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Eamonn Holmes thanks well-wishers after suffering stroke
“We’re taking it one step at a time,” Declan Holmes also said, as his 66-year-old father recovers in hospital.
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No need for hard stares as Paddington: The Musical triumphs at Olivier awards | Olivier awards
It was a night of sweet victory for Michael Bond’s marmalade-loving bear as Paddington: The Musical dominated the Olivier awards on Sunday. Amid the tuxes and gowns of a glittering ceremony at the Royal Albert Hall in London, the duffle coat-wearing bear got his sticky paws all over seven prizes including best new musical.
The award for best actor in a musical went to the duo who play Paddington: James Hameed provides the lovable hero’s voice and is the remote puppeteer, while Arti Shah performs in the furry costume. The show’s baddies, Tom Edden (as the busybody Mr Curry) and Victoria Hamilton-Barritt (as Millicent Clyde, who wants Paddington to literally get stuffed), won best supporting actor and best supporting actress in a musical respectively. Luke Sheppard was named best director for the production, which also picked up awards for costume design (Gabriella Slade and Tahra Zafar) and set design (Tom Pye and Ash J Woodward).
Paddington: The Musical, which has music and lyrics by McFly’s Tom Fletcher and a book by Jessica Swale, shared the highest number of nominations (11) with Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s Into the Woods. That show, at the Bridge theatre, took home two awards: best musical revival and best lighting design (Aideen Malone and Roland Horvath).
The ceremony was hosted by actor, comedian and Celebrity Traitors finalist Nick Mohammed who joked that he had repeatedly been asked by people (including his own agent) how he had got such a gig. He even roped in nominee Tom Hiddleston to hold up his cue cards.
There were performances on stage from stars including Rachel Zegler who won best actress in a musical for Evita, one of last year’s most talked about shows as it featured a scene in which Zegler sang from the London Palladium’s balcony to huge crowds on the street below. Zegler praised director Jamie Lloyd for creating such an “accessible moment” of theatre for passersby and thanked Londoners for “making me feel so welcome here”.
Fabian Aloise won best theatre choreographer for Evita while Elaine Paige, who played Eva Perón in the first production of that musical in 1978, won the Special award for her stage career, presented to her by Evita composer Andrew Lloyd Webber. Paige said it was a “pinch me moment” and praised her father for encouraging a spirit of perseverance that had helped her during her “remarkable adventure” in the industry.
Dramas exploring the theme of justice picked up several awards. Rosamund Pike beat nominees including Cate Blanchett and Marianne Jean-Baptiste to the prize for best actress for her performance in Inter Alia as a karaoke-loving crown court judge whose personal and professional life are rocked by a shock revelation. Pike, whose performance also won best actress at the Critics’ Circle theatre awards last month, originally performed the role at the National Theatre, has reprised it for a West End run and will take the play to Broadway in November. The play was written by Suzie Miller whose Prima Facie brought Jodie Comer the best actress prize at the Oliviers in 2023. Pike said it had been 14 years since she last performed on stage and that she had felt it was a huge risk to return. Praising her fellow nominees in the category, she said they had moved her to tears.
Inter Alia lost to James Graham’s Punch in the best new play category. Graham’s play is based on the true story of a one-punch death. Julie Hesmondhalgh won best actress in a supporting role for playing Joan Scourfield who sought restorative justice after her son James Hodgkinson died when he was hit by Jacob Dunne. Graham was joined on stage by Dunne and Scourfield and the playwright described their “extraordinary journey” towards healing. Hesmondhalgh said the play had a message of hope, compassion, forgiveness and love in a world of division, violence and conflict.
Ivo van Hove’s production of Arthur Miller’s All My Sons won the award for best revival, presented by Helen Mirren and Ian McKellen who joked that he would have to improvise with a Shakespeare speech during their introduction as he could not read the Autocue. All My Sons also won the best supporting actor prize for Paapa Essiedu who spoke of the importance of youth theatres and called for funding for access programmes to ensure the next generation of actors and audiences come through.
In one of the night’s biggest upsets, the star of All My Sons, Breaking Bad’s Bryan Cranston, was beaten to the best actor award by Jack Holden for Kenrex. Holden played every role in the drama, which he also co-wrote, about the citizens of a small US town taking the law into their own hands. Praising his “esteemed” fellow nominees, he joked that most people wouldn’t know who he is and encouraged audiences to take a chance on new talent when choosing what to see at the theatre. Kenrex also won a second prize for Giles Thomas’s sound design. The Olivier awards honour London productions but Kenrex and Punch were regional theatre triumphs: the former was a Sheffield Theatres transfer and Punch originated at Nottingham Playhouse.
There were no awards (from six nominations) for the transfer of the Broadway hit Stereophonic, which in 2024 became the most nominated play in the history of the Tony awards. Another US import, the uproarious Oh, Mary!, won the prize for best new entertainment or comedy play. Best family show went to Guardian journalist Nick Ahad’s rambunctious yet poignant adaptation of Onjali Q Raúf’s novel The Boy at the Back of the Class, staged at the Rose theatre.
The prize for outstanding musical contribution went to Chris Fenwick (for musical supervision and arrangements) and Sean Hayes (for his live piano performance of Rhapsody in Blue) for Good Night, Oscar at the Barbican. The award for best new production in an affiliate theatre went to The Glass Menagerie, the closing production at the Yard in Hackney Wick before the theatre reopens in a new home. The best new dance production was Into the Hairy by Sharon Eyal for S-E-D at Sadler’s Wells and best new opera production was Dead Man Walking by the English National Opera at London Coliseum. This year, Wayne McGregor won the award for outstanding contribution to dance and Danielle de Niese was recognised for her outstanding contribution to opera. Industry recognition awards went to children’s playwright David Wood; Betty Laine, founder of Laine Theatre Arts college; and Linda Tolhurst, stagedoor keeper at the National Theatre for almost half a century.
But it will go down in history as Paddington’s big night – the musical’s tally of seven awards is the same as past Oliviers successes Matilda the Musical, Hamilton, Cabaret and Sunset Boulevard.
This year’s ceremony included special performances to mark the 40th anniversary of The Phantom of the Opera in the West End and the 20th anniversary of Wicked.
The Olivier awards, which this year celebrated their 50th anniversary, are overseen by the Society of London Theatre. The winners were chosen by a team of industry figures, stage luminaries and theatre-loving members of the public.
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The Masters 2026: final round – live | The Masters
Key events
The leaders are out
The final group takes to the tee … and both Cameron Young and Rory McIlroy take 3-woods for safety. The way Rory has been driving all week, this could be a tactic we’ll see more than once. Time will tell. It’s not as though he’s giving up too much distance, and he’s just wedging in from 155 yards. He very nearly slam-dunks it, too, a couple of feet to the left. He’ll have a good look at birdie from 11 feet. That’ll hopefully put him on an even keel: remember he bogeyed Tea Olive yesterday, and infamously doubled it on Sunday last year. That, it is fair to say, is a marked improvement. Young, having found the fairway bunker on the right, finds the heart of the green and will have a putt from 20 feet or so.
An opening birdie for Sam Burns in the penultimate group. A lovely downhill putt from 30 feet, and he joins the leaders at -11. His playing partner Shane Lowry however takes a heavy-handed chip from the front of 1, and bogey takes him the other way. No birdie for Scheffler on 2, meanwhile, but Tyrrell Hatton follows up his spectacular eagle on 7 with birdie at 8.
-11: Burns (1), Young, McIlroy
-9: Rose (1)
-8: Scheffler (2), Day (1), Lowry (1)
-7: Hatton (8), Cantlay (3), Henley (3), Li (2)
Scottie takes putter from the back of 2. He only just gets his putt through the fringe, though the margins are small, and it still dribbles down to six feet. But he’s not 100 percent happy with that. A thin-lipped smile as he considers his birdie putt. Meanwhile a bogey for Viktor Hovland on 18, and he ends the week with a 67 at -4. That round promised more. He’s the new clubhouse leader, though.
Justin Rose isn’t wasting time either! He chips in from the swale to the right of Tea Olive, and the three-time runner-up moves to within a couple of the lead at -9. The gallery, who wouldn’t say no to the genial Rose getting his flowers at last, erupt in delight. Meanwhile over on 2, Scottie Scheffler fires his second into the green, but over the back. Still a decent opportunity to get up and down from close-ish range, though. A sense that this Masters is about to catch fire, and the leaders aren’t even out yet. Fingers crossed for an all-time classic. Another all-time classic. Two in two years too much to ask?
You’ll have noticed Tyrrell Hatton popping up at the bottom of that updated Leader Board at -6. That’s because he’s just holed out for eagle on 7 from 131 yards, landing his ball 15 feet over the flag and spinning it back into the cup! Earlier on today, Aaron Rai did the exact same thing, from 137 yards, so it’s been a good day on Pampas for the English. Rai ended his week at +5 after a round of 70.
Scottie Scheffler isn’t wasting time. A high cut around the branches from the pine straw down the left of 1 into the heart of the green. A mirror-image version of the wedge Bubba Watson played from the trees at 10 to win the play-off in 2012. He’s seven feet away. In goes the birdie putt, and if the leaders weren’t already worried†, they are now††. Bogey for his playing-partner Haotong Li, though, the cost of leaving his approach short.
-11: Young, McIlroy
-10: Burns
-9: Lowry
-8: Scheffler (1), Day, Rose
-7: Knapp (4), Henley (1)
-6: Åberg (7), Hatton (7), Schauffele (5), Reed (2), Cantlay (1), Li (1)
†: They were
††: They already were
Jake Knapp doesn’t have much of a record in the majors. A tie for 55th at the 2024 Masters, a couple of missed cuts at the PGA, another missed cut at the US Open. But the 31-year-old Californian did tie for 12th at the Players last year, and is poised to build on that here. An opening round of 73 followed by a pair of 69s, and with birdies at 1 and 3 he’s moved up the standings to -7.
Viktor Hovland responds magnificently to that double-bogey blow on 15. The pin on the famous par-three 16th is in its traditional Sunday position, front left, very accessible thanks to the downward camber of the green. Hovland finds the sweet spot that gathers his ball to six feet, then tidies up for birdie. He’s back to -5, and that’s the eighth birdie at 16 this afternoon already, with only 14 players having gone through so far.
Scottie Scheffler isn’t the only player looming large in the leaders’ rear-view mirrors. But you can bet your last shiny cent that Cameron Young and Rory McIlroy will consider him the most dangerous one. A world number-one ranking and two Green Jackets kind of add to the aura. Starting the day four behind at -7, it’ll take some effort from Scheffler, but if anyone can, Scottie’s the man. So having teed him up thus, he sends his opening drive wide of the bunker on the right-hand side of the fairway. He might have to punch under some branches from there. We’ll see. He’s going around today with Haotong Li, who he played with on the final day of last year’s Open at Portrush. A good omen for the big man? We’ll see about that as well. Li launches long down the left-hand side of the track.
Turns out Viktor Hovland’s momentum-saving efforts on 14 were all for nought. Hitting his second into 15, he air-mails the green, sending an absurdly overhit iron onto the bank behind and into the pond near the 16th. He can’t find the green with his chip back up, and that’s a double-bogey seven. Again, he isn’t the first, he won’t be the last, and it’s a reminder that the carpet can be whipped from underneath your feet at Augusta National in an instant. He’s -4.
Marco Penge was making a good fist of his Masters debut. Especially as the 27-year-old from Crawley, the reigning Spanish Open champion, took a triple-bogey eight at the 2nd on Thursday. Not the most auspicious start to his Augusta National career, but he limited the first-round damage to 76, then shot 69 and 71. Sadly his final round isn’t going so well, and he’s just dumped two balls in the water at the iconic par-three 12th, the first spinning back off the bank, the second from the dropzone not even getting over to dry land before dunking into the drink. A quadruple-bogey seven. He isn’t the first, he won’t be the last, and things could have gotten a whole lot worse, just ask the Towering Inferno …
Bogey at the last for Jon Rahm. A diminuendo end to a fine round of 68. You have to wonder how much buyer’s remorse Rahmbo has for joining the LIV tour: the 2021 US Open champion and 2023 Masters winner has never been the same player since. Still, his recovery this week from an opening round of 78 will give him a little succour. He ends his week at +1, one shy of the current clubhouse leader Gary Woodland.
We’re in that little major-championship sweet spot, the brief period of calm before the whipping up of a Sunday storm. So while we’re waiting for the leading players to take to the course, there’s time to indulge in a wee spot of Masters nostalgia. This episode of This Golfing Life, a wonderful new golf podcast hosted by the award-winning journalist and author Dan Davies, dives deep into the career of the 1980 and 1983 champion, the legendary Seve Ballesteros, and comes much recommended. (Fans of Paddington and Maurice Flitcroft may enjoy this episode too.) Get on it!
… so it’s probably time to update the Leader Board for the first time today. This is where we’re at for the moment. Meanwhile Viktor Hovland whips his second at 14 over the trees and into the heart of the green, and despite knocking his 25-foot birdie putt six past, tidies up to maintain his upward momentum. Quite a few of these lads, The Hov included, will be rueing their slow starts this week.
-11: Young, McIlroy
-10: Burns
-9: Lowry
-8: Day, Rose
-7: Scheffler, Li
-6: Hovland (14), Åberg (4), Knapp (1), Cantlay, Henley, Reed
Gary Woodland shoots 66
The chasing pack will be very much buoyed by the work of the early starters. Because is there a score out there? Oh yes, there’s a score out there. With the huge caveat that the fairways and greens will dry out and harden up as the afternoon sun beats down – Augusta National getting fast, fast, fast – the signs are very promising. Consider:
-
Ludvig Åberg has started out with three straight birdies; he’s -6 overall
-
Jon Rahm, who started the week with a LIV-shaming 78, is five under for his round today through 17; he’s level par
-
Gary Woodland has just got back to the clubhouse with a 66; he’s the early clubhouse leader at level par
-
Viktor Hovland is seven under through 13, though he’s just Roryed his drive into the trees at 14; he’s -6 for the Tournament
Is a low score on? Oh, it’s on. It’s already been on.
Garcia given code of conduct warning
Today’s weather bulletin: clear, dry and the hottest it’s been all week, with temperatures climbing into the mid-80s. Wind picking up a little during the day, but not in any intrusive manner. Meanwhile in other temperature-related news, the 2017 champion Sergio Garcia has been getting very hot under the collar, reacting to an errant drive on 2 by battering his driver into the ground a couple of times, before whacking it across a nearby cooler, snapping it in two. He’s been given an official code of conduct warning by Augusta National officials, while the tanty registers C++ on the Guardian’s Official Masters Meltdown-o-Meter™, which older and more jaded readers may remember from hole-by-hole reports passim.

Welcome, patrons, it’s time to clamber aboard the rollercoaster. Now then, if the wild and wonderful scenes of Moving Day are anything to go by, many things are possible today. The most likely is that either Rory McIlroy or Cameron Young will win: that’s because the last nine winners have come from the final pairing on Sunday. But there is precedent of a win from as far as eight shots back after 54 holes: Jack Burke Jr. pulled off that particular trick in 1956. Admittedly he only had three players ahead of him on the Leader Board, and it was blowing a field-scattering hoolie, but an eight-stroke comeback is an eight-stroke comeback, whichever way you spin it. Therefore anyone starting the day as low as -3 is technically in with a chance. At least according to the historical data. Even if they have 17 more players ahead of them than Burke did. And today’s conditions are benign. So let’s be realistic. But those are the facts, flat on the page.
Preamble
Exactly 30 years ago, give or take two days, this happened …
… so the loss of a six-shot lead at the Masters isn’t exactly a new thing. And hey, unlike the poor old Great White Shark, at least Rory has 18 more holes still to play, and with them an opportunity to do something about it.
Here’s how the top of the Leader Board looked when dawn broke in Georgia …
-11: Cameron Young, Rory McIlroy
-10: Sam Burns
-9: Shane Lowry
-8: Jason Day, Justin Rose
-7: Scottie Scheffler, Haotong Li
-6: Patrick Cantlay, Russell Henley, Patrick Reed
-5: Collin Morikawa, Jake Knapp, Ben Griffin
-4: Ryan Gerard, Xander Schauffele, Brooks Koepka, Wyndham Clark, Tyrrell Hatton, Tonny Fleetwood
-3: Ludvig Åberg, Brian Campbell, Nick Taylor, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Michael Brennan, Max Homa, Chris Gotterup, Kristoffer Reitan
… and here are today’s tee times (USA unless stated, all times BST).
1406 Aaron Rai (Eng), Charl Schwartzel (SA)
1417 Gary Woodland, Kurt Kitayama
1428 Jon Rahm (Spa), Sergio Garcia (Spa)
1439 Si Woo Kim (Kor), Rasmus Hojgaard (Den)
1450 Keegan Bradley, Dustin Johnson
1501 Matt McCarty, Corey Connors (Can)
1512 Viktor Hovland (Nor), Justin Thomas
1523 Alex Noren (Swe), Maverick McNealy
1545 Adam Scott (Aus), Marco Penge (Eng)
1556 Harris English, Samuel Stevens
1607 Brian Harman, Jordan Spieth
1618 Im Sung-jae (Kor), Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn)
1629 Sepp Straka (Aut), Jacob Bridgeman
1640 Chris Gotterup, Kristoffer Reitan (Nor)
1651 Michael Brennan, Max Homa
1713 Nick Taylor (Can), Matt Fitzpatrick (Eng)
1724 Ludvig Aberg (Swe), Brian Campbell
1735 Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Tommy Fleetwood (Eng)
1746 Brooks Koepka, Wyndham Clark
1757 Ryan Gerard, Xander Schauffele
1808 Jake Knapp, Ben Griffin
1830 Patrick Reed, Collin Morikawa
1841 Patrick Cantlay, Russell Henley
1852 Scottie Scheffler, Li Haotong (Chn)
1903 Jason Day (Aus), Justin Rose (Eng)
1914 Sam Burns, Shane Lowry (Ire)
1925 Cameron Young, Rory McIlroy (NI)
This report will get going at 6pm BST. In the meantime, catch up with the dramatic action from round three by reading Ewan Murray’s report …
… here’s how Rory McIlroy felt after letting his six-shot lead slip …
… and here’s Andy Bull on how sensational Scottie Scheffler put himself in the mix for the Green Jacket.
It’s on!
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