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00:11Hello and welcome to the start of your week on The One Show live on BBC One and iPlayer
00:16with Lauren Laverne and JB Gill. Lots coming up tonight from why Easter eggs are getting
00:21more expensive to new recycling rules that will impact millions from tomorrow. Plus,
00:26we are celebrating the return of a much-loved comedy and bringing you a powerful new drama
00:31that is guaranteed to get people talking. Yes, it's called Babies and it follows the bittersweet
00:36love story of a couple struggling to start a family which begins tonight at 9pm on BBC One
00:42and later we'll be joined by its stars Papa Esielu and Siobhan Cullen as they tell us why they hope
00:47it'll encourage important conversations. I think it really will, it's so beautiful. We will of course
00:52be asking Papa all about taking on the iconic role of Professor Snape in the highly anticipated
00:57Harry Potter series 2. Yes, can't wait. Also with us tonight, the brilliant Hugh Bonneville and Hugh
01:03Skinner who are reuniting to play Ian Fletcher and Will Humphries, a comedy duo we first met in the
01:08smash hit sitcom W1A, all about a team of managers working at the BBC. Yes, well now they're teaming up
01:15for the sequel but this time they're helping to manage an international football tournament from
01:20Miami in the new BBC sitcom 2026. What could it be based on and what could possibly go wrong? We
01:27will
01:27find out. Also tonight ahead of the bank holiday weekend when many are set to indulge in easter eggs,
01:33Chris Bavin has been given exclusive access to a chocolate factory in North Yorkshire to find out
01:38why chocolate prices are at a record high and how manufacturers are adapting. Hoping we're getting
01:43umpa-loompa or two. Fingers crossed. And we love hearing from you of course, perhaps you enjoyed
01:48watching the Hughes in W1A and want to let us know or maybe you've got a question for Papa or
01:53Siobhan.
01:53Get in touch on WhatsApp, that's 033 0123 1700 on socials or on email. But first tonight, millions of
02:02people in England will notice a change from tomorrow as new recycling rules come into force and alter what many
02:08of us do on bin day. Yes the new systems designed to make sure bin collections are the same for
02:13everyone regardless of where you live. Mina Shannon has been to find out more. Walk around different
02:20towns in England and you'll see a different set of bins and completely different rules about what goes
02:26in them. But that's all about to change. From April, the way bins are collected across England will be
02:35updated to make recycling simpler and more effective. And it's the biggest change to household recycling
02:44in 20 years. Every household will get a food waste bin, fewer collections for general waste and clearer
02:52rules. The idea being one simple system, more recycling and less landfill. But not everyone's happy about it.
03:02In the UK, Wales leads the way with a 68.4% recycling rate and weekly food waste collections in
03:10most areas.
03:11In Scotland and Northern Ireland, the figures are lower and collections vary from council to council.
03:17In England, it's hoped the new system will boost its current 44.6% rate. Where I live in Merseyside,
03:26with my mother-in-law Ang, the rules will come into effect this summer. What have I told you about
03:32rinsing the stuff before you put it in the recycle bin? We already have one bin for recycling paper,
03:38card, tins, glass and plastic, but some of us are better at it than others. So I feel like in
03:44this
03:45household, you're definitely the recycler. Yes. Out of ten, what would you mark me and Liam?
03:50Probably about two. The amount of times I have to take your stuff out of the bins and put it
03:58in the
03:58recycle bin. Coke bottles, cardboard from toilet rolls, shampoo bottles. She's literally getting
04:06exposed by my mother-in-law. One council that's ready to go is Warrington. Residents already have
04:13alternating collections. Mixed recycle in one week, general waste the next. And from tomorrow,
04:19they'll get a food waste collection for the first time, which means their general waste bin
04:24shouldn't fill up as quickly. Dad, I got this so then you can put it in the recycling bin.
04:30OK. Cheers, babe. Dad Paul has a wheelie bin and patio cleaning business,
04:34so he knows a thing or two about rubbish. I think the new recycling used to reinforce him
04:40are a good idea. We like to recycle and do as best we can with it.
04:43A common complaint about food caddies is the smell.
04:46So this is a smaller one for inside the house. It's not ideal. Obviously you're going to get a
04:51smell still coming out of there. Which means they need to be emptied frequently. To get Paul and I
04:57up to speed on the difference all this can make, we've been invited to see the recycling process up
05:03close. Weekly food waste will go to specialist plants where it's turned into renewable energy
05:09and fertiliser. Everything else comes to places like this, a dry recycling centre in Liverpool.
05:17One of the biggest problems that we have here is that we do unfortunately still get some food
05:22waste in with our recycling. That means the food messes up a lot of the paper and cards that comes
05:27in.
05:27It means that we can't really do much with it. Batteries and vapes are one of the biggest fire
05:33risks in recycling centres, causing on average one fire a day. What you should be doing is taking
05:40them back to your supermarkets. They will have a little box when you walk in where you can put your
05:44loose batteries into there. Right. If you buy vapes from there as well. And people putting these in
05:50their recycling bins. Unbelievable. Stop them. Even with cutting edge kits including AI robots,
05:59skilled workers still need to separate materials. So what's coming over this line now are the plastic
06:06bottles. As you can see we're separating out the final things that have slipped through the net.
06:10Like plastic bags. Plastic bags. You can see newspapers. Yeah. I'm surprised at how much stuff that I'm seeing
06:18that shouldn't be here. Can you just explain what happens once that batch has actually been contaminated?
06:25Anything that comes through like that would go to an energy from waste facility. Yeah I have to say
06:30this has been the biggest eye-opener for me personally. I think the big thing for me was the vapes.
06:36I didn't know vapes couldn't go in. Yeah. Now I know what to do and what not to do at
06:40home.
06:42Change can be inconvenient. But when it comes to waste, small actions at home
06:47certainly can make a difference.
06:52Thank you Mina. She's always so well turned out. Even at a recycling centre, it just looks on point.
06:58Let's hope these changes make recycling a bit easier for households across England.
07:02Right. It's time now to welcome tonight's first guest. It's the stars of BBC's latest drama,
07:07babies. Papa Esielu and Siobhan Cullen. Welcome.
07:11Thank you. Welcome both of you. And Papa, I've got to start with you because I've got to say
07:16congratulations on your Olivier Award nomination. Thank you so much.
07:20So that's for All My Sons, which you starred in the play alongside Brian Cranston. Ceremonies next week.
07:26How are you feeling about it? I'm mainly looking forward to seeing what Brian's going to wear, to be honest.
07:32I'm looking forward to it. It was such a joyful experience and everyone was brilliant and
07:37the show was brilliant. And so it's really great to see it. And Papa was brilliant.
07:40Yeah.
07:43Well, listen, you can now watch the Olivier Awards on BBC Two, 12th of April, hosted by Nick Muhammad,
07:49who will be here next week. We can see what Brian and Papa end up wearing. And from starring on
07:54stage
07:55to the small screen, because in just a couple of hours here on BBC One, Papa's going to be joining
07:59forces with Siobhan to bring us a brand new comedy, drama rather, called Babies.
08:04Yes, it's a powerful watch about a young married couple and their heartbreaking struggle to start
08:09a family, which covers themes of miscarriage and bereavement as well. And before we hear all
08:13about it, let's take a quick look. Do I need it?
08:18How are you two anyway?
08:19Yeah, really good.
08:20Do you think much about having kids?
08:21Er, no.
08:23Sure.
08:23You?
08:24Nowhere.
08:26Is that the baby? One minute, please.
08:32He's got no idea what you've been through.
08:34What we've been through.
08:38This isn't going to change us.
08:42I feel like we should start trying again.
08:48Oh, Siobhan, it's so great this. Now, it's obviously a very emotional subject, but it's
08:53also really funny. It's really joyful. It's the most beautiful story. And that's because of your
08:59characters. So Lisa and Stephen, tell us a little bit about them.
09:03Well, we meet them and they're newly married and they're just mad about each other. They're
09:10best friends. And up until this point, I think everything is gone as planned. And this is,
09:17I suppose, they decide, you know, they want to become parents and it's the first kind of hurdle
09:22that they face. So in a way, it feels like a little bit like a kind of a coming of
09:26age show in that
09:27we watch these people who are kind of naively making their way through life, facing their first
09:32kind of, I suppose, hardship. And then we watch them and as they kind of navigate that together
09:41and separately. And yeah, we see them kind of drift apart and then hopefully, you know,
09:46come together as well.
09:47Yeah, it's really touching. And Papa, amongst their loss, the couple are kind of expected to just get
09:53on with it, which is something that they struggle to do, isn't it?
09:56Yeah, for sure. But like, I mean, like, I suppose these big things happened in life and
10:01we're expected to continue, you know, to keep going to work or to keep, you know,
10:07like showing up for our friends or whatever. But I think what Stefan Golosevsky, the writer,
10:12has done so brilliantly is just created a world on the screen, which is so real and truthful and
10:19honest. He doesn't shy away from anything, which provided a brilliant playground for us to play.
10:27Yeah, yeah. And you're hoping that it will spark more conversations around pregnancy struggles,
10:33aren't you?
10:34Look, I kind of think the show is so, obviously, that's one aspect of it, but it covers so many
10:40different topics. It looks at family relationships. It looks at how like men are together and their
10:45friendships. It covers a wide range of topics. And really what I hope is that any audience member is
10:51able to take whatever feels right for them from it. But of course, like anyone who feels alone or
10:57feels isolated with any of the subjects that are covered in the show, if they feel seen or
11:05represented well in this show, then I think we've done our job.
11:08Yeah, it helps them connect.
11:09So, Siobhan, we have got a few different perspectives in the show, haven't we? It's not
11:14just Lisa and Stephen. Who else is kind of in the cast and dealing with, you know, potential parenthood?
11:21Yeah, there's another couple in the show, Dave and Amanda. Dave and Stephen are like best mates from
11:28school. And I think Stefan does a really brilliant job of kind of portraying
11:34friendships and maybe friendships that aren't in the most healthy of places. Stefan's a genius in
11:41in looking at communication and how people communicate or struggle or, you know, don't communicate.
11:50And Dave's at an interesting point in his life where he's met a new girlfriend, Amanda.
11:55And the show also looks at like their perspective on parenthood and the journey that they've been on
12:00as well as, you know, as well as Lisa and Stephen's. So there's a real kind of broad range
12:06kind of covered in the show.
12:07Yeah. And Siobhan, to help you prepare for the role, you spoke to some of your own friends
12:11about their personal experiences, didn't you?
12:14Yeah, I'm not a mum myself. And a lot of my friends are. So it was great to be able
12:23to
12:24draw upon their experiences where they were comfortable enough to share. We have a happy ending
12:31in our show. I don't think that's a spoiler. So I kind of reached out to my pals and I
12:37was like,
12:37look, I know you've all told me your birth stories, but if you're comfortable and if you're up for it,
12:42I'd love to hear the kind of warts and all versions. So I got loads of beautiful voice notes,
12:47some videos, some photos from friends of mine. And it was just a really lovely way to kind of connect
12:55at my friends and really kind of try to get a grasp of what that is that women go through.
13:01Highly recommended for anyone to do it.
13:03It's really interesting, especially for a male as well. I'm fascinated by it because it helps
13:07you understand so much more.
13:08Yeah. And I think women often will just say, oh yeah, it's all fine. Mum's doing well,
13:12baby's doing well. And, you know, they don't want to take up too much space or put that burden on
13:15anybody. So it was really nice to create that space.
13:19An eye opener. Good to have that research. Papa, you're doing another series, Falling,
13:23by the brilliant Jack Thorne, who was with us just a few weeks ago, writer of adolescence,
13:28and he was talking about Lord of the Flies. And you play a priest in that. But how do you
13:32go
13:32about researching something like that? Yeah, I mean, I play the Catholic priest in this show
13:39and I spent a lot of time with an amazing Anglo-Catholic priest in Cardiff where we shot.
13:47And it was great for me because, like, I kind of grew up in church and I've got this idea
13:52of,
13:52like, priests and vicars being, like, very kind of fusty, like, buttoned up, like, whatever,
13:56which is not fair. And, like, this particular man was just fabulous, wonderful. He had, like,
14:00incredible dress sense. He, like, wore a barb jacket wherever he went over his cassock.
14:05He carried, like, his tiny doll. I can't remember what, if it was a Jack Russell or a cockapoole,
14:09whatever. He just had a great vibe, you know? And, like, hearing him talk about faith and
14:15the reason why it's so important to him and it's so important for him to share it,
14:20I found fascinating from my perspective. Yeah. Listen, Siobhan, we have to touch on
14:25the fact that you're also filming the Highlander reboot. I just need to know,
14:30the question is, will Queen's music be making a return? I mean, I hope so because it is so iconic.
14:40The soundtrack of the original is just incredible. So, yeah, I mean, fingers crossed that it pops up
14:47again in ours. Excellent. Well, Baby starts tonight at nine o'clock here on BBC One and iPlayer.
14:56And for details of organisations which offer advice and support with bereavement or pregnancy-related
15:01issues, do go online to bbc.co.uk slash action line. Now, still to come tonight,
15:06we're going to be chatting to Papa about his role in the massive new Harry Potter series.
15:11Plus, Hugh Bonneville and Hugh Skinner will be telling us about the sequel to W1A as they
15:16reunite to bring us a brand new BBC mockumentary called 2026. But now, this bank holiday weekend
15:22is an important time in the Christian calendar and we've got lots coming up this week to help
15:27you celebrate. Tomorrow, we'll be joining pilgrims in the North York Moors as they take on a beautiful
15:32new pilgrim trail trail to Markland. And something else, JB, that people might be enjoying this
15:38weekend are these Easter eggs. But the cost of these bad boys is on the rise. You can,
15:45of course, shop around for budget options, but we bought this one a year ago. It's still good.
15:50I checked the date. £2.95 a year ago. What's it now? It is now on sale for an extortion
15:56at £4.50,
15:58an increase of over 50%. Wow, the cheek. And the rising price of chocolate is something Chris
16:04Bavin has been looking into as he exclusively headed to a factory in North Yorkshire to find out how
16:09chocolate makers are coping. Cocoa costs have hit record highs in the last three years, forcing some
16:19brands to shrink their products. Celebration tubs have shrunk by almost a quarter and Cadbury's
16:24dairy milk is 10% smaller, but nearly 50% more expensive. Thankfully, we are now finally starting
16:31to see prices return to their near historic level. I'm keen to find out how chocolate manufacturers have
16:39coped in this volatile market and possibly more importantly, when us the consumer might start
16:46to see some prices come down. Have you noticed anything about chocolate bars recently?
16:53Smaller than the cost of them. A good one for me is chocolate oranges. It used to be like 99p,
16:59now it's the best part of two and a half quid. I'm at Whittaker's in North Yorkshire,
17:05a chocolate maker spanning four generations. Today on the line is their top seller,
17:10the mint crisp. I'm with CEO William. There's been lots of challenges with cocoa beans recently and
17:18the prices have spiked extraordinarily high. How has that affected you and your business?
17:23It's been a real challenge because you can never adjust your pricing fast enough to keep up. You could
17:31buy your beans in about 2023 at around about £3,000 a tonne for the chocolate. At Christmas 2024,
17:40the price was nearly £10,000 a tonne. You're using a thousand tonnes of chocolate in a year.
17:45That's a huge impact to deal with. I've been here four to six years and the last two years have
17:51been
17:51the biggest challenge of my career. So now we are starting to see it come down. That must be a
17:56huge
17:56relief to you. We're not in a position to actually take advantage of that. We've bought all the cocoa
18:01that we need and we don't know until next September, October what those prices will be for the following
18:08year. Dr Tonya Lander of the University of Oxford says there were a number of reasons for the prices
18:15of cocoa rising initially. Climate change, diseases of the trees, but also trade tariffs and then also
18:22interesting shifts between cocoa market and cocoa production meant that it was just a really poor
18:28year. What's happening now to reduce these prices? A big part of that is simply that the yield this
18:34year is expected to be more like a normal yield rather than the very low yields that we saw in
18:3824
18:38and 25. But we're still expecting some reduction in availability because cocoa producers, many of them,
18:45sold their land for gold mining as a way of stabilising their own incomes. Cocoa trees thrive in tropical
18:50climates. They need consistently warm temperatures and high humidity to grow well. I'm keen to know if
18:57it could be grown closer to home. We do grow cocoa trees in the UK in glasshouses, but large-scale
19:05production isn't viable simply because of the sort of energy requirements of maintaining big
19:11glasshouses at the temperatures and humidities that they need. Guildford-based New Cocoa have found
19:17another way to tackle the rising prices by creating a cocoa alternative using fava beans that look and
19:24tastes surprisingly close to chocolate. Back in Yorkshire, one way William is adapting is by investing
19:31in this. So welcome to the nut production facility. A brand new nut factory which opened in October last
19:39year and the one show has been given exclusive access. So this is the new product? The new product
19:45is the double-enrobed milk chocolate Brazil nut. What was the inspiration behind doing this? The
19:52development of a whole series of new products in the future that would give us the opportunity not to
19:58just be so reliant on chocolate, but this is just the start. So it's Brazil nuts this year, next year
20:04we're
20:04already looking at macadamia nuts, marzipans or dates, anything that is nut based. With a volatile cocoa
20:12market, manufacturers like this one are airing on the side of caution. A spokesperson for the British
20:18Retail Consortium told us that retailers are doing everything they can to offer value to customers
20:24despite rising costs. Changes to the product, size and pricing are largely determined by the manufacturer,
20:30reflecting the cost of production. Retailers will pass on savings wherever they can.
20:36So despite falling cocoa prices, it doesn't look like we're going to get cheaper chocolate at the
20:41checkout anytime soon.
20:46Well, thank you so much, Chris. At least it's great to see chocolate makers diversifying.
20:51Fava beans, who knew? Time now to introduce our next guest. It's Hugh Bonneville and Hugh Skinner.
21:02I did wonder if that film might actually touch a nerve for you because I believe that you were once
21:06sacked from a job in a chocolate shop. Yes, a long time ago I worked in the in the basement
21:12of a very
21:14expensive chocolate shop packing chocolates and we had to put all the boxes together so we'd be but we
21:20could eat the chocolates as we went so we'd be quite sort of high on sugar by about 9.30
21:23we had to people
21:24call up and dictate the messages to us of what to write in the cards but they were quite austere
21:29the
21:30messages you know they'd say sort of best wishes so and so so we sort of warmed them up quite
21:34a lot
21:34and say I love you lots and always sign them off swark sealed with a loving kiss. Yeah we got
21:39fired.
21:41Poetic license, I love it. Well Hugh might not have made it as a chocolatier but he certainly found his
21:46calling in acting and now he's reuniting with Hugh Bonneville as they reprise their roles from the
21:51hilarious sitcom W1A a mockumentary about a group of managers working at the BBC. Yes but this time
21:57Ian Fletcher and awkward intern Will Humphreys have moved on from life at the Beeb and they are working
22:03in Miami on a very different job. Let's have an exclusive look as things start to kick off.
22:09It's the biggest sporting event in the world. The 2026 tournament. Football is a funny game.
22:16When you say he's here. His name is here. Okay. It's never over until it's over. This is our moment
22:21right? Essentially we're in the toilet and we're going to have to come out. Yeah nice one. Will! Oh yeah
22:25hi yeah.
22:26And it's one game at a time. Right like hashtag change the game right. Did I miss something or is
22:30this a lot worse than I thought?
22:32I mean at least we know where we are now. So that's all good.
22:39Now, QB we could hear there David Tennant narrating the series once again. So we first met Ian in 2012
22:45and then he was organising the Olympic Games before joining the BBC. Tell us about this new gig that he's
22:51got.
22:52Well once he'd sorted out the BBC Ian then went on to work for the National Obesity Initiative but that
22:58didn't really go anywhere. So now he's been parachuted into this football tournament that's
23:02taking place in Miami as head of as director of integrity and really steering what could only
23:10be described as three huge ships Mexico, Canada and the US towards a destination of who knows where.
23:16Wow. Well we used to see Ian in meetings where everyone's very straight obviously very British
23:21but these new colleagues in Miami they're a bit different aren't they? Well they are adopting certain
23:26national characteristics. Quite a punchy American lawyer who swears a lot, there's a Canadian who
23:31just wants to be nice to everyone and go back to Vancouver and a Mexican who thinks the world revolves
23:37around Guadalajara. So they've all got vested interests and their own national instincts at stake.
23:42Yeah. Now Hugh S so your character Will he was pretty clueless when he worked with Ian at the BBC
23:47and now he's Ian's assistant so how does that go down? Well I think you're quite pleased aren't you?
23:54I'm delighted of course. No I think it's quite crushing for Ian when he first arrives because
24:00yeah it's a sort of seemingly incredibly unproductive working relationship but I mean Will's
24:07absolutely thrilled to be back in Ian's orbit. I think the first time around it was a very sort of
24:11definitive experience for him and Ian's a sort of spiritual leader guru to him and I think he's
24:19been a bit lost ever since you know I think he's probably been traveling and I mean he says he's
24:22done some he's probably worked with horses quite a bit I think. Thrilled to be back in your orbit.
24:28Yeah. But they do share quite a touching moment in this series don't they?
24:32Oh yeah well they do well I think I've described I think the relationship is really it's like looking
24:37after Will Humphreys is the Paddington of the office world you know you know he's going to
24:42break the photocopier but with no manis or forethought and I think Ian just wants to look after Hugh
24:48sorry Will it's life in the dating art.
24:53And what kind of challenges you know is Ian facing in this new role? I mean director of integrity did
24:59you
24:59say? Yes well I mean I don't know if those you know there was another football tournament four
25:04years ago in Qatar and so that certain opportunities arose out of that learning experiences arose out
25:09of the Qatar experience and so director of integrity was was created in this new organization
25:15but really the main challenges are to make sure that Will gets the right coffee pods and opens the
25:21right biscuit gins it really has very little to do with football this show you'll be relieved to
25:25hear for those who don't follow football. Well I was going to say speaking of football it's not
25:29something that you had a great deal of experience in is it? I don't think that's fair GB I think
25:33I think my experience as the reserve goalkeeper for the under 11 B's uh it was seminal to my life
25:40as an actor so I bring a vast pool of I swim in a vast pool of experience or something
25:44like that.
25:45Papa you are also a very keen football player. Also exactly also and um yeah I mean I am like
25:52I I
25:53love to watch football and play football I probably also peaked at under 11 age but um I'm carrying on
26:01because God loves to try it of course. Yeah. Do you have a favorite position in football? Uh in football?
26:05I I I I
26:07In football yes. In football yes. Um uh I I call myself an all-rounder you know so I'm a
26:13mid a midfielder.
26:14Okay uh now Hugh West the dialogue in this show is as always very conversational you know it feels real
26:21but apparently it's very intricate and difficult to learn it's all sort of mapped out isn't it?
26:27Oh it's so detailed and yeah it's it's really hard to learn I mean we just sort of run it
26:31and run it
26:32and run it and stare at each other until we get it right but I think that's John Morton's such
26:36a
26:36brilliant writer I think the way he sort of observes those phrases we lean on when we're in a panic
26:41when
26:41actually we mean something else or just lots more is I find hugely relatable but it is uh it's the
26:48hardest
26:48thing I've ever learned and and usually don't learn and so we have to stop time and time again
26:52because I've mucked it up again but uh and and look well I suppose people say it would be your
26:56vocabulary is easy because you've only got about four words but um it's there's a huge difference
27:00between yeah crap and crap yeah and that sort of thing yeah yeah well we've got a lovely uh message
27:06on the ipad from Michelle it says I love w1a in 2012 so much I quote them all the time
27:12in work
27:12meetings which really makes me giggle oh yeah something's got to get you through hasn't it
27:16and Debbie says uh w1a is the best comedy I've watched the acting is a major contribution to this
27:22oh thank you well apologies for any foodie language you might have heard there 2026 starts next
27:28Wednesday at 10 o'clock on bbc2 and all episodes of 2012 and w1a are available on iplayer uh papa
27:34while
27:34we've got you we've had messages in about you as well erinson i'm so excited to see papa step into
27:40the iconic role of professor snape in the upcoming harry potter series i mean the trailer released
27:45last week things are really starting to get exciting aren't they yeah it's amazing and like
27:48we've been we've been filming for um what feels i think maybe like 10 months now so we're deep into
27:55it so it's it's so great to share even a little snippet of what we've been working on uh last
28:00week
28:01and yeah looking forward to more being shared in the months to come oh i'm so excited so my kids
28:07qb did your son read the books growing up yes i know where this is going uh yes i swore
28:13i wouldn't
28:13watch the film so i've read all the books my son's you know read all the books you know three
28:17times
28:17watched you know he's grown up now and i'm still stuck on goblet of fire so i apologize i will
28:22get
28:22catch up eventually i will just in time of the series exactly you'll get there eventually uh and papa
28:28what's it been like getting to know those young actors playing ron harry and hermione i mean they're
28:32brand new to the whole thing yeah i mean obviously i don't chat to them because um i'm playing the
28:36teacher and they're insufferable no they're they're totally joyous and it's it's beautiful
28:42watching them at this stage you know because to them this is just fun you know like every single
28:47day go to school there as well so every single day they're at school and then this is like school
28:51break you know when they're when they're filming but they're so so so talented and um yeah i think
28:56people are going to fall in love with them oh fantastic well we can't wait congratulations
29:01unfortunately that's all we've got time for tonight thank you to all of our wonderful guests yes we
29:06will be back tomorrow when we'll be joined by our comedian lucy beaumont traitors winner harry
29:11clark and singer songwriter holly humberston have a lovely evening good night
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