Both sets of fans sang chants in Jota’s name in the 18th and 20th minutes — the shirt numbers he wore during his spells at Molineux and Anfield, respectively. (Getty Images )
Florian Wirtz’s first Liverpool goal fired the Reds into the Premier League’s top four despite an unconvincing 2-1 win over Wolves on a day both clubs paid tribute to Diogo Jota.
Jota won four trophies after joining Liverpool from Wolves in 2020, but he was killed in a car accident alongside his brother Andre Silva in July. Two of his children led the teams out as mascots, while his wife, Rute Cardoso, watched on from the sidelines.
Both sets of fans sang chants in Jota’s name in the 18th and 20th minutes — the shirt numbers he wore during his spells at Molineux and Anfield, respectively.
“From after the tragedy happened until now, I have seen so many special moments — where the fans remembered him or our players conducted themselves unbelievably in the circumstances,” said Liverpool boss Arne Slot.
“Not only our fans but also the fans of away teams have shown the respect both Diogo and his brother deserved.
It was special to see his children being the mascot and how emotional it was before the game and then in the 20th minute.”
On the field, both clubs have suffered this season with Wolves staring down the barrel of relegation after taking just two points from their opening 18 league games
Liverpool’s performance has recently improved.
. Liverpool’s performance has recently improved, and Wirtz is starting to demonstrate the brilliance that enticed the English champions to pay Bayer Leverkusen £100 million ($135 million) for the German international.
Last weekend, the 22-year-old contributed his first Premier League assist to a goal against Tottenham, albeit at a significant cost to Liverpool due to Alexander Isak’s broken leg.
Shorn of the most expensive player in English football history for the coming months,
There is even more pressure on Wirtz to deliver on his hefty price tag.”
He’s been crucial for us throughout the season. But in football it is about results; you are mainly judged on results or on goals and assists,” added Slot. ”
I think today he showed much more than just the goal he scored; he was special for us in many parts of the game.”
Wirtz finally opened his account in his 23rd Liverpool appearance by prodding home Hugo Ekitike’s pass to double the home side’s lead.
Just 90 seconds earlier, Liverpool had made the breakthrough when Ryan Gravenberch slammed in Jeremie Frimpong’s cross.
Yet, even with a 2-0 half-time lead against a side on course to become the worst in Premier League history,
Slot could not relax. Santiago Bueno exposed Liverpool’s frailty from set pieces to pull a goal back just six minutes into the second half.
Slot’s men have made a habit of late collapses at Leeds and Tottenham in recent weeks and needed a perfectly timed tackle from Conor Bradley to deny Jhon Arias a late equaliser.
Joe Tracini has always struggled with his mental health but feels like he can finally look to the future after starting ADHD medication
Actor Joe Tracini has always experienced discomfort within himself.
As the son of comedian Joe Pasquale, Joe Tracini experienced self-consciousness and was prone to depressive thoughts during his upbringing in Great Yarmouth.
“I made my first joke on stage at 18 months old at one of my dad’s gigs,” he recalls. “But a lot of my confidence growing up was a front.”
The only way he could engage with his peers was through his skill for magic tricks. He was relentlessly bullied at school.
“I was like a little old man. I used to speak like a grown-up. I wore three-piece suits and couldn’t converse with other children,” the 37-year-old says.
Getty
Joe Tracini was born as Joe Pasquale, the same name as his father, but he changed it aged 12
He missed out on the role of Harry Potter, which was given to Daniel Radcliffe.
At the age of 11, he changed his surname from Pasquale to Tracini, after narrowly missing out on the role of Harry Potter to Daniel Radcliffe.
“I did six auditions for it. Although it was a significant rejection, I believe I would not have been able to handle the pressure of making those films. The casting director sent me a letter which I’ve still got.
“I changed my name because I wanted to do things off my own back; I didn’t want to have something to live up to. “I love my dad very much and we have a good relationship but I wanted people to like me for me,” he says.
Tracini went to musical theatre college and secured various acting and TV presenting roles, including as a series regular on the soap Hollyoaks.
Tracini was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD) a decade ago, which came as a giant relief.
The diagnosis prompted him to kick his addictions. He has been sober for 10 years, after several trips to rehab.
“I felt less guilty because I knew the drink and drugs were a symptom of my BPD. I thought Mick would go away but the medication made me feel numb and changed my personality so I came off it,” he says.
During the pandemic, he gained tens of thousands of social media followers by posting comedy dance routines, dressed in a leotard.
He also went viral for a video about his BPD, describing symptoms including mood swings, impulsiveness, paranoia, fear of abandonment and chronic feelings of emptiness.
Tracini has filmed several videos representing his BPD as two different people – himself and the negative voice inside his head, whom he calls Mick.
But around the same time, he stopped going to auditions and working because his mental health was awful.
“I lost so many months where I felt paralysed by fear. I started writing a one-man show called 10 Things I Hate About Me, all about my life.
“But during that period, I was so low, and I was having so many panic attacks that I thought I’d never be able to perform it,” he says.
The turning point came last summer, when he decided to explore the possibility that he might have ADHD.
Tracini looked through his list of followers on social media and found an ADHD psychiatrist who was able to diagnose him and prescribe medication.
“The drugs don’t help with my BPD, but I feel like I can start again.” It has cleared my brain and I can function again. I can work again and I can write.
“This time last year I thought, ‘This might be it. This might be who I am for the rest of my life.’
“I had no idea how life-changing the diagnosis would be – people don’t take ADHD seriously enough – finding out has saved my life.”
Joe has performed his one-man show in Edinburgh and is taking it on tour after rave reviews
In the summer, Tracini performed his one-man show to rave reviews at the Edinburgh Fringe. He is now taking it on his first-ever tour, starting at the Norwich Theatre Playhouse, just up the road from where he grew up.
Tracini spent so many years obsessing over the show that he felt he owed it to himself to perform it.
“Even if it had gone badly, I was doing myself a kindness to put it to rest and gain some closure,” he says.
“It encompasses many years of my life and includes numerous things that I clung to which ultimately harmed me.” It’s my past but it doesn’t have to be a part of me any more.”
Mick will always be there, he believes, but he has learnt to live with the voice inside his head.
“It has been like getting used to a flatmate. I hope he buggers off one day but we’re doing OK.
“I was always living in the past and worrying about things I’d done, but now I’m looking to the future.” I’m looking at weeks and months ahead, which is something Mick can’t argue with.”
If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this story, information and support can be found at the BBC’s Action Line.
Kirsty Armstrong visited the shop on its opening day
Families on a council estate claim that a new “social supermarket” will assist them in meeting their financial needs.
The shop at North Bransholme Community Centre sells surplus food, with packs of fruit, vegetables and bread costing as little as 20p a time.
Anyone living in the area, receiving means-tested benefits, and applying for a free membership can use it.
On its opening day this month, hundreds of people visited the store to buy food at about a third of the cost charged by most supermarkets, with bosses estimating it could save a family more than £200 a month.
Kirsty Armstrong, a mother of two, said the store took the pressure off the worry of doing a weekly food shop.
“Even though you work, it can still be really hard just to buy the simplest of things, like fruit.
“I’ve spent about £6 and I’ve got bread and fruit, and I am thinking about stuff in my basket that can be kept frozen.”
James Trott says many people on the estate will benefit
James Trott, 67, was one of the first customers through the doors and plans to use the shop regularly.
“It helps me as a pensioner because I have to pay for gas, electricity, water, rent, and council tax, which makes it really hard for everyone on the estate who is receiving benefits,” he said
The prices at other shops would have been double.
“I’ve just got a tin of beans for 60p; they would have been double in another shop.”
The Community Shop Group, a social enterprise, has opened the store as the 15th of its kind across the UK.
Food industry partners donate products from surplus stock, which results from overstocking or seasonal packaging. All are still in use to date.
Gary Stott says the store encourages people to make healthy choices
Gary Stott, the executive chairman, said as well as supporting people in the Bransholme area, it was helping to tackle food waste.
“Surplus food does occur and we can take that in and we can relabel it and get that on sale,” Mr Stott said.
“We have a retail store that offers 600 product lines, with the average basket spend being about 30% of the retail price, allowing families to save £212 a month on their shopping bills.”
“Even though we are a small convenience store, 30% of our basket is fruit and vegetables. That means families can come and make really healthy choices at an affordable price.”
Carol Redfern says the community cafe “means a lot.”.
The group said profits from the shop would be reinvested in a community hub, which aims to support members in learning new skills.
Meanwhile, a community kitchen and cafe sells breakfasts and lunches for £1.50, along with free children’s meals all year round.
Carol Redfern and her mum were among those enjoying refreshments.
She said, “To be able to come here and get quality food cheaper, it means a lot.
“My mum lives with me; she is disabled, so we are not on a lot of money.
David Daniels says the store will reduce the pressure on food banks
Figures from Trussell, the anti-poverty charity, suggest more than 700,000 people in Yorkshire and Humber have faced hunger in the past year due to a lack of money, with one in 10 people in the region living in households classified as “food insecure.”
David Daniels, who is 73 and receives disability benefits, described the community store as “a must in this day and age”.
“I think financially it will help many people,” he said. “It takes away from food banks as well.
Greg Fisilau was named man of the match for his performance in Exeter’s victory over Leicester Tigers; as a result, Exeter heads into 2026 one point behind Gallagher Premiership league leaders Northampton Saints after missing out on a bonus point in this win.
Last Updated: 28/12/25 7:06pm
Greg Fisilau (L) celebrates with teammate Stephen Varney during Exeter’s win over Leicester
Greg Fisilau inspired a resurgent Exeter to a 24-10 Gallagher Premiership win over Leicester Tigers at Sandy Park, moving them within a point of league leaders Northampton Saints.
England No. 8 Fisilau ran in the opening try and also played a key role in Stephen Varney’s 72nd-minute score that finally swung an absorbing contest out of the Tigers’ reach, winning him the man-of-the-match award.
Outstanding winger Campbell Ridl also crossed, but Exeter finished one try short of claiming the bonus point that would have sent them into 2026 as premiership leaders.
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It nonetheless represents a remarkable transformation by Rob Baxter’s side, who finished bottom of last season’s table after a disappointing campaign and were playing in front of a thinned-out home crowd.
Despite winning at home, Exeter missed out on securing the top spot.
A packed house witnessed the battle between fourth and fifth place and while Leicester returned home empty-handed, they were competitive until Varney struck.
Leicester were forced to deal with early pressure, with Andrea Zambonin scragging scrum-half Tom Whiteley and initiating waves of attacks that ended with Fisilau racing over from the 22.
Exeter were in control and regularly finding space in the wide channels. Ridl was released down the left wing in the 25th minute and chipping into space before benefiting from a kind bounce to finish a fine solo score.
Exeter Chiefs’ Campbell Ridl scored a try against Leicester
A dynamic try by Harvey Skinner was ruled out for a push by Will Rigg and it proved to be a critical 14-point swing as Leicester struck straight away, with winger Adam Radwan making ground before passing. interplay from the forwards ended with Cameron Henderson crossing.
TV cameras showed Tigers head coach Geoff Parling reading his players the riot act at half-time and when the game resumed, they had the wind at their backs.
A promising raid into the left corner was defended with a turnover and once Immanuel Feyi-Waboso had used his power and footwork to propel Exeter downfield, Henry Slade landed a penalty.
Slade was tackled dangerously, resulting in a yellow card for Samuel Williams, but the Chiefs failed to score a point while the Leicester replacement was in the sin-bin despite producing some dangerous moments in attacks.
Upon Williams’ return, fly-half Billy Searle was sent to the sin bin for entering from the side as Skinner fell inches short with a sprint for the line. Leicester were conceding a steady stream of penalties and were killed off when Varney raced over after Olly Woodburn had initiated the counter-attack with a towering catch.
Fisilau was also involved in the move that led to Varney touching down, and as Exeter hunted the bonus point in the closing moments, they twice dropped the ball over the line.
Walder: England can’t ignore Fisilau!
Exeter attack coach Dave Walder insists it is only a matter of time before England head coach Steve Borthwick takes a closer look at Fisilau, following his blockbusting form this season.
“I love working with Greg [Fisilau],” Walder said. “He’s got everything you’d want from a back-rower. He’s physical, he’s abrasive, and he’s very game-smart, but he’s also got lovely soft skills.
“He’s playing very well at the moment. If he keeps playing like that, I’d imagine England can’t ignore him, but you’d have to ask them that question.”
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On missing out on the bonus point to move top, Walder added: “This morning if you’d offered us a win, we’d have taken it. But I think deep down we’re a little bit disappointed that we didn’t score ourselves an extra bonus point due to our accuracy.
“At the same time, that’s a sign of where we’ve come from and where we are at the moment. We’re not too focused on where we are in the league; it’s about the process. The boys are working hard and have a terrific attitude and defence. We’re in a really positive place.”
Leicester head coach Geoff Parling said: “I thought it was the poorest we have been emotionally in turning up for a game. It’s the first time this season that we have lacked a bit of edge, especially in those first 30 minutes.
“We’re not good enough yet to have those off days. That’s the first time, and the group will admit it, that we weren’t quite on edge in terms of our collisions and how we were playing. We’re back at home against Saracens now and we’ve got to play with the right edge because that for me, wasn’t our DNA today.”
The family of a “devoted” grandfather, who passed away following an attack outside a village pub, has released a tribute. Six days after being punched outside
David Darke, 66, of the Crown public house in Appleby Magna, Leicestershire, suffered head injuries and died in hospital yesterday.
A 36-year-old man who was initially arrested on suspicion of grievous bodily harm was later re-arrested on suspicion of murder and is still in police custody.
In a statement released on Sunday, Mr Darke’s family described him as “a very loving father to three daughters and a proud grandfather to three boys”.
She added, “He was a much-loved brother and dear friend. Dave will live forever in our hearts, minds and spirits.
He was a strong, active, intelligent, and kind man who was a friend to all.”
“He was a devoted family man, with a deep passion for life, the outdoors, nature and travel. His life was tragically cut short and he has now been reunited with his loving, caring parents. All those who knew and loved him will greatly miss him.
His friends and family knew him as Dave, with neighbours saying he was a “nice guy” who worked in a local hotel and lived alone in a bungalow in the village.
Emergency services were alerted to the incident on Church Street just before 9.45pm on Sunday, December 21, and Mr Darke died at Queen’s Medical Center in Nottingham on Saturday.
All residents spoken to live in Leicestershire. They were completely shocked and were saying that nothing like this had happened before in the village.
The pub’s next-door neighbour, Chris Adams, 71, has lived there for 24 years and said it was “very unusual for something like this to happen”.
He added, “We were surprised because it’s such a quiet village and such a lovely pub. The landlady at The Crown does a wonderful job. The pub is in the centre of the community and we’ve never had any problems there.”
Millie Newall, a 21-year-old who resides near The Crown, reported that her father was walking his dog when the incident occurred, prompting her to call for an ambulance. He said, “It is quite scary. But things like this happen. This town is a quiet village and it is strange for this kind of incident to happen here.”
Senior investigating officer Detective Inspector Kevin Hames said, “The initial investigation resulted in us identifying a number of witnesses and examining CCTV from the area.
“Those inquiries will continue and the suspect will be reinterrogated by detectives.” This is an extremely difficult time for Mr Darke’s family and specialist officers are supporting them.
“We would still encourage anyone who was in Church Street last Sunday evening and who has not yet spoken to officers to remain in touch. We need to speak to as many people as possible who can help us piece together what happened that evening.”
Anyone with any information is asked to contact 101, quoting crime number 25*744889.
Myanmar’s army is conducting phased elections next month
Myanmar is voting in an election that has been widely dismissed as a sham, with major political parties disbanded, many of their leaders jailed and more than half the population expected to vote because of the country’s ongoing civil war.
The military government is holding a phased vote nearly five years after seizing power in a coup, which sparked widespread protests and civil war.
Observers say the junta, backed by China, is trying to legitimise and consolidate its power as it looks for a way out of the devastating impasse.
A new law that carries severe penalties, including the death penalty, has charged more than 200 people with disrupting or protesting voting.
Voting commenced on Sunday, during which several areas of the country reported explosions and air strikes.
Three people were taken to hospital after a rocket hit an uninhabited house in the Mandalay region early Sunday, the region’s chief minister confirmed to the BBC. The condition of one of these individuals is critical.
Separately, more than ten houses were damaged in Myawaddy township near the border with Thailand after a series of explosions late Saturday night.
A local resident informed the BBC that the attack resulted in the death of a child and the emergency hospitalisation of three others.
Further reports of casualties have emerged following other explosions.
Voters have told the BBC about the elections.
Voters have told the BBC that the election feels more “disciplined and organised” than before.
“The voting experience has changed a lot,” said Ma Su Zarchi, who lives in the Mandalay region.
“I was scared before voting. Now that I have voted, I feel relieved. I have cast my vote as someone who has tried his best for the country.”
First-time voter Ee Pyay Phyo Maung, 22, told the BBC she was casting her vote because she believed it was “the responsibility of every citizen” to vote.
She said, “My hope is for the lower class – right now, the prices of commodities are skyrocketing, and I want to support someone who can bring it down for the people who are struggling the most.”
“I want a president who provides equally for all people.”
EPA/Shutterstock
Voters queued to cast their votes in Yangon, Myanmar.
The Burmese junta has rejected criticisms of the elections and says its goal is “withdrawal.” The junta aims to establish a multi-party democratic system in the country.
After casting his vote at a heavily guarded polling station in the capital, junta chief Min Aung Hlaing told the BBC the election would be free and fair.
“I am the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, a civil servant. I can’t just say I want to be president,” he said, stressing that there are three phases of the election.
Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing casts his vote in Pyi Taw in the capital
Film director Mike Tee, actor Kyaw Win Htut and comedian Ohn Ding were among the prominent figures convicted under a law against disrupting elections that was implemented in July.
They were each sentenced to seven years in prison after criticising a film promoting the elections, state media reported.
UN Special Rapporteur Tom Andrews on Sunday called on the international community to reject the election, saying it could lead to “nothing legitimate”.
He said, “An election organised by a junta that is bombing civilians, jailing political leaders, and criminalising all forms of dissent is not an election—it is a theatre of the absurd, conducted at gunpoint.”
The army is fighting on multiple fronts, against armed resistance groups opposing the coup as well as ethnic armies, which have their militias. It lost control of large parts of the country in a series of setbacks but regained control of the region this year after sustained air strikes with support from China and Russia.
The civil war took thousands of lives, displaced millions, destroyed the economy, and created a humanitarian vacuum. The devastating earthquake in March and cuts in international funding have made the situation worse.
All this, and the fact that large parts of the country are still under opposition control, poses a huge logistical challenge to holding elections.
Voting is scheduled to take place in three phases next month in 265 of the country’s 330 townships, with the rest considered highly volatile. The results are expected by the end of January.
No voting is expected in half of the country. Even in townships where voting is taking place, not all constituencies will vote, making it difficult to predict the likely turnout.
Six parties, including the army-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party, are fielding candidates across the country, while the other 51 parties and independent candidates will contest only at the state or regional level.
About 40 parties have been banned, including Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy, which won landslide victories in 2015 and 2020. Charges widely believed to be politically motivated have jailed Suu Kyi and several key party leaders, while others remain in exile.
“By dividing voting into phases, authorities can adjust strategies if the results in the first phase do not suit them,” Htin Kyaw Aye, a spokesman for the election-monitoring group Spring Sprouts, told the Myanmar Now news agency.
Ral Uk Thang, a resident of western Chin State, believes that citizens do not want elections.
“The military does not know how to rule our country. They only work for the benefit of their high-ranking leaders.”
“When Aung San Suu Kyi’s political party was in power, we experienced a little bit of democracy.” But now we just cry and shed tears,” the 80-year-old told the BBC.
Western governments, including the United Kingdom and the European Parliament, have dismissed the vote as a sham, while regional bloc ASEAN has called for political dialogue before any elections.
Monisha Gower, of Essex & Suffolk Water, said Suffolk’s long-term water security was under threat
A water company boss says plans for two new reservoirs and a water recycling plant in Suffolk are essential to safeguarding the county’s supply for “generations”.
Essex & Suffolk Water provides water to about 1.8 million households in parts of those two counties and part of Norfolk.
In a bid to address growing demand, Suffolk Water has recently launched the Suffolk Water Recycling, Transfer, and Storage Project.
The company’s Monisha Gower said the county’s long-term water security was under threat, but this scheme could be the answer.
“East Anglia is one of the driest parts of our country,” she said.
“So we need to carefully plan ahead to secure and maintain the existing supplies – and this project represents a major step forward for securing water in the future.”
Suffolk has recently been identified by the Environment Agency as a Seriously Water Stressed Area, which means its long-term water security is under threat.
In September, Essex & Suffolk Water reported that Suffolk had experienced its second driest March-May period since 1921.
It is hoped that the scheme – part of a wider £1.5bn investment in water projects across the East of England – will ensure “reliable water supplies for generations to come”.
Northumbrian Water Group
Essex & Suffolk Water wants to build two new reservoirs, which will be partially based underground
If approved, a water recycling plant capable of producing 11 million litres (2.4 million gallons) of purified water would be built near Lowestoft.
the existing Lodgewood Water Tower in Sibton,
Two partly buried reservoirs—one near the existing Lodgewood Water Tower in Sibton, another near Saxmundham, and one near Eye Airfield— would also be built, storing water for use during dry periods. About 50 miles (80 km) of pipelines would be installed.
“We currently have sufficient water supplies to support our existing households and business customers, so that is fine and secure,” said Ms Gower.
“The challenge we have is meeting the extra demand from new commercial developments and commercial customers who want to connect to our water supplies.
Essex & Suffolk Water has previously released a map outlining its project plans, but they have not yet confirmed the exact locations for the work.
Ms Gower spoke to the BBC after a seven-week consultation period, during which about 1,000 residents attended drop-in sessions to share their views.
“Initial feedback has been broadly supportive and positive, so the community understands the need for this investment and what it would unlock,” she said.
Ruthlessly marketed as a sex symbol, Brigitte Bardot revolutionised French cinema.
It left a lasting mark on the memory of an icon who, during her prime, revolutionised the bikini, female desire, and French cinema.
Brigitte Bardot, who passed away at the age of 91, transformed the staid portrayal of women in 1950s cinema and came to personify a new era of sexual liberation.
On screen, Brigitte Bardot embodied a rare combination of French charm and continental sensuality. One publication referred to her as “the princess of pout and the countess of come hither,” but she eventually came to loathe that image.
Ruthlessly marketed as a hedonistic sex symbol, Bardot was frustrated in her ambition to become a serious actress. Eventually, she abandoned her career to campaign for animal welfare.
Years later, her reputation suffered due to her use of homophobic slurs and multiple fines for inciting racial hatred.
Bardot helped make bikinis socially acceptable in the 1950s.
Brigitte Anne-Marie Bardot was born in Paris on 28 September 1934.
She and her sister, Marie-Jeanne, grew up in a luxurious apartment in the plushest district of the city.
Her Catholic parents were wealthy and pious and demanded high standards of their children.
The girls’ friendships were closely policed. When they broke their parent’s favourite vase, they were whipped as punishment.
Roger Viollet via Getty Images
Her parents wanted Brigitte Bardot to become a ballet dancer
With German troops occupying Paris during World War II, Bardot spent most of her time at home, dancing to records.
Her mother encouraged her interest and enrolled her in ballet classes from the age of seven.
Her teacher at the Paris Conservatoire described her as an outstanding pupil, and she went on to win awards.
Life as a ‘jeune fille’
But Bardot found life claustrophobic. By the age of 15, she later recalled, “I was seeking something, perhaps a fulfilment of myself.”
A family friend persuaded her to pose for the cover of Elle, the leading women’s magazine in France, and the photographs caused a sensation.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Brigitte Bardot’s early magazine covers redefined fashion and the concept of beauty
At the time, fashionable women had short hair, carefully matched their accessories, and sported tailored jackets and silky evening wear.
Brigitte’s hair flowed around her shoulders. With the lithe, athletic body of the ballerina, she was nothing like her fellow models.
Pictured in a series of young, modish outfits, she became the personification of a new “jeune fille” (young girl) style.
At the age of 16, she found herself the most famous cover girl in Paris.
Her pictures caught the attention of the film director Marc Allegret, who instructed his assistant, Roger Vadim, to track her down.
QUINIO/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Bardot was infatuated with aspiring director Roger Vadim
The screen tests were not successful, but Vadim – who was six years older – took her on, first as his protégé and then as his fiancée.
They began an intense affair, but when Bardot’s parents found out, they threatened to send her away to England.
S.N. Pathe Cinema/Getty Images
Roger Vadim helped his teenage wife launch her film career
Roger Vadim, her ‘wild wolf’
In retaliation, she attempted to take her own life but was discovered and stopped just in time.
Brigitte was infatuated with the aspiring director.
He seemed to her as a “wild wolf”.
“He looked at me, scared me, attracted me, and I didn’t know where I was anymore,” she later explained.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Bardot and Vadim celebrated their wedding at the Church of Passy in Paris on December 12, 1952. Vadim sold the pictures of the ceremony to Paris Match.
Under such pressure, her parents relented but forbade the couple from marrying until Brigitte was 18.
Once they reached that milestone, the couple walked down the aisle.
Becoming an icon
Vadim began to shape Bardot into the star he believed she could be.
He sold the pictures of their wedding to Paris Match and instructed her in how to perform in public.
He helped his new wife find small roles in a dozen minor films, often playing pouty-yet-innocent female love interests.
But, until 1956, she was chiefly famous for posing in bikinis—a garment banned in Spain, Italy, and much of America for being on the razor edge of decency—and popularising a beehive hairdo.
Then came peroxide and the part that made her a star.
That year, Vadim’s debut film, And God Created Woman, opened in Paris. It failed to make money in France but caused uproar in the United States.
Marka/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Bardot created uproar in And God Created Woman
In a country accustomed to Doris Day’s image, Bardot became a sensational figure.
Her character pursues her sexual appetites, without shame, as men do. She dances barefoot in a trance, her skin glowing with sweat, with her hair worn wild and loose.
Her lack of inhibition leads to the collapse of social order, and outside the cinema, the reaction was equally intense.
The existentialist Simone de Beauvoir hailed her as an icon of “absolute”freedom”—raising Brigitte to the status of a philosophy.
But the American moral majority mobilised. The film was banned in some states, and newspapers denounced its depravity.
To audiences, Bardot became indistinguishable from the character she played. Paris Match labelled her as “immoral in every aspect”.
And when Bardot ran off with her co-star, Jean-Louis Trintignant, her image as a wanton libertine was inescapable.
Atlantis Films/Pictorial Parade/Courtesy of Getty Images
Existentialist philosophers hailed Bardot as an icon of “absolute freedom”
She divorced Vadim, who reacted as only a Frenchman could.
“I prefer to have that kind of wife,” he said, “knowing she is unfaithful, rather than possess a woman who just loved me and no-one else.”
He went on to work with Bardot again and later live with Catherine Deneuve and marry Jane Fonda.
A reluctant mother
In 1959, Brigitte – after several love affairs – married the actor Jacques Charrier, with whom she starred in Babette Goes To War.
The couple had a son, Nicolas, but Bardot resented her pregnancy, repeatedly punching herself in the stomach and begging a doctor for morphine to induce a miscarriage.
“I looked at my flat, slender belly in the mirror like a dear friend upon whom I was about to close a coffin lid,” she later recalled.
AFP via Getty Images
Bardot resented her pregnancy and was later sued by her son for emotional damage
After the inevitable divorce, Nicolas did not see his mother for decades.
He sued Bardot for emotional damage when she published her autobiography, in which she stated that she would have preferred to “give birth to a little dog.”
Brigitte was now the highest-paid actress in France, with some suggesting that she was more valuable in terms of foreign trade than the country’s car industry.
But she wanted to be taken seriously as an actress. “I have not had very much chance to act,” she complained. “Mostly I have had to undress.”
She began to attract the attention of Europe’s most respected film-makers, winning critical acclaim in Jean-Luc Godard’s powerful New Wave drama, Le Mépris (Contempt).
But the overall quality of her output was mixed, especially when she ventured outside France and into Hollywood.
A third marriage, to a millionaire German playboy, was followed by a string of lovers – although, uncharacteristically, she did reject Sean Connery.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Bardot grew tired of her sex kitten image and quit acting to campaign for animal welfare. “I have not had very much chance to act,” she complained. “Mostly I have had to undress.”
She made dozens of records, alongside Serge Gainsbourg and Sacha Distel.
With Gainsbourg, she recorded the raunchy Je T’aime… Moi Non Plus, although she begged him not to release it.
A year later, he re-recorded the song with the British actress, Jane Birkin. It became a huge hit all over Europe, with Bardot’s version remaining under wraps for 20 years.
A campaigner for animal rights
After nearly 50 films, she announced she was retiring to devote her life to animal welfare in 1973.
“I gave my beauty and my youth to men,” she said. “I’m going to give my wisdom and experience to animals.”
Philippe Caron/Sygma/Getty Images
She raised 3,000 francs (then about £300,000) to establish the Brigitte Bardot Foundation by auctioning off her jewellery and film memorabilia.
Bardot – or B.B., as she was known in France – campaigned against the annual seal cull in Canada and irritated some of her countrymen by condemning the eating of horse meat.
She became a vegetarian, attacked the Chinese government for “torturing” bears, and spent hundreds of thousands on a programme to sterilise Romanian stray dogs.
Sygma via Getty Images
Bardot campaigned against the culling of seals and the fur trade, among other issues
Her life, marked by turmoil, ended in a troubled manner.
In her later years, she was prosecuted on multiple occasions for racial hatred.
She objected to the way the Islamic and Jewish faiths slaughter animals for food.
But the way she voiced her criticism was unforgivable and—in fact— illegal.
She wrote in 1999 that an overpopulation of foreigners, especially Muslims, is invading her homeland. This landed Bardot with a huge fine.
She went on to criticise interracial marriages and insult gay men, who, in her words, “jiggle their bottoms, put their little fingers in the air, and, with their little castrato voices, moan about what those ghastly heteros put them through.”
Bardot was in court so often that, in 2008, the prosecutor declared that he was “weary” of charging her.
Gilles BASSIGNAC/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Bardot was in court so often that the prosecutor said he was “weary” of charging her
In the 1960s, Brigitte Bardot was chosen as the official face of Marianne, the emblem of French liberty.
Then she herself became an icon: a beautiful, liberated, modern woman who refused to conform to outdated stereotypes.
After three failed marriages and several suicide attempts, she gave up the spotlight to campaign against cruelty to animals. To her surprise, the media’s fascination with her continued, even as fame became notoriety.
She is survived by her fourth husband, Bernard d’Ormale, a former adviser to the late far-right politician Jean-Marie Le Pen.
Bardot’s political opinions led to a troubled end to her life, as she spent her final years as a semi-recluse fighting race-hate allegations in the courts.
Lisa Stocker, 39; her partner, John Collier, 39; and partner, Phineas Flot, 31, feared they could be hanged under Indonesia’s strict anti-drug laws but are now due to be released within days.
Phineas Floate, Jonathan Collier and Lisa Stocker were arrested in Bali earlier this year in connection with a £300,000 cocaine plot. (Image: AP)
Drugs boss Brit Lisa Stocker and her associates are to be deported from Bali just days after being spared the firing squad for a £300,000 cocaine smuggling plot.
Mother-of-three Stocker, 39, her partner John Collier, 39, and partner Phineas Float, 31, fear they could be executed under Indonesia’s strict anti-drug laws when they are sentenced in August.
But a judge at the Denpasar Central Court decided not to impose the death penalty after he admitted to drug trafficking to the island.
Instead, they were kept in hellish prisons for a year before being deported from the country. This means, given time, all three will be back in the UK next month.
read more. Lindsay Sandiford’s UK return home prompts Casey to call for ‘transparency’ read more. Pregnant British ‘drug mule’ Bella Cooley gets ‘proper toilet’ after jail in Georgia
A trio of Britons saved from death penalty and will be deported to UK within days (Image: AFP via Getty Images)
A source said, “Those three can count themselves very lucky. Others have spent years behind bars for similar crimes – some even said they were going to be hanged.”
The court heard that Float had agreed to take part in the conspiracy for a “reward” of 500,000 Indonesian rupiah – the equivalent of just £22.50.
Prosecutor Med Umbara had urged Judge Herianti not to impose the death penalty, despite Indonesia’s famously strict anti-drug laws.
Drug trafficking has drawn criticism around the world.
It is a dramatic display of tolerance from Indonesian authorities, whose tough stance on drug trafficking has drawn criticism around the world.
The mules, all from East Sussex, pleaded guilty to trafficking charges.
Prosecutors sought a one-year sentence for the three Britons, a major relief in a country with some of the toughest drug laws in the world. (Image: AFP via Getty Images)
On February 1, a routine X-ray of their luggage revealed suspicious packages, leading to the arrest of Stocker and Collier at Bali’s international airport.
He had travelled from the UK to Bali via Qatar. The couple told police they did not know the packages contained drugs and believed they were giving the British delicacies to a friend.
After their arrest, Stocker and Collier became informants for the Indonesian police and agreed to lure their partner into the ambush.
Lisa Stocker and Jonathan Collier were busted trying to bring 992 grams of cocaine hidden in 17 packets of Angel Delight sweets to Paradise Island. (Image: AFP via Getty Images) )
His release and deportation come just weeks after British drug lord Lindsay Sandiford, 69, was freed after 13 years on death row.
The legal secretary spent more than a decade in Bali’s notorious Kerobokan prison after being caught with £1.6 million worth of cocaine in 2012.
But Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper struck a bilateral deal with Indonesian authorities to secure his release in October.
Sandiford was repatriated along with fellow British citizen Shahab Shahabadi, 35, who has been serving a life sentence since 2014 after being arrested during an investigation into an international drug trafficking network.
British death row inmate Lindsay Sandiford was photographed before being repatriated under an agreement between Indonesia and Britain (Image: Coordinating Minister of Indonesia)
Officials say both Britons have suffered serious health difficulties. The Foreign Office has refused to say whether Sandiford will be detained or immediately released because he is at home.
But Indonesian authorities claimed he would be sent to jail after being sent back to Britain.
When it comes to holiday dining, you should enjoy your favourite food traditions! After all, part of having a healthy relationship with food is eating the foods you enjoy year-round.
But many of us struggle with aspects of eating a well-balanced diet—especially around the holidays.
Whether it’s sugar cravings, not getting enough fruits and vegetables, or just too much of a good thing,
The most impactful step you can take is understanding your individual struggles when it comes to navigating your health during the holiday season.
With that in mind, here are three RD-approved strategies you can use this holiday season to help maintain or strengthen your relationship with your health.
What an RD wishes you knew about holiday food
1. FOCUS ON WHAT YOU CAN do.
When we fixate on what we can’t have or shouldn’t do, it can feel overwhelming and may even perpetuate unhealthy patterns, causing us to return to old routines.
Instead, focus on how you can support your health during the holidays so you stay engaged with building habits—not dwelling on shortcomings.
“I encourage clients to reframe the holidays as an opportunity to add nourishing choices rather than restrict enjoyable ones,” says Katherine Basbaum, a dietitian with MyFitnessPal. “That mindset shift may make it easier to stay consistent.”
TIP: Look at your current routine and identify what’s already working. Is there a simple way to integrate one new habit to make yourself just a little healthier?
You might aim for three cups of vegetables daily, commit to the gym twice a week, or add a 15-minute walk after dinner. Choose whatever feels doable for you.
The main point: think about what you can do, not what you need to stop doing.
2. IT’S ALL ABOUT BABY STEPS
We often want to overhaul our entire diet and activity level to see quick results, then get discouraged when it doesn’t pan out. That’s why many of us quickly revert to old routines.
Small, deliberate improvements to your routine are often the most successful. Making one or two changes at a time gives you a better shot at building a lasting habit.
“The people who stick with their goals long-term are the ones who start with changes they can maintain through busy seasons—holidays included,” says Basbaum.
TIP: Try something like walking two evenings a week or adding a piece of fruit instead of reaching for a second holiday cookie.
The key is making sure it’s a simple, realistic change that fits your existing lifestyle, even during this busy season.
Try tracking these simple adjustments to your routine in MyFitnessPal to see your progress over time and celebrate the small wins along the way.
These changes might not sound as dramatic as a total transformation, but they may help you maintain a healthier lifestyle in the long term. Give it a try and you may find that these habits stick much easier.
3. DON’T FORGET ABOUT PROTEIN AND FIBER
Focusing on an overall balanced diet is always the goal. For many people, this means getting enough vitamins, minerals, fibre, and protein.
Basbaum asserts that protein and fibre serve as crucial tools during the holiday season. “
They help you feel satisfied after meals so you’re less likely to overeat later, and they support stable energy and blood sugar throughout the day.”
High-fibre foods are often rich in vitamins and minerals, so prioritising fibre with proteins is a smart strategy.
These nutrients help with satiety, support muscle growth and maintenance, improve metabolism, and help balance blood sugar—all important for feeling your best during the holiday season.
TIP: Start by tracking your food on MyFitnessPal to see if you’re reaching your daily fibre goal. If you’re falling short, try adding more to your meals.
Aim to include at least one fibre-rich food and one protein-rich food in each meal and snack.
Frequently Asked Questions: Holiday Food
How can I stay on track with my goals without missing out on holiday foods I love?
Focus on adding healthy habits rather than restricting foods. Build your meals around protein, fibre, and vegetables; then enjoy your favourite holiday treats without guilt. Balance, not perfection, is the goal.
What if I’ve already fallen off track with my healthy eating?
Start fresh right now—you don’t need to wait until Monday or January 1st. Pick one small change you can make today, like adding a vegetable to your next meal or taking a 10-minute walk. Small steps add up.
Should I track my food during the holidays?
Tracking can be helpful for staying aware of your habits without being restrictive. Use MyFitnessPal to see where you might need more protein or fibre, but don’t stress about hitting every macro perfectly during this busy season.
How much protein and fibre do I aim for each day?
General recommendations are about 25-30 grams of fibre daily and 0.8-1 gram of protein per kilogram of body weight (or about 0.36 grams per pound). Check out MyFitnessPal for personalised targets based on your goals.
The Bottom Line
The holidays aren’t easy.
But you can navigate the holidays with health in mind by giving yourself grace, focusing on what you can add rather than subtract, and tracking with MyFitnessPal to bring awareness to your diet.
After all, we’re here to support your health and fitness goals all the way.
Originally published November 30, 2022; Updated December 2025
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The post 3 Things a Dietitian Wishes You Knew About Holiday Food appeared first on the MyFitnessPal Blog.