlando. The conference featured panel discussions, cast meet-and-greets, special announcements, sneak previews, and more. The first ChosenCon was held in Dallas, TX in 2023 with over 3,500 attendees.

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of The Chosen TV

  • Faith: “We are drawn to the power of the restoration narrative”

    Digital Editor’s Note: I’m delighted to welcome longstanding friend of Sorted Magazine and the host of Sky Sports Soccer Saturday, Simon Thomas, as our Guest Writer. In this surprisingly honest article Simon opens up about the difficulties, and the triumphs of his personal journey over the last few years.

    Simon writes: One of my favourite TV shows is The Repair Shop on the BBC. It’s become a hugely popular show. In a nutshell (if you’ve never seen it) the show is filmed in a beautiful old barn in West Sussex, and in the barn are a whole group of expert craftspeople.

    In each episode members of the public bring in items from old clocks that no longer work, to pieces of broken jewellery to tired old pieces of furniture. Often these items have very little monetary value; but to the person who owns them they mean everything. They might be an old family heirloom or something that reminds them of a loved one who has passed away or an old toy that evokes memories of a happy childhood. The emotional value of these items to the people bringing them in is immeasurable.

    Photo Credit: Gorodenkoff via Getty Images

    Each show follows the story of these heirlooms being restored to their former glory, and the show always finishes with them being reunited with their owners. As the cover is lifted from the restored clock or childhood teddy bear, there is often a visible emotional reaction, as they see that beloved item restored to its former glory. I’m sure I’m not the only one who has found myself shedding a tear as you witness this moving moment.

    But for me it isn’t just about the restored item; it isn’t just the joy of seeing these highly skilled men and women in action; it isn’t even just the emotional reaction of the owner that has caused this show to connect with so many people, I think it taps into something much deeper – as people, we love stories of restoration.

    We are drawn to the power of the restoration narrative. Whether it’s the story of a football team that has risen from the ashes of almost going out of business, or the moment Tiger Woods came back from his life implosion and injury hell to win The Masters in 2019; or a classic car being brought back to life, we love seeing life being restored.

    But most of all we love seeing the restoration of people. We love the comeback narrative. We find inspiration in seeing someone for whom life looked almost over, rising from the ashes and becoming their glorious old selves again.

    The Christian faith I have had since I was just a young lad is all about restoration. The God I follow is in the business of restoring broken lives. The story at the centre of the Christian faith is the ultimate story of restoration, with Jesus rising from the dead having been brutally crucified three days before.

    In late 2017 and for the next couple of years, I was like one of those items brought into The Repair Shop. I was broken, I was in pieces, I was an emotional mess, the colour had left my life and I feared I was beyond repair.

    In the space of a few short weeks towards the end of 2017 my life was turned upside down and inside out, after my first wife Gemma died very suddenly from a rare, but aggressive strain of blood cancer at the age of just 40.

    In three short days from her diagnosis to her death I had gone from a 44 year old happily married man with a brilliant eight year old son and a wonderful job presenting Premier League football on Sky Sports, to being in the darkest and most fear filled place I had ever been.

    Life for me now felt over. I was beyond repair. My only aim in life after this biggest of blows was to somehow keep it together for my boy Ethan, get him through school and college and then my work was done. Beyond this life felt pointless, and more worryingly it felt devoid of hope. Over many moths my life descended into a dark period of alcohol abuse and despair. On more than one occasion it led me to the precipice of ending it all.

    Photo credit: Rod Long via Unsplash

    But somehow throughout this; despite my anger with God that this had all happened; I held on to my faith – even if at times it was by a single finger nail. If my life was ever to become something again, a life worth living again I had to find hope – I had to find purpose again. Time and time again a verse from the Old Testament would come to me during those dark months and it’s a verse from Micah, chapter seven:

    “Do not gloat over me, my enemy!

    Though I have fallen, I will rise.

    Though I sit in darkness,

    The Lord will be my light.”

    The story of my life over the past few years has been this – in the same way The Repair Shop brings loved family heirlooms back to life; the God I follow has been the master of turning devastation into restoration.

    Somehow out of the wreckage of late 2017 he has done something extraordinary in my life. It’s been a tough and rocky road to walk at times; but God has been incredibly faithful, he has never left my side.

    I have met and married the most amazing woman Derrina, I have been blessed with two more children (Talitha and Theo) and having been in the career wilderness for may years after leaving Sky in early 2018, last year I became the new host of Sky Sports Soccer Saturday. And after years of alcohol self medication, I have now been sober for over two years.

    I don’t write this last part as a boast, or a moment of ‘look at me now’ I write it to be an encouragement. Whatever your story is; however much you may feel battered and bruised by the storms of life; God is still massively interested in you. There is no situation too hopeless for him; no life so broken it’s beyond repair. And in Him there is always, always hope.

    He is the master craftsman; he is the God who brings restoration, life and hope out of the ashes.

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Sky Sports

    Read more of Simon’s story here: Love, Interrupted | Free Delivery at Eden.co.uk

    Watch a message from Simon here: Simon Thomas – Hope in the Darkness — Streams.Studio (streams-studio.com)

    Follow Simon on Instagram at simonthomastv

  • Culture: Stars read Shakespeare at Regents Park Open Air Theatre

    Former actress, bestselling author and poetry champion Allie Esiri and Regents Park Open Air Theatre present Shakespeare for Every Day of the Year – Live!

    Samuel West (pictured above)

    On Monday 8th July Allie Esiri will be joined by a star-studded cast of award winning theatre and film actors including Paul Chahidi, Damian Lewis (Homeland – main picture), Toheeb Jimoh (Ted Lasso), Stephen Mangan (Green Wing), Tracy Ann Oberman, Tony Robinson (Blackadder), Danny Sapani (Killing Eve, Black Panther), Samantha Spiro (Sex Education), Luke Thompson (Bridgerton), Samuel West (Slow Horses), Olivia Williams (The Crown), and Susan Wokoma (Enola Holmes), for a hugely entertaining evening of Shakespeare based on Allie Esiri’s bestselling poetry anthology: Shakespeare for Every Day of the Year.

    To celebrate 400 years of Shakespeare’s First Folio and over 90 years of Shakespeare performances at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, Allie Esiri and friends will guide you on a journey through the Shakespeare you love and the best bits you don’t. There will be poetry, speeches and scenes read by actors who have a special connection to Shakespeare’s work and to the theatre itself. It was at Regent’s Park, for example, that homeland actor Damian Lewis spent a season playing Hamlet, that Susan Wokoma starred in the hit production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and where Samantha Spiro performed an acclaimed Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing and won an Olivier Award for Hello Dolly! Expect great performances, poetry, laughter, wisdom and wit.

    Stephen Manghan (pictured above)

    One of the UK’s biggest selling poetry books, Shakespeare For Every Day of the Year by poetry champion Allie Esiri is an inspiring collection of 365 poems, speeches and scenes from across all of Shakespeare’s plays, each with an illuminating introduction. Allie has published ten hugely popular poetry anthologies including A Poem For Every Day Of The Year and 365 Poems For Life as part of her mission to keep poetry alive and make it accessible for everyone.

    Susan Wokoma (pictured above)

    Signed copies of Allie Esiri’s poetry anthologies Shakespeare for Every Day of the Year and A Poet for Every Day of the Year will be available on the night.

    NB. Actor appearances are subject to availability. Check the website for updates to the lineup.

    All Photo Credits: Copyright remains with the individual artists pictured supplied via Tory Lyne-Pirkis.
  • Sport: Dan Walker takes top spot in celebrity golf list

    New research has revealed the UK’s top ten celebrity golfers, with TV presenter Dan Walker taking the top spot. The study, conducted by luxury golf apparel brand Galvin Green, analysed the list of participants in 2023’s BMW PGA Championship Pro-Am, before filtering through these to rank the UK’s top ten celebrity golfers based on their handicap.  

    TV broadcaster and presenter, Dan Walker, ranks first in the list of the UK’s top ten celebrity golfers, with an impressive handicap of +0.8. Sharing a fairway with golfing champions, Walker tees off at Hallamshire Golf Club in Sheffield, alongside rising star Alex Fitzpatrick and his brother, 2022 US Open winner, Matt Fitzpatrick.  

    In second place is football cult-hero and presenter Jimmy Bullard, who plays off scratch 0. The former Premier League footballer went on to co-host the iconic sports show Soccer AM after retiring, but now presents the popular Tubes & Ange Golf Life with his former co-worker Peter Dale (Tubes).

    In third place is football legend Gareth Bale, with a handicap of 0.5. Bale built a mini golf course at his home, modelled after three of golf’s most famous Par 3’s: the 12th at Augusta, Royal Troon’s ‘Postage Stamp’, and the tricky 17th at Sawgrass.  

    Anton Du Beke of Strictly Come Dancing fame, places fourth on the list, with a handicap of 1.4. The famous ballroom dancer turned judge is an avid golfer and a member of the prestigious Wentworth Golf Club in Surrey.  

    In fifth place is England cricketing legend, Sir Andrew Strauss, who has a handicap of 1.8. Strauss’ sporting successes are certainly not limited to cricket, with the former England batsman managing a hole-in-one whilst playing with fellow cricketer Paul Collingwood at Woburn Golf Club.  

    England’s James Anderson is another cricketer to make the top ten, placing sixth with a handicap of 2.6. Anderson is a member at the prestigious West Lancashire Golf Club, known for its challenging layout, where rolling fairways and strategically placed bunkers demand precise shot placement.  

    Tied for seventh place is former footballer Jermaine Jenas and entrepreneur Seb Carmichael-Brown, both with handicaps of three. Jenas, who now works as a sports pundit and a presenter of The One Show, claims his handicap once reached as low as 1.5, speaking to Jimmy Bullard on ‘Tubes & Ange Golf Life.’ Seb, who gained notoriety as the co-owner of non-league side Hashtag United, has his own YouTube channel devoted to his golfing exploits Seb on Golf showcasing his impressive golfing abilities on various courses around the world.  

    Ranking eighth on the list is former Rugby Union player, Thom Evans, with a handicap of 5.2. Evans, who has also worked as a model, made the headlines in 2017 when he took part in a celebrity Nearest-to-the-pin competition at Celtic Manor.  

    Award-winning actor Tom Holland places ninth on the list, with a handicap of six. In the BMW PGA Championship Pro-Am 2023, Holland played alongside his brothers, Harry and Sam, who also boast impressive handicaps of 6.8 and ten, respectively.  

    Rounding off the list in tenth place, is Naga Munchetty, the UK’s top female celebrity golfer and BBC Breakfast presenter, with a handicap of 6.5. Munchetty uses her platform to promote golf and support noble causes. She presents the annual Charity Golf Day at Moor Park Golf Club, allowing her to give back to the community through the sport she loves.

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Dan Walker

  • Stephen Fry: “not just a green space”

    Stephen Fry (pictured above), Friend of St James’s Church, said: “What is needed in Piccadilly is a proper place to sit and reflect and take yourself out of the bustle. The garden at St James’s Piccadilly is not just a green space, it’s an active part of the community, as the rest of St James’s Church is.”

    A new show garden has been inspired by the green spaces and community spirit at St James’s Church, Piccadilly, in central London. Work has begun at RHS Chelsea Flower Show on St James’s Piccadilly’s Imagine the World to be Different show garden. The garden is sponsored by grant-making charity Project Giving Back and designed by award-winning landscape architect Robert Myers.

    Designer Robert Myers said: “The St James’s Piccadilly garden at RHS Chelsea centres around restoration and climate resilience. Through our commitment to environmental innovation, we aim to inspire others to create a more sustainable and resilient future. Already a place of refuge and consolation for thousands, the newly designed counselling cabin underlines the importance of healing at the heart of St James’s Piccadilly’s mission.”

    Rector, Rev Lucy Winkett said: “The garden and courtyard of St James’s Piccadilly (pictured above) offer a welcome space in the busyness of central London for conversations under trees. Robert’s design emphasises the inherent resilience of nature and its healing powers. For us it’s important that it is a space where each person has their own dignity and where our interdependence with the natural world is emphasised and celebrated.”

    The garden evokes St James’s churchyard garden and highlights the importance of public green spaces in the city for healing and biodiversity. The garden is inspired by St James’s inclusive ethos, the character and form of the existing gardens, bombed in World War Two, but surviving and evolving into a biodiverse, eclectic haven for people and nature. The show garden also features a unique timber structure designed by Ivan Morison to replace the existing hut which houses the counselling service providing 5,000 hours of free counselling a year.

    The church’s community is committed to making the world a better place. The RHS Chelsea garden will support efforts to raise £20m for The Wren Project, a scheme to rejuvenate the historic, Wren-designed church and particularly to restore its garden, in order to accommodate and amplify St James’s extensive social outreach and environmental work. Donations can be made at https://www.sjp.org.uk/chelsea-campaign/

    The Imagine the World to be Different garden will be re-sited in two phases. All the trees and plants will move to St Pancras Church on Euston Road, which is a partner to St James’s. All of the hard landscape elements and timber cabin will be stored and reused as part of The Wren Project at St James’s.

    Main Photo Credit: Jack Taylor via Getty Images. All other images courtesy of St James’s Church, Piccadilly, Central London.

  • Prom Praise presents Chariots of Fire celebration

    A century ago, Olympic sprinter and Christian missionary Eric Liddell refused to compete in his favoured 100 metre race because it was held on a Sunday. Instead, he competed in the 400 metres … and won. Liddell’s story and the convictions that motivated him formed the foundations for the 1981 film Chariots of Fire.

    As the Olympics return to Paris this summer and to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Eric Liddell’s historic race, All Souls Music are delighted to confirm guest artists for Prom Praise: Chariots of Fire, broadcast live from the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday 4 May 2024.

    The concert will draw inspiration from Liddell’s tale of integrity, presenting an evening of musical sportsmanship that champions perseverance, character and hope.

    Artists include YolanDa Brown OBE, Martin Smith (pictured above), Ellie Limebear and Natasha Da Costa. Livestream host and Channel 5 News anchor Dan Walker (main photo above) will take to the stage with former Strictly Come Dancing partner, Nadiya Bychkova, performing a sensational new dance to Vangelis’ iconic Chariots of Fire main theme.

    Graham Daniels, General Director of Christians in Sport and a Director of Cambridge United Football Club, will offer a brief pause for thought and Eltham College Choir and musicians will be performing, honouring the school which formed such a crucial role in Liddell’s early life.

    Ellie Limebear (pictured above)

    The concert will also feature the World Premiere of a new orchestration of ‘How Great Thou Art’, celebrating the 75th anniversary of this well-known hymn, as well as featuring performances from Searchlight Theatre Company, bringing Liddell’s story to life.

    Sponsored by Christians in Sport and supported by Wycliffe Bible Translators and the Stuart Hine Trust, Prom Praise: Chariots of Fire promises to be a whirlwind of musical energy, celebrating an Olympic year and worthy of a giant of sport and faith.

    Natasha Da Costa (pictured above)

    Famous worldwide for a unique voice in music, the All Souls Orchestra has a longstanding residency at the Royal Albert Hall hosting an annual promenade concert, Prom Praise, which fuses a special partnership of classical and contemporary musicians for an evening of world-class music.

    PROGRAMME INCLUDES:

    Miklós Rózsa March of the Charioteers from Ben-Hur

    Vangelis Chariots of Fire Main Theme

    Rom Goodwin The Trap Main Theme

    Sibelius Finlandia

    FEATURING:

    All Souls Orchestra

    Prom Praise Massed Choir

    Conductor: Michael Andrews

    Special guests: Martin Smith, Ellie Limebear, YolanDa Brown OBE, Eltham College Choir and more

    Speaker: Graham Daniels

    Livestream host: Dan Walker

    The live event will be taking place at the Royal Albert Hall, Kensington Gore, London, SW7 2AP on Saturday 4 May at 7.30pm. Tickets are available from the Royal Albert Hall Box Office.

    The Livestream will begin at 7.15pm at allsoulsmusic.org<http://allsoulsmusic.org>

    All Photos: Courtesy of Prom Praise