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00:11Hello and welcome to your Thursday One Show live on BBC One and iPlayer with Alex Jones
00:16and Roman Kemp. Now tonight we have got a really powerful one big reunion as very shortly
00:22we'll see the moving moment Jeff Brazier reunites a group of former patients at Great Ormond
00:28Street Hospital with the inspiring consultant who saved their eyesight. More on that special
00:33surprise in a moment. It's gorgeous. Oh it's really really nice. Also coming up we'll be
00:38joined by Vera Drake's Eddie Marsden, boarding points is Zuka Hoyle and Taha Raheem who many
00:43will know from the hit BBC series The Serpent. Yes and now they've teamed up in their brand
00:48new high stakes crime thriller Prisoner about an inmate on the run who's handcuffed to a
00:53prison officer and if you're a fan of Line of Duty then you are going to really like
00:57this one as well. Absolutely. Also joining us tonight is Spice Girl Melanie C who's preparing
01:03to release her brand new album tomorrow. We'll exclusively hear her new single Drum Machine
01:07later on as she shares the personal love story that inspired it. Lovely and Melanie's not the
01:12only singing sensation on tonight's show because ahead of Dawn Chorus Day this Sunday Chris Packham
01:19has been finding out about a fascinating singer in the animal world which transforms everyday
01:24sounds into extraordinary song. You don't want to miss that one but now we're starting with
01:30that special One Big Reunion as a group of former patients personally thank the consultant
01:35who changed their life and Geoff Brazier was there to help make it happen.
01:44This is Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital in London and today it's going to be the location
01:49of a special reunion. Professor Chris Lloyd is a paediatric ophthalmologist here. Over the course
01:56of his 30-year career he's treated thousands of children with complicated eye diseases transforming
02:01their lives and those of their families. Most people don't get the opportunity to thank the doctors
02:07that saved their sight or their lives after their stay in hospital but we wanted to give the
02:11opportunity to some of Professor Lloyd's patients who are meeting as we speak just around the corner.
02:17Let's go and meet them. In a nearby pub almost 30 people whose lives have been touched by Professor Lloyd
02:22have gathered waiting for their cue to surprise him. So Anna tell me your story how did you end up
02:28in the care of Professor Lloyd? I was born with bilateral congenital cataracts and Professor Lloyd
02:34performed my surgery when I was five months old. He is the doctor that saved my sight but he's also
02:39a person who's enabled me to live my life to the full. What did Professor Lloyd do for you?
02:46Do an eye test. Yeah he did test your eyes when you were a baby. So Sola was operated on
02:53when he was
02:54seven weeks old. His eyes were so tiny so we feel very lucky that Professor Lloyd's skill and expertise
03:01have helped to give Sola the best chance of good vision. So he's achieved incredible things for a lot
03:06of people your family included. How much does he deserve this recognition? Every time Sola says
03:13look mummy I think of Professor Lloyd. Yeah. And I want to thank him every time I hear those words.
03:20Professor Lloyd has worked with hundreds of colleagues over the years and many have been
03:24impressed by his care and attention to detail. He is humble, doesn't take himself too seriously but
03:30at the same time has immense gravitas and his patients just love him. When he became a patient
03:35himself just weeks after major surgery for cancer, he was back treating children determined not to let
03:42any of his patients down. The day after he'd had some bad news he was in operating on a baby
03:47that
03:48had flown in especially to see him and then he went in the next day to do a follow-up
03:51appointment to make
03:52sure that everything had gone smoothly and I think that kind of sums up the person he is. I always
03:56like
03:56to think of all the kids who are now adults walking around who can see better because of the work
04:00that
04:00our dad's done. Professor Lloyd's been told he's been interviewed today as part of a hospital promo video
04:07and he doesn't know his family and patients are here. He thinks the interview will be conducted
04:12in front of an audience of academic students who are soon to arrive so I'm running through the
04:17questions with him first. What drew you into this speciality in particular? I can combine doing
04:24something I enjoy, ophthalmology, with looking after children and that worked out pretty well. I'm always
04:30curious about what's the favourite element of your job. You've gone to work and you've made a difference to
04:34people that that's the best thank you really isn't it you know. Eventually the audience starts
04:40filtering in. No let's just ignore them for a minute if we just carry on that's all right. Of
04:44course. Thanks. So some of our audience are just going to come in. He clocks immediately that all is
04:50not as it seems. I think I've been set up here. Why is that due? Do you feel like you
04:55recognise some of
04:56these guys? Obviously yes. So obviously we're not here to speak to some academic students about your
05:03wonderful profession. We are here to celebrate you. Is there anybody here that would be our stand up
05:09if they have been helped at some point by Professor Lloyd? That's a full house. Thank you so much
05:16everybody. Is there anyone that would like to give a personal thank you to Professor Lloyd?
05:22Um, I like it. Good. Then let's start with you. Thank you Professor Lloyd.
05:35It might not set you off, it will set me off. Anyone who's an adult, any not cute kids. Thank
05:41you for
05:41saving our family and thank you for giving us the quality of life that we've got. It really is down
05:47to you.
05:47I was seven weeks old when I had my cataract operation. Now I'm 21. I'm in my second year of
05:53medical school and I'm hoping to specialise in ophthalmology and kind of give back to what Professor
05:59Lloyd has done for me. So he's inspired you to follow in his footsteps. 100%. I wouldn't be here
06:04without him. Wow. And this is what I want to continue doing. He's already lost for words. I'm speechless.
06:09It's, uh, it's, it's, thank you so much. But of course I have one last revelation.
06:16Really we're here from the one show. So on behalf of everyone in the room and everyone who isn't,
06:22that would probably love to have been here, can we have a big round of applause please?
06:29Having the privilege of being able to look after
06:32kids and make a difference is, uh, that's what it's all about really.
06:36You do deserve it though. Let's have one more round of applause guys.
06:40Oh, what an incredible moment and how amazing is Professor Chris Lloyd? Lovely man isn't he?
06:50Thank you to Geoff for helping us out with that as well.
06:52Yeah, it was perfect. And if you want to be reunited with someone special,
06:56please do get in touch at one big thank you at bbc.co.uk. Tell us all about them. We
07:01want to know.
07:02Uh, time now though to say hello to tonight's guests. It's pop star and DJ Melanie C and stars of
07:07the new
07:07thriller Prisoner, Taha Raheem, Izuka Hoyle and Eddie Martin.
07:14Oh, well lovely to see you all. This is nice, isn't it? Full house tonight. We'll start with you,
07:19Izuka, because congratulations are in order and Big Boys is up for a TV BAFTA.
07:23Yeah. And as it happens, we know that you, Eddie and Mel, big fans. Oh my goodness.
07:29We love it. How can you not be? And if you haven't seen it, go watch it because you will
07:32love it.
07:33Yeah, well, it is something to add to the watch list. Exactly that. It is so brilliant. Uh, well,
07:38it's a big day as well for Taha, Izuka and Eddie because their brand new action-packed thriller Prisoner
07:42has hit the small screen. Yeah, it's from the director of Peaky Blinders and follows the story of
07:47prison transport officer Amber as she's tasked with escorting an inmate to court so he can testify
07:53against the crime organisation he once worked for. Yeah, but when the vehicle transporting
07:58them is ambushed by the very crime organisation in question, the pair find themselves on the run.
08:03The only problem is they're handcuffed to each other. Nightmare. Who's this guy?
08:09He worked as a contract killer for Pegasus. 47 confirmed kills. The only job is to get Stone to court.
08:17What are you doing? What are you doing? Pegasus has someone inside the MCU. Who are these people
08:24trying to kill you? My foreign employers. They use family against you. How many who are these people?
08:36I can finish this.
08:40APPLAUSE
08:44Well, now then, Izuka, this is very hard-hitting. Yeah. But Amber, your character, she's come back to work
08:51first day after having a baby. Yep. And then it's like the first day back and it's a nightmare. Tell
08:57us why.
08:58It's a total nightmare. So she is tasked with the job of having to take him to the place that
09:04he's going
09:05to. And essentially, she decides to handcuff herself to him. And throughout that journey, they are attacked
09:12and followed by Pegasus the whole way through. Congratulations. And Amber and Tibor are at
09:18completely opposite ends of the moral spectrum. And Tibor is the prisoner, isn't it?
09:23Tibor is the prisoner who Tahar is playing. And it's just essentially then she starts to figure out
09:31what sort of person she is. And her moral compass is challenged and her view of other people is
09:38challenged. And it's just kind of like the worst first day at work ever. Yeah.
09:45Tahar, of course, you play Tibor. But this is someone that is quite complex as a character.
09:52You've played complex characters in the past. Charles in The Serpent as well. But for this,
09:57being handcuffed to Amber, of course, Izuka's character, four months of filming,
10:01what was that actually like? You must know each other very well.
10:04Yeah. We do. Actually, we had a lot of fun, you know, because when you get tied to somebody,
10:11you don't know. It could be a nightmare. Yeah. You know, and I could have turned into a real
10:15t-boy. Yeah. 47, 48. Yeah. But luckily, thank God, I had Izuka tied to me. And I mean,
10:24she's a great actress and such a beautiful soul. So we got along so well. Yeah. Yeah. Well, you'd need
10:30to.
10:30Oh, yeah. Zuka, am I right? Your choreography between the two of you is pretty good. Getting
10:35in some roly-poly's, little couple of forward rolls there. We did some roly-poly's, which you
10:38won't see in the show. But that was one of the first things we went to do. And the very
10:43first thing
10:44we met. You two. You two. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Hi, nice to meet you. I'm Zuka. Roly-poly. Yeah.
10:52It's a shame we've got the coffee table in the way. They could have done it. Yeah, that's next.
10:56And see how this works. Yeah. And then, Eddie,
10:58your character is in charge of the investigation. Yes. But is he trustworthy?
11:05Can you ever trust me? Well, this is it. Yeah. Good answer. You know? Yeah.
11:12But Izuka, I mean, you filmed this in and around Cardiff as well. I mean,
11:16did you feel right at home there straight away? Yeah. I mean, I absolutely fell in love with Cardiff
11:22and Wales. I mean, I'm back and forth all the time now. I spend a lot of time in North
11:25Wales
11:26and Sledonia. I just, I picked up my bike. I moved back to Wales. And then, well, I didn't
11:31move back. I moved there. And from the moment I took a breath when I got off the train, it
11:36was like
11:36it was the deepest breath I'd taken in a long time. It's not Scotland. It's different. But the Celtic
11:41energy is in the soil. Yeah. And it just felt like home. The green, the Celtic tug, like the
11:47mother tongue, here in the Welsh crew, speaking Welsh whilst we were filming was the most grounding
11:52and beautiful thing I'd experienced. That Welsh crew. I knew I liked you, Izuka.
11:58Just laughing you up there. Do you do the rest of this in Welsh? Oh, no.
12:02Oh, diolch yn fawr.
12:05Oh, diolch yn fawr.
12:07Eddie, we have to talk a little bit more about your character. Now, without giving it,
12:11what can you tell us? Because he's charged with a big job here. Well, I play Alex Tebbit and he's
12:18been obsessed with bringing down Pegasus for the last seven years. So he's put his life and soul
12:24into it. He's lost his marriage. He's basically a very dysfunctional man. The funny thing is these
12:29guys do all this action stuff where they, where they, there's explosions and have to kill people
12:34and they're being chased. And I have one thing where the phone rings and I run out of my office
12:39and I run 10 yards. And the screening audience laughed when I ran.
12:44It just burst out laughing.
12:46It's all good. It comes out of nowhere. Bam, you know.
12:50It's a very, very complex character. It's, you don't know where his morality lies. You don't
12:56know whether he's corrupt or not. It's, but that's match. Matt's a brilliant writer. There's so many
13:01layers to this. And we said earlier, it's from the same director as, uh, the boated Peaky Blinders,
13:06but you've worked with lots of brilliant directors, Eddie, including Martin Scorsese.
13:12Yes, I did. What was that experience like? It was, it was revelatory to me because he's so open.
13:19And so there was one day when he walked on set, we're doing a massive scene and he walked on
13:24set
13:24in front of all these people and said, I don't know what to do. And that's not because he wasn't
13:29prepared, but as an artist, he accepted not that you had to lose sight of the shore to cross the
13:35ocean.
13:35And that was in Gangs of New York. Yeah, it was in Gangs of New York. And I realized
13:39as a young actor then, and that you, when you go up to a higher level, you realize there's no
13:44big
13:44secret. It's just people are prepared to add more and more complexity and complexity is just multiple
13:52simplicities. So it empowered me. It gave me a lot of confidence as an actor.
13:55So good. Tahar, I know you've always loved, loved film from a very young age. There's a story I know
14:01that you have. We can't condone it. It's pretty naughty behavior, this, I have to say. You used to
14:07sneak into the cinema, didn't you? Yeah. Yeah, I did. Yeah, when I was a teenager, I couldn't afford,
14:13like, you know, movie tickets. So I would sneak in through the side door. Yeah. And yeah,
14:18I was so small that I could just walk and pass just under the cashier and they wouldn't see me.
14:26But yeah, it was great. And he chased me for years. The same guy. But it turned into a full
14:32circle moment, didn't it? Yeah. And then I met him, like, years later when I was presenting a movie
14:37in Lyon. And he showed up with this, uh, 1920 stylish mustache. So long. We used to call him
14:45mustache. The manager of the cinema. Yeah. Right. Yeah. And, uh, yeah, we just had a great moment
14:51when he showed up and he invited me in his, uh, new, new theater. Yeah. And he said, like, uh,
14:57this
14:57time you'll enter the, by the, you know, the big door. Yeah. Oh, very good. You should have done this
15:04before. Yeah. Very good. Uh, well, all episodes of Prisoner are available to watch on Sky and now.
15:11Uh, still to come, Melanie will be telling us all about her world tour and will take an exclusive
15:16listen to her new single. Yeah. And Melanie's not the only one who can belt out a tune because in
15:21our next film tonight, Chris Packham has been finding out about a local, a vocal powerhouse,
15:26should I say? Who's very local. Very local as well. Yeah. Uh, songs have basically become the
15:30soundtrack to many people's lives. The blackbird is one of Britain's most favorite birds. And for
15:39me, it's the singing that makes them particularly special. It really stands out in that chorus of
15:46birdsong. And then there's that little flourish right at the end. At its simplest, the song is
15:55about holding a territory and attracting a mate. And in fact, the female blackbird isn't black at all.
16:01It's brown. But it's her that chooses that mate based upon the quality of his song. Now, new
16:10research has revealed just how sophisticated blackbird song really is. Mark Constantine, author of The
16:18Sound Approach to Birding, is one of the UK's top experts on birdsong. Blackbirds, they sing all their
16:24lives and they learn all their lives. And that learning begins even before they hatch. In the eggs,
16:30they're listening. In the eggs? In the eggs. They're listening to their parents. The minute it's born,
16:36it's able to imitate anything, but it has to learn all of it. Blackbirds live for an average of four
16:43years, but it can take up to three years to fully master their song. I've got recordings of two different
16:49blackbirds to play to Mark. Listen to this blackbird then. Yep. I'm ready.
16:56What can you tell me about that bird? It's repetitively using that final spring sound.
17:03If you listen to the phrase, fairly simple phrase, so not a lot of sophistication in that.
17:08That, I would say, was probably about two years old. There's another blackbird here. Now,
17:14this one's on a TV aerial, so this has got to be a suburban blackbird. Let's go for it. Okay.
17:20This is richer, isn't it?
17:22Do you know what? I think for the first time in my life, I've heard the difference between those songs.
17:29The recordings show that a blackbird song grows richer and more complex with age. They're also
17:37remarkable imitators. In these clips, they can be heard mimicking the sounds of police sirens and car
17:43alarms. It's showing off, Chris, basically. If they're a first-year male and they're too imitative,
17:51she won't have anything to do with them. Really? Yeah, she doesn't like it. No,
17:54it's proven that she won't mate with overly imitative birds. It's improving its song,
18:00it's learning its song. It's just exquisite. And its song has been a source of joy for many people,
18:07including Anne Baldwin from Dorset. It was the tonic she needed when she moved back to the UK.
18:14I came back under rather sad circumstances because my husband had just died and I was feeling so
18:19miserable. And then two blackbirds arrived. I can't tell you how much it lifted my spirit. I mean,
18:25I feel like tearing up. It was just incredible. It made me fear I was at home.
18:29I felt that they were my friends. It's something very special, isn't it? When you have a relationship
18:34with essentially a wild animal. I felt that they really appreciated that they could be a presence
18:41that would change my mind about having come back to England. And it worked because I'm glad to be here.
18:47But the blackbird is now facing a new and growing threat. It's a mosquito-borne disease and it
18:55affects blackbirds. George Batho is from the British Trust for Ornithology.
19:01So we've seen in London a drop off of about 40% in the blackbird population from the levels it
19:07should be.
19:08What could people do, George, in their garden then to, you know, help reduce disease transmission
19:14for blackbirds in particular? Clean out your water bowls on a regular basis to make sure that
19:19if they're only larvae getting there, they get chucked out. Indications are the populations will
19:23recover, but it will take some time for immunity to build up. For many of us, like Mark and Anne,
19:31blackbirds aren't just part of the garden. They're part of our lives. The blackbird is a very strong
19:37presence. It's a companion. I look forward to conversing with my blackbird every day. Joyous.
19:44So look, the next time you hear a blackbird, take the time to listen because this song is not only
19:52beautiful, it's the result of a lifetime of learning. And from my perspective, that makes it even more
20:00precious. Oh, see, I do love the blackbird call. Very nice. You've just claimed over there now. No,
20:07I wasn't. I wasn't. I was thinking about the woodpigeon call. I always think that's the biggest bop in the
20:12UK.
20:12I won't do it now to stop embarrassing you, but... No.
20:15Hoo, hoo, hoo, hoo, hoo, hoo, hoo. We know it. Look, well, this Sunday, people all around the world will
20:20be
20:20celebrating songbirds for International Dawn Chorus Day, when people are encouraged to listen to the birds
20:26when they're most active. Yes, and there are events taking place all around the UK to mark the day.
20:32If you want to get involved, we put all the details on our website. You might like it, Azuka,
20:37because you were saying that you do love listening to the... You get up early sometimes just to listen
20:41to the dawn chorus. I do. I'm a big fan of dawn's chorus, but I'm actually a huge fan of
20:45the blackbird.
20:45I'm not even just saying that. I absolutely love it. When I was in Cardiff, I have this app called
20:50Merlin, which is the bird app, where you can listen to and identify all the different types of birds
20:54and the bird calls. And each time I was like, oh, this one is beautiful. It would always be the
20:59European blackbird. That's the one that would come up. It's stunning. I absolutely love it.
21:03Got the apps. Other apps are available, I have to say. That's dedication. That's serious dedication.
21:08Merlin is a fantastic app. Oh, well, there you go. It's brilliant.
21:11I've got to move on. It's so new. Others are available. No one's a cat.
21:16We're celebrating a different type of song now. We're celebrating
21:20Melanie, of course we are, because tomorrow she releases her new album called Sweat.
21:25But before we find out more, here's an exclusive listen to her latest single, Drum Machine.
21:30I hear the sound. There's a drum machine that's playing in my heart.
21:37I repeat the symphony of you.
21:43The deep vibration.
21:47I can't go on now.
21:52It's on repeat the symphony of you.
22:05It's inspired by somebody really special, isn't it?
22:08It is. You know, this is a love song, really. The album, it was interesting because making
22:13this record, I think it took about two and a half years and it crossed a really interesting
22:17period of my life. I'd just broken up from a long-term relationship. So there was, you know,
22:22that difficult untangling moment with some anger and bitterness, meeting somebody new,
22:27falling in love and all the wonderful things that come with that. So it just gave the album
22:31a really lovely arc.
22:32And can we dig into that a bit?
22:35Well, I thought you might want to.
22:37She's found the juice there.
22:38Go on.
22:38Because, well, it's the first date is the thing, isn't it?
22:42Yeah.
22:42Can you share with the group what happened?
22:44Where did it go?
22:45Safe space.
22:46Yeah.
22:46Well, he's Australian. I met him over in Sydney and I was there on a DJ tour and he took
22:53me to this
22:53beautiful restaurant and it was one of those. It was kind of a love at first sight kind of thing.
22:57Nice.
22:58And he is wonderful and we had this gorgeous date. And then a couple of days later, I was DJing
23:03on a
23:04boat. It was like one of these sunset cruises. But the thing is, these cruises go for hours.
23:08And I was like, I don't want to be locked in a little room for hours when I'm only DJing
23:13for an hour.
23:13Yeah.
23:14So he wanted to go, but I didn't know him well enough to go, well, just hang out with me
23:17and
23:18you know, we'll have the day together. So him and a few mates went on this cruise
23:22and I just turned up on a boat, DJed, but it was full of Spice Girls fans. So he's only
23:28met me a
23:29couple of times and everyone's got like a Spice Girls t-shirt or a sporty Spice t-shirt and he
23:33must
23:33just thought, what is going on? But then as I left, the police turned up, I got this police
23:39escort to shore. I thought it was, I thought it was quite cool for me your first day.
23:43Yeah, that's good flex, that.
23:44I look like a diva.
23:45Yeah, yeah, yeah, a lot of flex. But let's chat about the album, because as you say,
23:49it took a long time to craft it and to build it. Sweat, I mean, you want this to bring
23:55people together.
23:56Absolutely. I think the big difference for me on this album is I've kind of gone back even
24:02before I was a Spice Gale. So I've been DJing for about eight years and I love dance music,
24:06but I'd kind of left club culture in the past because I discovered raving when I was about 17.
24:13Obviously didn't go out until I was 18. But the Spice Girls happened really quickly after that.
24:19So all of that part of my life kind of got put on hold because we were so busy doing
24:24all the
24:24fantastic things that we did. And then DJing, I just remembered all these great songs and
24:30there's so many like great club classics that are remixed and brought up to date. And this thing
24:35of like, as humans, we work so hard and something we love to do is get on that dance floor
24:41and have
24:41that release. You know, people come together, strangers, we have these experiences and we share
24:46it with each other. It's so inclusive. And that's absolutely what I wanted to represent on this album.
24:52Yeah, nice. Yeah. And you've got a world tour. Oh, I do. In fact, I'm so busy. I'm playing Union
24:58Chapel tonight. I'm in Liverpool tomorrow. I think I'm in Leeds on Saturday. Come on. Michelle is coming
25:04to Union Chapel. Yeah, she's probably there before me. The UK leg kicks off in Glasgow in October. It does.
25:11Yeah. I mean, the question that people want to know, of course, will there be classics? I turn to
25:16you. Is Brian Adams going to be there? He wants to be. Yes. So the thing is, I've actually not
25:23done a
25:23whale tour for over 20 years. I've toured Europe a lot, but I'm going to Australia and Southeast Asia.
25:29I'm back in America. And there's so many people who haven't seen me for a long time. So yes,
25:34I do want to do the classics, but I've got so many things to do. And there's got to be
25:38some Spice Girls as well.
25:39Definitely. Be rude not to, right? So we've got to weave it all in and, of course,
25:43bring this new album to life. So it's going to be, yeah, it's going to be a good show.
25:47Yeah. And you grew up in a very musical family. I did. Is it true that the living room was
25:53turned
25:53into a rehearsal space? Well, I thought that was the norm, you know. My mum's a singer.
25:57I know. On the tables and things. I realise that now. Yeah, I used to go to sleep to the
26:03sound,
26:03so my stepdad's a bass player. So the bass would always go through the floorboards and that was,
26:08yeah. That was life, yeah. It's a nice way to go off to sleep, though, isn't it?
26:12Exactly. But I think any, you know, kind of, I mean, you're all artists, essentially, you know,
26:16being able to create something. You always look to those inspiration. Usually it comes from when
26:20you are so young. I know, Eddie, talking of inspirational people, there's a certain Mr Bennett.
26:24You always like to thank him. Yes, Mr Bennett. We run a menswear store in Bethnal Green.
26:28He was a bookmaker, paid for me to go to drama school. He was actually the best man at my
26:32wedding.
26:32I've got a funny story. Well, it's not funny in a way. He had a stroke the night before my
26:37wedding.
26:38Right. So he couldn't come to my wedding. Right.
26:40And I had to follow the ambulance as I took him to a hospital in Italy. And I was waiting.
26:44I didn't, he was 82. I didn't know how he was going to be. I was waiting. I was thinking,
26:48I didn't know how serious it was. And then they wheeled him out and I was terrified.
26:53And then he suddenly sat up and went, Eddie, I'll do anything to get out of making the speech.
26:57Yeah. And it's okay. You started out in musicals because, I mean,
27:06Mel, obviously you started around 16 and you were early as well, wasn't it? Yeah. Yeah.
27:10I was, I was doing musical theatre from, well, I went to Arts Ed. That's where I trained to
27:16musical theatre from 18 to 21 and I love it. Inches it. Inches it. Yeah. Do you? Me and you,
27:23I tell you, we've got a connection going on here. We've got a trade-off. We tried there,
27:27singing along the way. Thank you so much for everyone who was messaging in. Yes.
27:30Very quick. Linda has said, I watched the whole series of The Prisoner today. I absolutely loved it.
27:37Reached it. Wow, already. Whole series. There we are.
27:39Well, that is all we've got time for tonight. A big thank you to all of our guests.
27:43Tomorrow I'll be back with Clara and we'll be joined by Sarah Hadland and Stephen Mangan,
27:48alongside Strikes' Tom Burke and Casualty star Barney Walsh. Have a great evening. See you.
27:56Bye.
27:57Bye.
28:00Bye.
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