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    Topless ex-rugby ace Danny Cipriani pictured smoking spliff in street months after boasting ‘I’m free from substances’

    EX-RUGBY star Danny Cipriani smokes a strong morning spliff — months after proudly claiming: “I’m free from substances and never been happier.”The 36-year-old was snapped topless and openly puffing away early in the morning in a street in North Hollywood, California.Danny Cipriani pictured smoking a spliff in the street months after claiming he was free from substancesCredit: SplashThe ex-rugby ace takes a puff of the cannabis spliffCredit: SplashThe 36-year-old was snapped topless and openly puffing away early in the morning in a street in North Hollywood, CaliforniaCredit: SplashThe retired England fly-half – in the US with new actress lover AnnaLynne McCord – was also seen later smoking with a shirt on.It comes after he is reported to have landed a big-money deal to take part in Netflix’s reality show Bear Hunt, hosted by Holly Willoughby and Bear Grylls.Cipriani, who has spoken openly of his previous drug and alcohol abuse, is thought to have bought the pre-rolled joint from a shop called Project Cannabis, near where he is staying.It came in a $5 tube labelled Green Crack, a high-potency marijuana strain known for its “energising effects”.Read More on ShowbizWhile smoking cannabis is illegal in the UK, recreational use is legal in California and 24 other US states.Two weeks ago, Cipriani went public on his romance with AnnaLynne, 36, who played scheming Eden Lord on the US medical TV drama Nip/Tuck.She also appeared in the reboot of hit drama 90210.It came after The Sun revealed the pair had grown close and were enjoying a “spiritual holiday” in Egypt.Most read in CelebrityCipriani’s estranged wife Victoria Rose hit back, saying: “Nice to see my husband has moved on but his belongings and clothes in our house, in our drawers, still haven’t moved on.”Just eight months ago, Cipriani told The Sun on Sunday he was “free” from substances.A look at Danny Cipriani’s ‘new tantric sex girl squeeze’He admitted he overdid opioid painkiller tramadol, had dabbled with cocaine and even smoked crystalised toad venom.Cipriani insisted he could control his use, which helped him deal with trauma and pain from sporting injuries.However he revealed he ended up in the Priory in 2020 after consuming too many magic mushrooms. He told how he threw himself down stone steps during a “psychotic episode”, convinced wife Victoria was trying to kill him.Cipriani — who was seen smoking the spliff on April 25 — was approached for comment.Cipriani is thought to have bought a pre-rolled joint from a shop called Project Cannabis, near where he is stayingCredit: SplashCipriani with Hollywood actress AnnaLynne McCordCredit: Splash More

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    Whoopi Goldberg reveals cocaine incident in hotel after becoming a ‘high functioning addict’ in Hollywood

    WHOOPI Goldberg has admitted cocaine was “kicking my a**” as she hit rock bottom in the 1980s when recreational drug use in Hollywood was at a high. The Oscar-nominated star, who has been open about her past, recalls an awkward incident at a hotel in her new memoir, Bits and Pieces: My Mother, My Brother, and Me. Whoopi Goldberg admitted in her new book ‘Bits and Pieces’ that she hit rock bottom in the 1980sCredit: Instagram/whoopigoldbergThe star, pictured with ex-husband David Claessen, said she became a heroin addictCredit: GettyWhoopi cleaned up in the ’70s after becoming a heroin addict and her first husband was her drug counselor, Alvin Martin, the father of her daughter, Alex.But after moving from New York to California to further her acting career, she started taking cocaine when she began attending Hollywood parties. Whoopi believed she could handle the drug because it didn’t seem as dangerous as heroin and Hollywood had a relaxed attitude towards it. She said a bowl of Quaaludes would greet her at the door of parties and lines of cocaine would be laid out for guests at soirees in the likes of Hollywood, Bel Air, and Beverly Hills. Whoopi classed herself as a “very high-functioning addict” who would still show up on set and do her job for about a year until she realized she was getting “sloppy” at work. The View co-host recalled a “slap-in-the-face” moment while staying at a luxury hotel in Manhattan for her birthday when somebody had given her an ounce of cocaine. The cocaine had me in its clutches.Whoopi GoldbergWhoopi was sitting on the closet floor sniffing the drug by herself and didn’t hear the maid knock or let herself in before she opened the closet door. “I screamed,” the star wrote. “She screamed and backed up and looked like she was going to run. Most read in Celebrity”I had to get to her quickly and try to calm her down. She was staring at my face as I talked.”Whoopi said the woman eventually understood it was her room and left, but when she turned to look in the mirror she realized she had cocaine “all over my face.”Whoopi Goldberg completely transforms for new Western movie in Outlaw Posse promo as she promotes gig away from The View”I’d have been so embarrassed if my mother knew the extent the coke had me in its clutches,” she admitted. She said she was “p****d off” with how bad the problem had got at that point and felt she was letting her daughter down, admitting she’d been sitting in the closet for two days.Whoopi said she had let her cocaine addiction run her life and it had taken over. She said she didn’t want to die and felt like the “luckiest woman in the world” because she was able to give up using drugs quickly, while other people find themselves in the throws of addiction for years. The actress said she changed her friend circle and began turning down party invites. She put on 20lbs in recovery, but claims in the book it was a small price to pay to get back on the straight and narrow. HIGH & HALLUCINATINGWhoopi, 68, also writes in the raw memoir about an incident where she began hallucinating after taking drugs and didn’t get out of bed for days.She previously spoke about the disturbing moment on The View, and how she didn’t even leave to go to the bathroom. “I ended up sitting on a bed for three or four days scared there was something under the bed,” she said on the show back in 2011. “I wet the bed, I pooped the bed… I was so scared. I hit bottom. I did that a long time ago.”In 2009, Whoopi also opened up about how she dropped out of high school and worked as a phone sex operator to get by while getting hooked on heroin. “I was a child of the Sixties so I ingested as many mind-altering substances as I could,” she said, per The Telegraph. READ MORE SUN STORIES”It was a rite of passage. And when I got clean I was convinced I wanted to be an actor.”Whoopi’s autobiography will be released on May 7, 2024.Whoopi classed herself as a ‘very high-functioning addict’ who would still show up on set and do her job for about a year until she realized she was getting sloppy’ at workCredit: PA:Press AssociationThe actress said she changed her friend circle and began turning down party invitesCredit: GettyWhoopi pictured on The View alongside co-star Joy BeharCredit: Getty More

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    Bitter love split, spats with sons & burning through her £50m fortune – how Britney Spears’ life has gone into free fall

    IT was a court case that raged on for years, as #FreeBritney campaigners fought for pop superstar Britney Spears to be released from a legal arrangement that gave her little power over her own life.But two and a half years after she was freed from her 13-year conservatorship, which had given her father Jamie control over her personal life and finances, there are major questions over whether throwing her back into the deep end of life without any help was the right thing to do.Britney Spears pictured in 2018Credit: GettyFans wave #FreeBritney placards but sources say the singer has no one looking out her nowCredit: AlamySince November 2021, the Toxic singer has been hit by disaster after disaster and things have gone from bad to worse.Britney, 42, married third husband, actor Sam Asghari, 30, in June 2022, after they began dating in 2016. But they split 13 months later amid allegations she attacked him as he slept and left him with a black eye and bite marks.Then her sons Preston, 18, and Jayden, 17, moved to Hawaii with their dad Kevin Federline, 46, and publicly begged their mum to stop stripping off and dancing in videos posted on Instagram.Read More on ShowbizThe pop favourite, who has sold more than 150million records, is now living an increasingly “dysfunctional and isolated” life according to sources in the US.And there are concerns she is burning through her £50million fortune, splashing her cash on eye-wateringly expensive luxury holidays.Yesterday, US gossip website TMZ claimed she has been spending millions of dollars on regular trips to French Polynesia every couple of months, blowing the money on private jets, luxury hotels and staff.Then there have also been monthly trips to Hawaii, costing £280k a pop, where she stays in the presidential suite at the Four Seasons.Most read in CelebrityA source said: “There is no one looking after Britney. “Her life is in freefall. Britney Spears dances in teeny black bikini inside LA mansion as she gushes she was ‘feeling herself’“She has no focus and no one is telling her that she is at risk of flittering away all of the earnings she worked so hard for. “She is living like there’s no tomorrow.”There were allegations of financial mismanagement during her conservatorship.She was forced to perform several lucrative tours and Las Vegas residencies, released four albums, appeared as a judge on the X Factor USA and launched a string of products but despite her heavy workload, the numbers did not add up to the huge sum she should have earned, while her father was paid £12,000 per month.But the source continued: “Her finances were so tightly watched when she was in the conservatorship.“There were times when she had to ask her backing dancers to pay for dinner and she was basically given meagre pocket money from her own accounts.“Now it’s like she’s gone from one extreme to the other. “It’s worrying to think what could happen in just a few short years if she blows through her fortune.”Although the conservatorship was legally terminated in 2021, only last week did the legal wrangle over the intricacies finally come to an end. It was decided she would have to pay £3.2million in fees to her lawyer Mathew Rosengart and a further £1.6 million for her father’s legal costs.But an emotional Britney hit out at her dad Jamie, 71, and mum Lynne, 68, who she has also had a rocky relationship with, claiming they ought to face “justice”.In a post on her Instagram page on Sunday night, before she deactivated her account yesterday, she wrote: “There has been no justice and probably never will be!There is no one looking after Britney, her life is in freefall. No one is telling her that she is at risk of flittering away the earnings she worked so hard for’Inside source“The way I was brought up I was always taught the formative of right and wrong but the very two people who brought me up with that method hurt me!“I am so lucky to be here! “It’s funny ’cus till this very day I haven’t told them face to face!“I text through IG but I honestly believe it will not be so safe if I ever did go face to face!”Her lawyer Mathew seems to be one of the only people acting in her best interests, after deciding it would be better to end the legal battle with Jamie.The Sun’s insider said: “Britney told Mathew that she wanted justice and her day in court with her dad.“She urged him to push the case that Jamie effectively stole money from her, while running the estate as her conservator but he has strongly denied any wrongdoing.“Jamie’s lawyers have had the right to make Britney sit in front of them for depositions about many of these matters — and it would cost many more millions. “If that had happened, she would have been filmed answering hours of questions about the darkest times in her life including drug problems, mental health woes and personal dramas.The star wed husband number three Sam Asghari in June 2022 but they broke up 13 months laterCredit: Instagram/Sam AsghariSinger Britney won back control of her finances and personal life from dad JamieCredit: AFP“Mathew’s focus has been protecting his client.”However, the source, based in Las Vegas and who has worked with Britney for many years, stated: “Jamie has pretty much had all his expenditures examined by the LA Superior Court and signed off by a judge. “The overarching observation is that Jamie saved Britney’s finances from ruin.“She was at one point down to £2.5million and he helped her to rise up to more than £50million.”While Britney has struggled since the conservatorship was terminated, many are convinced it was how she was treated during the arrangement which did irreparable damage.During interviews in the UK in 2016 during a press tour for her ninth album Glory, she appeared present and witty. A few years later it was a different story.In early 2019, she pulled out of a Las Vegas residency and announced an indefinite hiatus from music.Sons Preston and Jayden have begged Britney to stop posting revealing picsCredit: Refer to CaptionOne of Britney’s erratic and worrying social media postsCredit: Instagram/britneyspearsIt is believed to have been axed after she refused to take medication and she was carted off to a live-in rehabilitation centre, leading fans to question where she was, having not been pictured for months.At that point, she was forcibly given lithium to treat her bipolar disorder, as well as a cocktail of other prescription medications.Speaking in court in 2021, she said: “Lithium is a very, very strong and completely different medication compared to what I was used to.“You can go mentally impaired if you take too much, if you stay on it longer than five months. But he put me on that, and I felt drunk.”In summer 2021, Jamie’s lawyers made it clear that much of her private health information had been kept a secret from the public as he tried to protect her.Documents filed in court said: “There is no doubt that the Conservatorship saved Ms Spears from disaster, supported her when she needed it the most, protected her and her reputation from harm, and facilitated the restoration of her career.”But now she is out on her own, she appears far more erratic and vulnerable, with distrust for the system which was supposed to look after her.I was always taught the formative of right and wrong but the very two people who brought me up with that method hurt me! I am so lucky to be here!’ Britney on Sunday on InstagramIt has also been more than two years since she has seen her sons, who did not attend her wedding to Sam. Speaking in 2022, Jayden said of his relationship with his mum: “I 100 per cent think it can be fixed, of course. “It’s just going to take a lot of time and effort. “I really want to see her again.”But about her social media, he added: “It’s almost like she has to post something on Instagram to get attention.“There’s a high chance that this is never going to really stop, but I’m hoping for me, maybe she will.”There is once again a discussion over whether Britney could ever return to music. Aside from one-off collaborations with Sir Elton John and Will.i.am, she has not released her own music in eight years.Last year, her management started assembling a team to write for a new Britney album. But after she got wind of the plan, she hit out online and said she had no ambition to ever return to pop.Now there are fears she might have to do it because she needs the cash. But the music industry is not an easy place to navigate and is quick to build people up and spit them right back out again.READ MORE SUN STORIESWhat Britney needs right now is some proper TLC. Her father clearly isn’t the one to give it to her, but someone needs to step in. More

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    I was a ‘Bond Girl’ with £1k glamour model gigs – but secretly I was battling crippling £250-a-day heroin addiction

    TO the outside world Vicki Rebecca lived a glamorous £1,000-a-day life and had even appeared in a James Bond film.But away from the cameras, the Abderdeen-born glamour model battled a crippling, decade-long heroin addiction that nearly cost her life. Glamour model Vicki Rebecca would land gigs as a Marilyn Monroe lookalike that paid up to £1,000 per dayCredit: FacebookAt the same time, she was using heroin and over the years her addiction grew increasingly worseCredit: SuppliedNow 67, Vicki shares her inspiring recovery story in her memoir Naked TruthCredit: FacebookBetween high-paying jobs throughout her twenties, Vicki would lock herself away in her flat to scoff McDonald’s burgers and watch films while shooting up multiple times a day.The addiction also left her needing to sneak away to the toilets while on photoshoots and movie sets to take drugs – including while appearing as a nude model for the opening sequence of the 1979 Bond film Moonraker, which starred the late Sir Roger Moore. Vicki’s turning point came after a spiritual experience at 29, which led to her leaving London to get clean and eventually retraining as a psychotherapist. Now In her brave memoir, Naked Truth: Diary of a Glamour Model, the 67-year-old recounts her journey from seedy photobooths in Soho to high-paying gigs before quitting fame to overcome her addiction.READ MORE ON SHOWBIZShe tells The Sun: “I was a ‘functional’ heroin addict, I was managing my life until the habit got worse and worse and all I wanted to do was sit in my joggers and eat McDonald’s. “I would wake up in the morning looking awful with bags under my eyes and track marks, and not a great complexion, then on went the make-up so I could go to a shoot. “I was living two different lives: Marilyn Monroe and a junkie, my life was crazy and a paradox.“I’d appeared in a James Bond film and was impersonating Marilyn Monroe, the most beautiful and gorgeous Hollywood star the world had ever seen.Most read in Celebrity“But at the same time I was an addict and during shoots, I would be racing to toilets to jack up.”Vick was introduced to heroin by a friend one year before filming Moonraker – and recalls being one of two naked models, whose silhouettes featured in the film. Sick racist fans threaten to boycott next James Bond movie if Aaron Taylor Johnson becomes 007Then 22, she was required to jump around on a trampoline to create the acrobatic poses needed by the film’s director.She recalls: “I was jumping up and down on a trampoline so that it looked like I was tumbling through the air. “I was completely naked apart from a g-string with a bit of make-up. There was minimal staff on set so it wasn’t like the crew was standing around gawping.  “In another scene, which wasn’t used in the film, I had to jump off 18ft scaffolding into the arms of the actor who played Jaws, Richard Kiel. “He was a giant of a man with hands that were literally the size of a bunch of bananas and he had to catch me. I tried that shot a few times, too many for my liking.”Vicki’s silhouette was used for the opening sequence of the James Bond film MoonrakerCredit: MGMThe late Sir Roger Moore starred as 007 in the 1979 hitCredit: RexWatch our exclusive chat with Vicki Rebecca at the top of the articleVicki shot one scene with Richard Kiel, who played Jaws (right), but it didn’t make it into the final filmCredit: Kobal Collection – ShutterstockVicki believes she would have used drugs during the 10-day shoot at Pinewood Studios for Bond, which paid around £1,800, and between takes recalls “a lot of waiting around, drinking tea and eating bacon rolls”. She adds: “I felt really proud to appear in the James Bond film, even if my part was a blink and you’ll miss it kind of moment. It really impresses people even now.” Vicki’s other big moments included appearing on The Sun’s Page 3 and in the 1979 film The B***, which starred Joan Collins. She also had numerous high-paid jobs as a Marilyn Monroe lookalike – after being convinced to go for a test shoot when a photographer noticed her similarities to the Hollywood icon.GETTING HELP:
    If you think that you have a drug addiction then please contact your GP.
    You can also visit FRANK for honest information about drugs and to find local treatment services.
    If you are having trouble finding the right help, call the FRANK drugs helpline on 03001236600
    Or click here to visit the NHS website for more advice and support

    It would help her to land jobs that paid up to £1,000 per day and fly overseas to open nightclubs – as well as to feature in a sketch in The Two Ronnies TV show.She says: “It was incredible really. I recreated a lot of the Marilyn shots you might imagine, like the one where her skirt pops up while standing above a Subway grate. “We did that for Philips Lady Shaver and another similar one for Kodak. Then I was lying on a bed for a furniture company and did about everything else you could imagine.“I ended up jetting off all over the world and sometimes was met off the planes with bunches of flowers. I opened supermarkets and nightclubs including one in Reykjavik, Iceland. It was really crazy.” But the jobs weren’t always so elegant – when Vicki moved to London in her late teens, she stumbled across an advert for ‘Glamour models’ but the job turned out to be “pretty sleazy”.Vicki was a glamour model and even appeared on The Sun’s Page 3Credit: SuppliedShe gained lucrative modelling gigs including ones that allowed her to travel to Germany and IcelandCredit: FacebookShe recalls: “I remember thinking, ‘Oh, I’ll be posing in lingerie adverts or underwear cataologues’.”But it ended up being this pretty sleazy ‘come up and photograph us’ booth.”As a junkie, there were just two types of day – the ones when I had heroin and would be lying in bed shooting up and the ones when I didn’t and was hunting for moreYears later, while portraying Marilyn, her heroin addiction was worsening with her spending up to £250 a day on the drug as it took over her life.She says: “People became aware of my addiction, I used to be late to shoots and would disappear to the toilets for far too long. “In one shoot, I remember lying on a big heart-shaped bed for a calendar and the first assistant yelled ‘cut’. He could see my track marks from using and I was sent to make-up.“No one would say anything to me, they wanted me to finish the shoot because a lot of money had been invested in that day or half a day of work.” Vicki’s highest paying work was as a Marilyn Monroe lookalikeCredit: FacebookShe posed as the Hollywood icon while hiding her addiction to heroinCredit: SuppliedIn her personal life, Vicki became increasingly reclusive and she details the struggles of her addiction.“As a junkie, there were just two types of day,” she says. “The ones when I had heroin and would be lying in bed shooting up and the ones when I didn’t and was hunting for more.“I’m definitely not blaming my modeling career for my addiction, it was a path. I was a bit of a rebel in the Seventies and I experimented with drugs.”During this time, Vicki says her family were “suspicious” but she “lied to them, like all addicts do” and was able to “put on a good show” while visiting them in Scotland. I don’t look back at my life and feel sad. There was a lot of love and laughter, but there was also darkness, sexual violence, addiction and other disturbing thingsVickiShe attempted to wean herself off the drug multiple times using Methadone and had attempted going cold turkey but it “was absolutely insufferable”.During one fateful moment in 1985, she recalls walking around a building site while battling suicidal thoughts when she heard a voice in her head say: “You can be reborn.”She recalled: “It felt like an external voice, it was so strong and felt like a body, mind and soul feeling. It was extraordinary and wouldn’t be the first time I would hear it. “I didn’t stop using in that minute but it helped to lead me to a point where I could stop using. It was almost like a lifeline. It saved my life.”In 1987, Vicki left London and returned to Aberdeen to get clean after asking for help from her family. She says: “I got to a place where I felt I had no more choice but to move back home, I knew I couldn’t do it in London because it was too easy to access drugs and it was high quality. Vicki used Methadone for the last time in 1990Credit: FacebookShe now works as a psychotherapist helping othersCredit: Facebook“I knew going back to Aberdeen I’d have a better chance of making it.” Vicki discovered meditation and alternative therapies that helped her to battle the addiction and within three years, she used methadone for the last time. She initially studied to be a lawyer and later became a psychotherapist, specialising in neurolinguistic programming (NLP) and hypnotherapy. Now 33 years in recovery and 25 years as a therapist, she uses her lived experience and training to help others. Vicki hopes her brutally honest book Naked Truth – which became an international bestseller on Amazon on the day it launched – will help others and insists: “If I can do it, anyone can.”She says: “I don’t look back at my life and feel sad. There was a lot of love and laughter, but there was also darkness, sexual violence, addiction and other disturbing things. “Writing the book was a real eye-opener, it made me realised I have really lived a life between all of that and I’ve changed so much over the years.READ MORE SUN STORIES“I don’t pull any punches and that’s the kind of honest society needs. It’s authentic and raw, that’s what I think is inspirational.”Find out more about Vicki Rebecca’s work and her book here. Timeline of James Bond actorsOver the years there have been seven actors who have played 007.
    The first ever James Bond film was in 1962, and this is who has played the lead role over the years:

    Sean Connery – The late star was the first ever actor to play Bond, and reprised the role for seven movies.
    George Lazenby – The star only played Bond once, but was the youngest actor to ever play the spy.
    Roger Moore – The late movie star spent 12 years making seven films in the famous franchise.
    Timothy Dalton – The smooth actor took over from Roger Moore and appeared in The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill.
    Pierce Brosnan – The handsome star played Bond for four movies from 1995 to 2002.
    Daniel Craig – The British star was the first blonde James Bond and the sixth actor to win the role in 2005. More

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    How legendary hardman Vinnie Jones found love again five years after losing wife Tanya and beating cancer himself

    FIVE years ago Crazy Gang footballer-turned-actor Vinnie Jones lost the love of his life and his career was waning.But now, at 59, the hardman has found happiness again with a new partner — and is adored by a new generation of fans after starring in hit Netflix gangster series The Gentlemen.At 59, former football hardman has found happiness again with a new partner Emma FordCredit: Discovery +The Sun revealed that Vinnie has finally found love again with his personal assistant, and former model, Emma, 47Vinnie with Tanya, his beloved wife of 25 years, who died of cancer in July 2019, aged 53Credit: GettyHe has given booze the boot and is set for West End stardom after being offered a big-money deal to be in Only Fools And Horses The Musical.Such a change in fortunes would have felt unlikely for Vinnie after Tanya, his beloved wife of 25 years, died of cancer in July 2019, aged 53.The couple were both diagnosed with melanoma — skin cancer — in 2013, and Tanya’s diagnosis followed a string of other health problems including cervical cancer and an emergency heart transplant at 21.Vinnie’s treatment was successful but Tanya’s cancer spread to her brain. After she died at their home in Los Angeles he said: “They said to us maybe days, maybe weeks, maybe months. I was on my knees howling.”READ MORE ON VINNIE JONESHe vowed he would never marry again, adding: “It was the perfect one and done for me.”But yesterday The Sun revealed that Vinnie has finally found love again with his personal assistant, Emma Ford, 47.Though a wedding seems unlikely, given his previous comments, pals say Emma has “brought the light back into Vinnie’s eyes” after years of heartache.True gentlemanThe former Wimbledon, Chelsea and Leeds midfielder fell for her while filming his 2023 TV show for the Discovery+ channel, Vinnie Jones In The Country.Most read in ShowbizBut out of respect for Tanya — who he had dated when they were teens before they later reunited and wed in 1994 — Vinnie has chosen not to speak about his romance with Emma.They care about each other deeply and things are looking up for both of them.Friend of Vinnie and EmmaOne source said: “Tanya is the love of Vinnie’s life and he’s a true gentleman, so he didn’t want to reveal his new relationship purely out of respect for her.Football legend lands surprise big-money role in Only Fools and Horse musical“But he is happy with the way things are progressing with Emma and is excited for what their future holds.“They care about each other deeply and things are looking up for both of them.”Emma, from Taunton, Somerset — who Vinnie affectionately calls “Blondie” — worked for lads’ TV channel Men & Motors, where Vinnie also hosted his own show in the 1990s.She posed for racy snaps in her undies to promote her show, Emma’s A-Z Of American Sex, and was also a team captain on gameshow A Question Of Sex in 2003.She once appeared in a magazine ad for fashion firm Urban Stone, with her photos taken by erotic snapper Bob Carlos Clarke, who is said to have regarded her as his “muse”.Like Vinnie, actress Emma later moved to Los Angeles for work, and after many years of partying hard in the US, she quit booze.In Vinnie’s Discovery+ show, which first aired in November, she is seen helping him run his farm in Petworth, West Sussex.Insiders told The Sun their relationship was “very organic” and blossomed from a working friendship into a romance — and pals were “thrilled” when they revealed they had become a couple.Vinnie’s love life development has intertwined with a resurgence in his acting career.He has reunited with director Guy Ritchie — who gave Vinnie his film debut in gangster movie Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels 26 years ago — on The Gentlemen.Vinnie won the Empire Award for Best Newcomer for his role as Big Chris — and he starred for Guy again two years later as bounty hunter Bullet-Tooth Tony in Snatch.Emma in TV show Vinnie Jones In The CountryCredit: © 2022 Warner Bros. Discovery,Emma was also a TV presenter before becoming Vinnie’s personal assistantA pal said former model ‘Emma has brought the light back into Vinnie’s eyes and she clearly makes him very happy’This time, Guy has cast him as Geoff Seacombe, the loyal groundskeeper to an aristocratic crime family in Netflix mega-hit The Gentlemen.The eight-parter, featuring Theo James as the Duke of Halstead, dropped on March 7 and blew its competition out the water — with 12.2million views in its first week.The show — a spin-off of Guy’s 2019 film of the same name — has been viewed 44million times in the UK alone.The director said of casting Vinnie again: “There’s been a hole in my soul in the shape of Vinnie Jones for the last 20 years. I was so happy to have him back.”And he has been rewarded for giving Vinnie another shot — with the actor gaining plaudits for his role.Queen Camilla’s son Tom Parker Bowles said: “The Gentlemen is the first thing I’ve binged for ages. Pure joy. But Vinnie Jones . . .  god he’s good.”Vinnie said: “Guy and myself have come a long, long way since the Lock, Stock and Snatch days.“I think he was warmed that I was on the set and I was warmed that we were reunited.“I’d reunited with Matthew Vaughn a few years ago on Kingsman, so it was just wonderful.“It’s like your brother’s directing it and you’re in a movie. That’s kind of how it is. That’s really the best way to describe it.”Grabbing Gaza’s privatesVinnie’s acting career has frequently seen him play a tough guy — mirroring his image from his footie playing days, when he formed part of Wimbledon’s “Crazy Gang” side who caused a huge upset to beat Liverpool and win the 1988 FA Cup.A famous press photograph from 1987 that perhaps best captures his reputation is that of him acquainting himself with a young Paul Gascoigne in a not-so-gentlemanly way — by grabbing his privates as they clashed on the pitch.Vinnie retired from football in 1999 while playing for Queens Park Rangers, with 13 red cards to his name.He has also previously been caught up in trouble off the field — which he blames on his addiction to alcohol.In 1995 he bit a journalist’s nose in a Dublin bar in what he claimed was a “prank gone wrong”.In 1998 he was convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm and criminal damage after drunkenly beating up his neighbour.I grew up in an era when mental health wasn’t even a thing, yet it’s something I struggled with without realising. Now I want to empower men and women to talk about itVinnie JonesFive years later, he got community service for attacking a passenger on a plane while drunk and claiming he could have the flight’s crew “murdered for £3,000”.Watford-born Vinnie — who turns 60 next January — has said he was “19 or 20” before he had his first drink, but he quickly became hooked on it.He said of the toll of booze addiction: “It’s all rot. You’re rotting from the inside out. I didn’t talk about it to anybody.”This week, though, he is celebrating 11 years of sobriety by playing golf in the sunshine of Palm Springs, Florida.And Vinnie is fronting a mental health campaign to encourage football fans to talk more.In a video for the campaign with his former club Chelsea and the Samaritans, Vinnie says in a team talk: “Huddle up, everyone. Enough is enough — it’s time to chat.“I grew up in an era when mental health wasn’t even a thing, yet it’s something I struggled with without realising. Now I want to empower men and women to talk about it.“To those of us that love football, we need to use those connections we have made to talk about more than just football. If I can do it, then you can too.”Vinnie’s latest character Geoff — though sometimes seen handling a shotgun — is calm, quiet, caring and polite, never forgetting to address his boss with “your grace”.It is a far cry from the stereotypical Vinnie role, but one that appears to reflect his character in real life.And it may be one that proves to be the launch pad for a new chapter of success in his screen career.He is in advanced talks to play gangster Danny Driscoll in the Only Fools musical and has called in some of his old footie pals for cameos — including ex-Chelsea ace Dennis Wise.And the calls for a second series of The Gentlemen are already growing louder.A source said: “Vinnie is more in-demand than he has ever been, thanks to the show’s success.READ MORE SUN STORIES“He would no doubt be brilliant in the musical too — even though no one has heard his singing voice!”After five painful years, this ex-footballer and now genteel gangster groundskeeper is headed for greener pastures once more.The former footie hardman has reinvented himself as a sought-after actor, appearing in films such as Lock, Stock And Two Smoking BarrelsCredit: AlamyA tearful Vinnie talks about Tanya’s death on Good Morning Britain in 2019Credit: refer to caption.Vinnie in Netflix hit The GentlemenThe star playing for the Wimbledon crazy gang in 1988Credit: Allsport More

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    ‘After all the turbulence, we needed our own Xanadu… we found it in Margate,’ says The Libertines’ Carl Barat

    ON a cool early spring Tuesday afternoon, all is quiet on the Eastern Esplanade, Margate.Just past Superior Slots and Bugsy’s Tenpin Bowling, I arrive at an imposing terrace of five-storey townhouses in varying states of repair.I’m meeting Barât, front right, to mark the band’s fourth studio album (and first in nine years), the wildly entertaining, fittingly titled All Quiet On The Eastern EsplanadeCredit: Ed CookeForget the sleazy Camden dives of The Libertines’ turbulent past, The Albion Rooms has become their new spiritual homeCredit: Ed CookeDuring their wild days, Barât suspected that The Libertines’ insane live shows were populated by ‘people who just wanted to come and see a car crash’Credit: GettyMost retain their original red-brick outlook, but my destination, No31, is painted top-to-bottom in black with dull gold metalwork.One of the establishment’s owners, Carl Barât of The Libertines, likens it to a “decaying tooth in the Victorian facade”.Above the ground-floor bay window is a red neon sign, styled in scribbled handwriting, that reads “The Albion Rooms”.After I push open the heavy front door and venture inside this glorious study in mock-Gothic decadence, I’m introduced to the genial Barât, who is a picture of health.READ MORE ON THE LIBERTINESYes, he who formed rock ’n’ roll rabble rousers The Libertines with a certain Pete Doherty more than a quarter of a century ago.I’m meeting Barât to mark the band’s fourth studio album (and first in nine years), the wildly entertaining, fittingly titled All Quiet On The Eastern Esplanade.He tells me that the band bought the building in 2017 and spent the next four years turning it into a guest house complete with indoor and outdoor bars and a state-of-the-art studio.‘We had to buy bricks and mortar’“If this place was in the West End of London, it would be four or five million, maybe more,” he says. “But it was on for £500,000 and we managed to haggle it down to £460,000, which was pretty good haggling.”Most read in MusicForget the sleazy Camden dives of The Libertines’ turbulent past, The Albion Rooms has become their new spiritual home.It’s also another sign that Margate, perched on the Kent coastline’s north-eastern tip, is morphing from faded seaside resort into cultural mecca — a process enhanced by the artist who grew up there, Tracey Emin.Pete Doherty breaks down while reliving moment he was ‘kicked out’ LibertinesExplaining their choice of location, Barât says: “I cast the net far and wide, everywhere from Thailand to Scotland, and it came down to property prices.“The whole point was that we wanted our own Xanadu or Shangri-La, but we’d already spent most of our money.“We knew we had good earning potential, that a record deal was coming up, so we needed to buy bricks and mortar — rather than letting it go in fees or tax and ending up with nothing.”Before we get stuck into the new album, The Libertines’ 45-year-old co-frontman gives me a guided tour of the premises.We visit the seven guest rooms designed by Rhiannon Sussex, including the first-floor suite Barât helped style in the familiar black and gold. It has a balcony, sea views and is named the “William Blake” after the poet, painter and figurehead of the Romantic Age.Next we have a peek into the room immediately above ­— the “Emily Dickinson”, in honour of the 19th Century American poet ­— which has Doherty’s influence all over it.The focus was to buy and build this place — and then anoint it with our blood, sweat and tears.Carl BaratMore black and gold, a vast vintage brass bed, bespoke wallpaper depicting a scantily clad pre-Raphaelite maiden and a love heart painting by Pete himself.Elsewhere, on the stairs, in the bars and washrooms, there’s plenty of Libertines memorabilia in the form of old gig posters, photos and artwork.In the downstairs loo, the white-tiled floor has the words “YOU PISSED IT ALL UP THE WALL” picked out in black capitals — a line from The Libertines’ first single, What A Waster.And, finally, Barât leads me through the well-appointed studio, today occupied by singer-songwriter Amy Studt, where he, Doherty, bassist John Hassall and drummer Gary Powell convened to record All Quiet On The Eastern Esplanade.“The focus was to buy and build this place — and then anoint it with our blood, sweat and tears,” says Barât.“We had to keep the energy flowing, beyond just emailing song ideas to each other.”’We suffered personal trauma’With Barât moving his family down to another place in Margate, Doherty living in France with his partner and baby daughter, Hassell in Denmark and only Powell remaining in London, The Libertines seem to be scattered to the four winds.With the birth of The Albion Rooms, however, they have a cast-iron HQ for the first time in their rollercoaster career.I suggest that it offers them the possibility of a future they can all enjoy.“I hope so,” muses Barât, before choosing his next words carefully.“Thinking back, it is very apparent that we suffered personal trauma in our early years — through the drugs, obviously, and the lifestyle that followed.”Somewhat ruefully, he continues: “People started believing we were only capable of creating art through perpetuating that lifestyle.“It was our ball and chain and it has also been the death knell of many a good artist because they carried on down that road.”During their wild days, Barât suspected that The Libertines’ insane live shows were populated by “people who just wanted to come and see a car crash”. “But, having clung on to one another for dear life through the turbulence, we’ve finally found some semblance of togetherness.”In 2024, he can report: “There’s so much genuine friendship and positivity between us that the car crash is not on the bill any more.”Talking to Barât, the word Albion, an ancient, romanticised alternative word for Britain, crops up a lot. It will forever link him to Doherty, who has also repeatedly embraced it.After signing with Rough Trade Records in 2001, they rented a flat together in Bethnal Green, which they dubbed The Albion Rooms.Barât once squatted in an disused factory on Albion Road, Stoke Newington, which was “run like a concentration camp by a guy called Denzil The Wizard, who tapped into street lighting for electricity”.Later, he lived “legitimately” on the same street in a house that he painted black.It’s only fitting, therefore, that The Libertines’ new seaside venture keeps the Albion flag flying in a building of the same dark hue.Looking out over a Victorian bandstand to the English Channel, Barât says: “It feels as if The Good Ship Albion, which is how we think of ourselves, may have docked forever.“Maybe we’ll discover it hasn’t, but we’re finding things calm at the moment.”Though the new album was recorded at their studio on the lower ground floor of The Albion Rooms, the seeds were sown on Barât and Doherty’s songwriting trip to Jamaica in September 2022.I ask what prompted their brainstorm. “When we’re alone together, our chemistry is unique,” replies Barât.“In this case, we thought, ‘S**t, we need a record, do we have it in us? Let’s find out’.”Their first day in Jamaica coincided with the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, a cathartic moment for the two bandmates.Barât says: “We were sitting at the top of a mountain in this glass building watching the funeral, being brought endless trays of jerk chicken.“We had a bit of Wray & Nephews [rum], some Red Stripes and it seemed as if our past came back to life.“We put a few demons and taboos to bed and, after all the bulls**t was out of the way, we realised we still had work to do and we still had a lot of love for each other.”Returning to England with four tracks in various stages of completion, the whole band got together in Margate with producer Dimitri Tikovoi and, four weeks later, the 11-track All Quiet On The Eastern Esplanade was in the can.We must have been 18 or 19 and those unfulfilled ideas are like birds that peck at your window in the night.Carl BaratThe cover shows The Albion Rooms and what Barât describes as “a motley crew of characters from the songs” including “the day-drinking mum with the Juicy Couture tracksuit” from Mustang.The frontmen share most of the writing duties, while bassist Hassell deserves a shoutout for his sublime, er, melody on Man With The Melody.The album kicks off in boisterous style with Run Run Run, a call to arms suggesting The Libertines fully intend to escape their chequered past.But it also includes a song by Doherty and Barât, the airy Shiver, which began life 25 years ago.“At our first writing sessions, we came up with the line, ‘The last dream of every dying soldier’,” says Barât.“We must have been 18 or 19 and those unfulfilled ideas are like birds that peck at your window in the night.”Without getting too political, the album reflects on our uncertain world with the riotous, ska-inflected Be Young voicing environmental concerns.“When you’re one degree from total and utter f***ing annihilation,” it cries.Lurid headlinesWith towns like Margate on the frontline of the small boats crisis, Merry Old England — “with her chalk cliffs, once white, greying in the sodium light” — poses the question: What sort of country are migrants actually arriving in?Barât says: “Peter and I both put our views into that song. We slightly differ in our opinions, but we didn’t go too far down any one road.”He adds that the shores of Kent have been “the doorstep for everybody back to Julius Caesar and The Vikings, creating wave upon wave of the mongrel race that is the English”.Elsewhere, this vividly realised album evokes British B-movie horror on Baron’s Claw, includes a shouty punk singalong, Oh S**t, and ends with teary ballad, Songs They Never Play On The Radio.Before our chat wraps up, I ask Barât for his hindsight on the three previous Libertines albums, starting with their debut, 2002’s Up The Bracket, regarded as a classic and the best thing since Britpop.He says: “That album represents bright lights, ambition, happy-go-lucky mentality — and disbelief at finding ourselves in that position at that time.“We felt we were standing in the pantheon of our idols. I bought a picture of James Dean in Camden Market and we added little pictures of John Lennon, Groucho Marx, Ian Brown and Morrissey.“We named it The Anxiety Of Influence. These were our heroes and we thought we could get a step closer to their world.”Next up is the self-titled second Libertines album, released in 2004 as the wheels fell off in a cloud of lurid headlines, mostly surrounding Doherty’s drug addiction and wayward behaviour.Despite huge public appetite for the band and critical acclaim for songs such as Can’t Stand Me Now and What Became Of The Likely Lads, the record summons bad memories for Barât.“It was all about fallout, heartbreak, chaos, exhaustion,” he says. “I find it hard to celebrate that awful time.“We aired our dirty laundry in public, which seemed to capture the imagination of those around us.”For his part, Barât feared he was “contributing to the size of the monster” and he admits: “All the ongoing shenanigans raised the profile till it became an inferno.”By the end of 2004, The Libertines split for more than five years, the co-frontmen plunging into other projects, but Barât knew he and Doherty had unfinished business.We don’t know what we’re worth ticket wise — it could be Madison Square Garden or a local bar.Carl Barat“I tried to tell myself that a reunion was never going to happen so I could move on,” he says. “I was looking for closure everywhere, but never finding it.”Back together for a headline slot at the 2010 Reading and Leeds Festivals, followed by rounds of touring, they finally delivered album No3, 2015’s Anthems For Doomed Youth.Recorded at a sweaty studio in Thailand with the odd praying mantis for company, the record was well received.Barât sees it as a crucial stepping stone to the happy place they find themselves in today. He says: “Even though we still had a lot of unresolved issues between us, we knew we intended to have a future.”Carl admits one remaining ambition is to crack America. ‘Trouble is, Pete’s been banned there for the past 20 years,’ he laughsCredit: Ed CookePete Docherty has moved on from his wild times and now lives in FranceCredit: GettyWith The Albion Rooms, Margate, providing them with a home and a cracking new album, we now know what became of the likely lads from The Libertines.One remaining ambition is to crack America. “Trouble is, Pete’s been banned there for the past 20 years,” laughs Barât.READ MORE SUN STORIES“We don’t know what we’re worth ticket wise — it could be Madison Square Garden or a local bar.“But we’re hoping, especially with Pete’s progress, to get there and find out.”THE LIBERTINESAll Quiet On The Eastern EsplanadeThe Libertines’ new album All Quiet On The Eastern Esplanade’ is released on 8 MarchCredit: Handout★★★★★ More

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    The Gentlemen’s Kaya Scodelario spent night on the street at 4 & was troubled teen before making £1.2m as Hollywood star

    SHE’S the star of Guy Ritchie’s Netflix series The Gentlemen and has a Hollywood hit list which includes Maze Runner and Pirates Of The Caribbean 5.But Kaya Scodelario – who first found fame in Skins at 14 – was forced to sleep on the streets when she was just four and has fought her way up from a poverty-stricken childhood to become a screen star, commanding up to £1.2million a movie.Kaya with co-star Theo James in the Netflix hitCredit: RexKaya says her mum struggled but was ‘my inspiration’She starred with Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean 5Credit: ©Walt Disney Studios / Supplied by LMKThe 31-year-old has also overcome a sexual assault at 12, troubled teen years which saw her leave home at 16 and, most recently, a split from husband Ben Walker, the father of her two children, after an eight year marriage.But the plucky star – who plays drug queen Susie Glass in the action-packed Netflix series – says acting was a lifelong dream and “the only thing I was ever good at.”She sees success as a way of paying back her mum, Brazilian-born Katia, for the sacrifices she made while raising her daughter alone,“I want to give a life back to her as she gave her whole life up for me,” she has said.READ MORE IN FEATURES“She had to play the role of mother and father at the same time, and she did it to perfection. I managed to find a way through because of her. My mother is my biggest inspiration.”Hard childhoodKatia split from Kaya’s dad, Roger Humphrey, when she was just one and, three years later,  she left East Sussex to move to London, taking her four-year-old daughter with her.Homeless, the pair were forced to sleep on the streets for their first night before being given a council flat in north London, where Katia struggled to make ends meet, working several jobs and battling depression.“Mum built a life for me in a difficult place, at a difficult time,” she said in 2017.Most read in Celebrity“When I was growing up, we didn’t have much money. What was important in my house was to have food on the table, be happy and have our family.”Kaya also struggled with dyslexia and describes herself as “painfully shy child, very insecure, very anxious”Vinnie Jones explains his upcoming role on Netflix drama The GentlemenShe told Hollywood Reporter:  “I was really bullied as a young child, and I changed schools a couple of times. But, I always had this dream that I wanted to act. It was the only thing I was ever brave enough to put my hand up and put myself forward for.“Growing up in England, being very working class and having an immigrant single mother, I didn’t think that people like me could do things like that. “I knew I’d never be able to afford to go to drama school or have any coaching. So, I kind of accepted that it wasn’t going to happen at the very mature age of 14, which is quite depressing.”The star had a tough upbringingCredit: InstagramKaya at the premiere of the The GentlemenCredit: RexKaya runs a drugs empire in the Netflix hitSexual assaultKaya was estranged from dad Roger until 2010, a year before his death, and left home at 16 after relations with her mum became strained, although they are now close.“She raised me alone and she suffered depression most of her life,” she has said. “It can be very dark, very difficult, especially as a teenager. It put a lot of pressure on our relationship.“I wanted to help but I was 16 and probably not saying the right thing.”My best friend’s boyfriend was stabbed in Stoke Newington a couple of months before I got offered the roleKaya ScodelarioAs well as her difficult homelife, Kaya was a victim of a sexual assault, when she was 12 – causing a rift with her Brazilian ‘family members’.In 2018, as the #MeToo movement began to gain momentum, she revealed the “horrific” assault in order to help other abused children to speak out earlier.“It’s taken me 13 years to say #MeToo,” she wrote on Twitter, adding her alleged attacker is “still protected by ‘family members’ in Brazil. They’ve told lies to papers to try to silence me.”She added that others who had spoke out gave her the courage to do the same and told Harper’s Bazaar: “I remember thinking that if I was 12 years old and I had this horrific thing happen to me but I saw a woman I admired speaking up about it, it would have made me feel less guilty. “It would have inspired me to think, ‘This won’t hold me back, this is something that has happened but I am not a victim.’”So I thought if I can do that for one person then I owe it to my 12-year-old self.”Age lieKaya’s life changed overnight when she landed the role of Effy in the gritty teen drama Skins, at the age of 14.She later revealed she almost lost out on the part after a lying about her age backfired – because they thought she was too old.After being told about the open auditions for the show, she dropped by on the way home from school to see who was lining up, but didn’t actually go in.She was approached by producer Bryan Elsley after he spotted her sitting across the road. “For some reason, he came over and asked me if I wanted to audition. I said, “Yes,” but I knew I was too young because I was told you had to be 16 and up,” she said. “So I lied and said that I was 16 and a half, and he let me audition. Then they called back and said that I was too old so I admitted that I lied about my age. “Luckily, they gave me the opportunity. I happened to be in the right place at the right time.”Kaya was cast at 14Credit: Channel 4Kaya (centre) played Effy and dated Jack O’Connell (centre left) who played CookCredit: HandoutShe starred alongside Billie Piper in True LoveCredit: BEffy became one of the longest running characters, from 2007 to 2012, and had hard hitting storylines – which included sex scenes and teen drinking – which Kaya said reflected the life she had known growing up on a council estate.She said: “My best friend’s boyfriend was stabbed in Stoke Newington a couple of months before I got offered the role.“I know kids who live like this.”She also experimented with drink and drugs growing up, although her mum was strict and insisted she was home by 8pm every night, because “she didn’t want me to get pregnant like all the people around me.”“My mum’s quite open-minded. She’s Brazilian and I think that helps. I always knew about sex, about drugs, about religion,” she adds.“I did go through a phase of smoking weed but I told her about it and she convinced me to stop. I never smoked it again.“She’s even made me promise never to do a nude scene. That’s my excuse, producers!”Kaya’s stint in Skins also led to a role in the BBC drama True Love, in 2012, where she played a schoolgirl seduced by a female teacher, played by Billie Piper, with whom she shared a kiss.Famous first loveStarring as lovers in the Skins led to an offscreen romance with Jack O’Connell, who she called her “first love.”“We were so young and at the same time both becoming famous,” she said.“I was completely in love with him. If he’d told me to jump off a bridge, I would have.”Jack – who has since starred in Unbroken and Ferrari – “broke my heart” and she says she “spent a whole week in my room crying” after their split in 2009.She went on to date Shameless star Elliot Tittensor for five years, and supported him when he was arrested after an incident in 2010. The actor drove at an 18-year-old who was following Kaya, knocking him down and causing brain damage and was later fined £750 for driving without insurance.The pair broke up in 2014 but, after the injured man launched  a civil suit for damages, she gave evidence on Elliot’s behalf via video link from Australia – where she was filming Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales. Kaya dated Shameless star Elliot for five yearsCredit: GettyKaya and ex-husband Ben met in 2014Credit: GC ImagesThe former couple have two children together, now aged seven and twoCredit: InstagramIt was also in Australia that Kaya met actor Benjamin Walker, her co-star in The King’s Daughter, in 2014. Benjamin, then 31, had just divorced Meryl Streep’s daughter Mamie Gummer and quickly fell for the then 22-year-old BritHe proposed after just six months – when he presented her with a Cartier love bracelet for Christmas then realised he “wanted to buy me an engagement ring” – and they got married at New York City Town Hall in 2015.I was completely in love with him. If he’d told me to jump off a bridge, I would haveThe Maze Runner star told ELLE Magazine: “I never had any family heirlooms, nothing that was ever passed down to me and so when I met my husband and we were falling in love, he bought me a Cartier Love bracelet for our first Christmas together.”Kaya added: “He says that it was then that he realised that he actually wanted to buy me an engagement ring, so he sort of weirdly proposed with a Love bangle.”The couple have two children, aged seven and two, who they keep out of the limelight and sadly, in February, they announced their split, saying they had made “the joint decision to end their marriage but continue to co-parent lovingly whilst remaining the best of friends.”Hollywood hit From her Skins launchpad, Kaya landed the role of Cathy in Andrea Arnold’s Wuthering Heights before playing Teresa in Maze Runner series, from 2013. She went on to star opposite Johnny Depp in the fifth Pirates movie, in 2017, taking home a reported salary of £1.2m.But she says her latest role, as drug baron Susie in The Gentlemen, is her coming of age. READ MORE SUN STORIES“She’s the first actual woman I’ve played. It’s been a long line of teenagers and young adults,” she told the LA Times. “It was really f***ing cool to play someone who was already there, who is at the top of their game, who is confident and who is unapologetic.”Seems the Skins star is all grown up – and owning her future.Ray Winstone stars as Susie’s dad in The GentlemenCredit: Christopher Rafael/Netflix More

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    Watch the shocking moment Love Island’s Davide Sanclimenti ‘dishes out hippy crack balloons’ during wild party

    DAVIDE Sanclimenti was seen dishing out “illegal hippy crack” to revellers at an after-party in Manchester this weekend.The Love Island winner, 29, uses an air canister to prepare balloons for pals in our exclusive video.Davide can been seen giving out hippy crack in our videoDavid was seen concentrating as he sorted out the balloonsDavide could be seen holding the canisterThe Italian businessman is a regular on the red carpetCredit: GettyThe couple called it quits a second time before ChristmasCredit: instagramThe gas was claimed to be nitrous oxide by a whistleblower at the small gathering.The Class C drug, also known as laughing gas, was re-classified in November and serious users now face two years in prison and dealers, up to 14 years.If you take too much, you risk losing consciousness and can suffocate from lack of oxygen.Davide has been enjoying a party lifestyle in Dubai and the UK since his split from Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu earlier this year.READ MORE ON DAVIDEHe was out with mates this Easter weekend and was filmed appearing to fill the balloons in the early hours of Saturday morning following the Solaris of the Sun event at Firefly club.Davide can be seen using a blue pump to inflate the balloons but there is no suggestion he sucked on the gas himself.A spokesman for Davide declined to comment.It comes after he was seen sniffing a white powder on an Ibiza bender last summer – the first time the TV dating show couple split.Most read in CelebrityAt the time, a representative for Davide insisted he was snorting snuff.Love Island winner Davide snorts white powder in Ibiza days after Ekin-Su splitEkin and Davide later reunited but broke up for good in January.In March the Turkish beauty, 29, then went into the Celebrity Big Brother house – with Davide reacting in a late-night video shared with The Sun.Cheersing a shot, he ranted: “F**k Ekin-Su.”A source close to Davide said in response: “Davide has understandably been going through a tough period recently and not been feeling his normal self.“He’s been trying his best to put a brave face on and get back to the fun Davide that everyone knows and loves by going out socialising more and focusing on his fitness to help his mental health.”What is laughing gas?NITROUS oxide, also known as laughing gas, is normally bought in pressurised canisters and pumped into a balloon and then inhaled.
    Used gas canisters are increasingly littering the streets as nitrous oxide use has become increasingly popular in the UK.
    Here’s what we know about it.
    The colourless gascan make people feel euphoric and relaxed.
    But it can also cause some people to have hallucinations.
    The results are caused by the drug slowing down the brain.
    Is it illegal in the UK?
    A ban on nitrous oxide came into force on November 8, 2023 and will assist police in tackling the anti-social behaviour caused through its use.
    Supplying the drug can land offenders seven years in jail.
    How dangerous is nitrous oxide and what are the side effects?
    Nitrous oxide can cause dizziness and affect your judgment, creating a risk of accidents.
    In large quantities it can also cause the user to faint or pass out.
    If nitrous oxide is inhaled through the mouth from a pressurised gas canister or in a confined space it can cause sudden death through lack of oxygen.
    Heavy, regular use of the drug can cause a deficiency of vitamin B12 and a form of anaemia.
    Severe vitamin B deficiency can cause serious nerve damage.
    One woman was left paralysed from the chest down after inhaling 15 balloons of “hippy crack” every weekend. For more information, see drugs advice site, Frank.
    Why is nitrous oxide called ‘hippy crack’?
    Nitrous oxide is often referred to as “hippy crack”.
    There is some debate about how the term came into use, some argue that hippy refers to the laid back stereotypical user while crack is a reference to the drug’s quick onset.
    The drug may also be called whippits, laughing gas or chargers.

    Davide won Love Island with Ekin-Su in 2022Credit: RexDavide partying in Ibiza last year after his first split from Love Island star Ekin-Su CülcüloğluCredit: SplashSpent silver canisters are becoming a more popular sight across the country More