Owning up. Hugh Grant confessed to throwing a “terrible” tantrum while filming his upcoming movie Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves.
17.02.2023 - 00:35 / manchestereveningnews.co.uk
Health leaders have said the major 48-hour nurses strike announced for next month is a 'worrying escalation' that could 'lead to serious damage to the NHS' and 'risk patient safety'.
The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) has announced a significant escalation in strike action at more than 120 NHS employers across England in the increasingly bitter dispute over pay and staffing. A 48-hour walkout will be staged from 6am on March 1.
For the first time, the RCN will involve nursing staff working in emergency departments, intensive care units, cancer care and other services that were previously exempted. The college said it was continuing discussions with the NHS at national level as part of its commitment to 'life and limb' care but will reduce services to an “absolute minimum”
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Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said failure to provide cover to departments such as cancer care is a 'significant escalation' from previous strikes, that will 'inevitably cause further disruption to patients'.
Sir Julian Hartley, chief executive at NHS Providers said the escalation was 'worrying', with over 140,000 appointments already postponed as a result of staff walkouts, and that the NHS could be 'seriously damaged'.
However the union said the decision has been made with a 'heavy heart' and that both nurses and patients did not want the strikes to happen. In Manchester, Tameside and Glossop Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, the North West Ambulance Service and Wrightington Wigan and Leigh NHS Foundation Trust will be impacted.
Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay
Owning up. Hugh Grant confessed to throwing a “terrible” tantrum while filming his upcoming movie Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves.
Hugh Grant recognizes that he loses his temper at times.
HBO’s penultimate episode 8 of The Last Of Us delivered 8.1 million viewers Sunday night across HBO Max and linear telecasts. That’s up 74% from the series debut night in January and sets a new series high ahead of next Sunday’s season finale, per Nielsen and HBO.
Recovering Rangers star Ianis Hagi's international comeback has been put on hold after Romania left him out of their Euro 2024 qualifiers later this month.
Tom Sizemore, who starred in Saving Private Ryan, Black Hawk Down and in hundreds of other film and TV roles over three-plus decades, died Friday at a hospital in Burbank. He was 61 and had been in a coma since suffering a stroke February 18 that resulted in brain aneurysm.
Taylor Swift has given the Swifties an inside look at the making of the “Lavender Haze” music video.
Hosea Chanchez‘s introduction to Los Angeles was a series of unfortunate events. At 17, he dropped out of school and drove across the country with his cousin in his Mitsubishi Eclipse, expecting to stay with a family member and pursue his dream of being a working actor. His housing plans fell through, but his relative organized for him to temporarily crash with a friend.“I ended up staying one night with this young lady, and I had no idea that she was on drugs and was dating her drug dealer,” he said during this week’s “Renaissance Man.”If it sounds ominous, it was.
When a movie gets tangled up in all kinds of financial problems, delayed for over a year, played out internationally, sent straight to streaming in Canada, and then finally getting the green light to open in the U.S. via a new distributor and thrown into theaters with virtually no notice or time to mount a marketing campaign, you have to think there must be something very wrong here.
Salma Hayek and her step-daughter Mathilde Pinault had a major fashion moment during Paris Fashion Week. The pair were photographed together at the Saint Laurent Fall/Winter 2023/24 show, wearing matching ensembles and showing off their sophisticated style.The Hollywood star wore a Saint Laurent green gown in emerald green, paired with a black blazer, accesorized with minimal jewelry, including a gold crystal necklace, and completing her look with black platform heels and a black clutch.Salma was all smiles at the exclusive event with Mathilde, who wore a similar gown in grey, paired with a brown puffer jacket, strappy heels and a white chain bag.This is not the first time the pair have been spotted sharing their passion for fashion.
Owen Gleiberman Chief Film Critic For 25 years, I have never been much of a Guy Ritchie fan. I found the in-your-face-and-over-the-top crime dramas that made his reputation — “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,” “Snatch,” “Revolver,” and “RocknRolla” — to be empty-flashy exercises in the too-muchness of genre kinetics, overly infatuated with their post-Tarantino cutthroat cool. It was clear that Ritchie had talent, but the way just about every shot in his movies was designed to remind you of that turned the films into layer cakes that were more frosting than cake. After a while, he dropped the badass glitz and settled into a more conventional career, and some of those movies were okay. I confess that I enjoyed his remake of “Swept Away” (yes, the one with Madonna), and he had fun applying what was left of his high-froth ADD style to the Robert Downey Jr. “Sherlock Holmes” franchise. Yet I could never escape the feeling that Guy Ritchie had trapped himself on a hamster wheel of trying too hard. I’ve liked a few of his films. But I’ve never loved one.
Tom Sizemore‘s family is sharing an update on his health just days after the actor suffered a brain aneurysm. In a statement shared with ET, Sizemore’s manager, Charles Lago, said the actor’s family is deciding on “end of life matters” after doctors informed them that “there is no further hope” for the 61-year-old film star.
Tom Sizemore‘s manager has provided a devastating update following the actor’s tragic stroke last week.
Tom Sizemore’s manager Charles Lago has released new information about the prognosis for the actor who has been hospitalized in critical condition in intensive care since February 18, in a coma.
Hugh Jackman revealed that playing the mutant Logan/Wolverine in the "X-Men" movies and Marvel Cinematic Universe took a toll on his singing voice. The 54-year-old actor, who recently finished his year-long run starring in the Broadway musical "The Music Man," admitted that some of the acting that was required of his iconic role damaged his voice.
Hugh Jackman admitted that he's done some things in that would make his voice teacher in drama school feel dismayed. Horrified, actually. In an interview with BBC's, the 54-year-old actor revealed that he damaged his voice screaming and yelling while playing the iconic Marvel character in nine films across more than two decades.
Hugh Jackman has revealed that the growling and yelling he did while playing Wolverine has permanently damaged his voice.Jackman played the superhero for nearly two decades at the start of the 21st century, making him a one-time Guinness World Record holder for longest career as a live-action Marvel character.Speaking to the BBC’s Front Row, Jackman detailed how the demands of the role had permanently affected his voice.“My falsetto is not as strong as it used to be and that I directly put down to some of the growling and yelling,” he said. “My voice teacher in drama school would’ve been horrified by some of the things I did [in Wolverine].”Jackman added: “We learned the technique [in school] of how to shout and how to yell without ruining your voice.
BBC Radio 4’s “Front Row.” “My falsetto is not as strong as it used to be and that I directly put down to some of the growling and yelling.”“My voice teacher in drama school would’ve been horrified by some of the things I did [in “Wolverine”],” he added.Jackman’s character is known for roaring when he’s letting out his iron claws.“We learned a technique [in school] of how to shout and how to yell without ruining your voice,” he explained. “However, during Wolverine, I did some screaming and yelling and things that I think did damage to my voice.”“I’m working on it.
Hugh Jackman is opening up about just how much of an impact that Wolverine has had on him in his life.
Wolverine needs some Listerine.
Zack Sharf Hugh Jackman has spent over two decades, six movies and two uncredited cameos playing Wolverine in the “X-Men” film franchise, and all that superhero growling and yelling has taken a toll on the actor’s voice. Jackman revealed on the BBC’s “Front Row” show that playing Wolverine has resulted in permanent damage to his vocal cords. “I’ve done some damage to my voice with Wolverine. My falsetto is not as strong as it used to be and that I directly put down to some of the growling and yelling,” Jackman said. “My vocal teacher in drama school would’ve been horrified with some of the things I did [as Wolverine].” Jackman continued, “We learned a technique [in school] of how to shout and how to yell without ruining your voice. However, during Wolverine, I did some screaming and yelling and things that I think did damage to my voice. I’m working on it. I work with a singing teacher and I try not to hurt myself. I put a lot of effort into both physical movement and my vocal preparation for every role.”