Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Actor Alan Cumming hands back UK medal in anti-empire protest

Cumming, who is largely US-based, was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2009 in recognition of his acting and his work for LGBTQ+ rights in the United States.

Actor Alan Cumming hands back UK medal in anti-empire protest

Scottish actor Alan Cumming said on Friday he had returned a UK state honour in protest at the "toxicity" of the British Empire, 14 years after receiving the award.

Cumming, who is largely US-based, was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2009 in recognition of his acting and his work for LGBTQ+ rights in the United States.


But he said he had reflected further on the role of the monarchy after the death last year of Queen Elizabeth II.

That refection, "and especially the way the British Empire profited at the expense (and death) of indigenous peoples across the world really opened my eyes", Cumming said in an Instagram post marking his 58th birthday.

Gay rights had advanced meanwhile in the United States, and any benefit from the award was "now less potent than the misgivings I have being associated with the toxicity of empire", Cumming said.

"So, I returned my award, explained my reasons and reiterated my great gratitude for being given it in the first place. I'm now back to being plain old Alan Cumming again. Happy birthday to me!"

The queen's death also forced a reckoning for Welsh actor Michael Sheen, who handed back his OBE late last year and urged an end to the heir to the British crown being named prince of Wales.

Further back, Beatles songwriter John Lennon returned his MBE medal -- which ranks below an OBE -- in 1969 in protest at UK involvement in a Nigerian civil war and its support for the US war in Vietnam.

(AFP)

More For You

Chiranjeevi and Ram Charan Receive Grand Welcome at London Wax Statue Launch

Ram Charan’s wax figure was officially unveiled on 9 May 2025

Instagram/ alwaysramcharan

Chiranjeevi and Ram Charan draw crowds at the London wax statue launch

Megastar Chiranjeevi and actor Ram Charan received an enthusiastic reception from fans in London as they attended the unveiling of Ram Charan’s wax statue at Madame Tussauds.

The father-son duo arrived in the UK capital with family members, including Ram Charan’s wife Upasana Kamineni, their daughter Klin Kaara, and his mother Surekha. Fans gathered in large numbers at the venue, chanting and trying to capture photos with the stars, turning the occasion into a celebratory event.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billie Piper

Billie Piper reflects on filming an awkward sex scene with animal noises for Secret Diary of a Call Girl

Getty Images

Billie Piper says filming sex scene with animal noises in Netflix drama made her feel ‘wrong’

Billie Piper has opened up about a particularly uncomfortable moment from her time filming Secret Diary of a Call Girl, the ITV drama that stirred headlines when it first aired and is currently available to stream on Netflix until 29 May.

Long before she took on more mature roles, Piper was widely recognised as the beloved companion Rose Tyler in Doctor Who. But in 2007, she took a sharp turn, starring as Hannah Baxter, a London escort who goes by the alias Belle de Jour in a show based on a popular anonymous blog-turned-book.

Keep ReadingShow less
Vijay Deverakonda

Vijay Deverakonda transitions from romantic roles to action star with his upcoming film Kingdom

Instagram/thedeverakonda

Vijay Deverakonda’s romantic image takes a turn as 'Kingdom' kicks off a power-packed May

May is shaping up to be a milestone month for Vijay Deverakonda, with a new film, fresh music, and a spotlight on the romantic roles that made him a star.

Deverakonda, who shot to national fame with Arjun Reddy, has long been associated with intense, emotionally complex romantic leads. Whether as the self-destructive surgeon in Arjun Reddy or the soft-spoken charmer in Geetha Govindam, he carved a space for himself as the unconventional ‘loverboy’, sometimes unpredictable, many times flawed, but undeniably magnetic.

Keep ReadingShow less
Maaran

Abhishek Jain's Maaran explores the dark realities of patriarchy through the gripping survival stories of two women

Abhishek Jain's 'Maaran' is a gripping Gujarati survival thriller that exposes the dark side of patriarchy and power

In Maaran, director Abhishek Jain trades urban comfort for unsettling discomfort, presenting a grim world where women’s bodies are battlegrounds and silence is often enforced by fear. Set in an isolated village, the film drags the viewer into a reality that is as disturbing as it is familiar.

At the heart of the film are two women: Birwa and Tara. Strangers at first, they are bound by the same invisible chains that pull countless women into cycles of exploitation. Birwa is a victim of human trafficking; Tara is on the brink of becoming one. Their stories run parallel, then collide, in ways that shake them and us to the core. The film’s narrative doesn’t offer dramatic rescues or grand revenge. Instead, it focuses on the internal shifts that happen when survival becomes a woman’s only compass.

Keep ReadingShow less