13/12/2017 The One Show


13/12/2017

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Transcript


LineFromTo

Hello and welcome to The One Show,

with

Matt Baker...

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And Alex Jones.

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You may have seen it was the eagerly

awaited premiere for Star Wars:

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The Last Jedi last night

at London's Royal Albert Hall.

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As well as the stars

of the film, Prince William

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and Prince Harry were there.

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Well, tonight, we're turning

to the dark side and have invited

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two of Star Wars' most feared

members of the First Order

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on to our own red carpet.

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Please welcome Domhnall Gleeson,

who plays General Hux!

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And Andy Serkis, who plays

Supreme Leader Snoke!

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My word, you must be really...

Chewbacca is here as well!

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Come-down!

He is absolutely massive!

I did not expect him to be as tall

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as that.

I think he is taller than

our one.

That is the real one, isn't

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it?

It is, sorry, I have messed up

there!

Are you treated differently

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on the red carpet?

We have our own

black carpet which goes up and down!

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Sorry, gentlemen, we have got

another guest tonight... They have

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just told me we've got another

guest.

Really?

Who could that be?

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No, this is bad news...

It's not

HIM, is it? It is! Is it?! It's

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Sarah Milliken!

Darth Vader is NOT

from the north-east!

What an

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introduction! We are so pleased it

is you, really pleased.

We have

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rolled out the red carpet, are you a

fan of going to a premier?

No, I

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like to go on a Wednesday afternoon

when there is nobody else there and

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I can sit in my jeans with my belly

hanging out! We plan to go on Boxing

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Day.

It'll be sold out, I'm sorry.

All tickets are gone, by the way.

If

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you can't pull any strings, who

can?!

Yeah, all tickets are NOT sold

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out, you can get some!

How to is

he?!

We were asking exactly that. We

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have got a bit of a home-made theme

going on tonight, because these

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costumes amazingly are home-made,

some of them.

And we even have a man

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here who has built his own Imperial

Walker in his back garden. We will

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talk about that in a bit.

I mean, I

was in a mood about our shared! Also

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later, we will be making The Sweet

Makers, recreating suites of

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Christmas past, revealing recipes

you can make at home this Christmas.

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If you are in the process of making

anything home-made, decorations,

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Star Wars costumes, whatever it is,

even your own presence, let us know.

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Show them off and get in touch with

us in the usual ways.

So, we have

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seen proved today that medical

science fiction has become fact

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which the story of baby Vanellope,

who has survived after being born

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with her heart outside of her body,

all thanks to the incredible work of

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the staff of the Glenfield Hospital

in Leicester.

It shows that early

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treatment or diagnosis can save

lives, and Joe has met parents

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pushing for a postnatal test to help

save even more.

10-week old baby is

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living in isolation at this

Children's Hospital in Newcastle.

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His parents are making no ordinary

visit to see him.

We have to do this

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at least 40 times a day.

It is quite

overwhelming, because there's a lot

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to remember.

Even has a rare

condition, called severe combined

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immunodeficiency, known as Scid,

which means for him the world

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outside is deadly.

If he does pick

up any infection or germs, we are in

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trouble. This is where we've been

living for the past five weeks.

In

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order to hold their son, the couple

need to go through this strict

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hygiene routine everyday, and for us

to be with them, we have had to

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sterilise our camera equipment, too.

It is our first child, so we can't

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give him the normal affection that

any parent would want to give.

I

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have not been able to kiss my son.

He's ten weeks old.

Kissing him

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could kill him. It's heartbreaking.

Scid first hit the headlines in the

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1970s, when and American was

confined to living in a plastic

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bubble for 12 years. He became known

around the world as the bubble boy.

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Advances in medicine mean that the

bubble is now a clean air room.

Only

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seeing him through the window is

really difficult for the family.

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They want to give their support but

they don't know how they can.

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Because of Abby's family history

with the condition, Ethan was

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fortunate to be diagnosed

straightaway. In England it is only

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found in about 15-25 babies a year.

It is not routinely tested for at

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birth, so for some the diagnosis

comes too late. When James was born

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he seemed perfectly healthy but

after five weeks he caught a cold

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and became very ill.

So, Suzie took

him to the doctors.

She said I think

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he should go to hospital, he might

have a chest infection. He was in

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for six days and then he perked up

and we were sent home. Then over the

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next two weeks he started to

deteriorate.

He was eventually

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diagnosed with Scid and transferred

to London's Great Ormond Street

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Hospital.

By that point, he was so

poorly, he didn't really stand a

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chance.

James died five days before

his first birthday. The couple are

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now campaigning for every baby born

in the UK to be screened for Scid.

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There is a cheap, simple test that

can diagnose this condition. It can

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be done in the same way as a routine

thing which is already done for

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every child. It is just one more

test which costs £2 50. Why would

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you not do it?

It is another option

which can prevent all of this.

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Today, they returned to Great Ormond

Street to find out whether their

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campaigning has paid off. Public

Health England is set to announce

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whether or not they will recommend a

trial screening programme. The

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hospital's expert is Professor Bobby

Gaspar, and has spent six years

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pushing for all newborns to be

tested. If you can diagnose Scid

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early on, what can you do?

They can

have a procedure to correct it which

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is usually a bone marrow transplant

or now we have gene therapy. And we

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can save virtually every baby. At

the moment the survival rates

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diagnosed at birth are only 90%.

On

the other side of the hospital, the

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difference early detection and

treatment can make is clear to see.

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Nine-month-old Henry received bone

marrow from his two-year-old

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brother. Five months on his mum and

dad have an appointment to see if

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his immune system is developing.

The

baby's T cells are really coming

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through now. The results at the

moment suggest that the transplant

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has worked, so that's really good

news.

That's brilliant.

What does

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this mean for the future - how

normal will things hopefully be for

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Henry?

If we keep our hands clean

and all of that, he will be able to

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do all of the things which you and I

can do.

Including talking very

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loudly! You've got a good voice,

haven't you?! I am back with Bobby,

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and he has news from Public Health

England.

We've heard just now that

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they've actually recommended that

the UK should go ahead with the

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pilot for screening for Scid.

Obviously, we wish it was national

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screening straightaway, but this is

a big step forward.

I think it is

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fantastic.

If you save one family

going through what we have had to go

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through, it would be worth

everything.

As for baby Ethan in

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Newcastle, after receiving

life-saving bone marrow from his

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dad, he is finally able to take a

trip outside for an hour.

It is a

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milestone, the family feels like

we're actually getting somewhere.

We

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can see some light, we're going to

have a healthy baby at the end of

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it.

Thanks so much to the couple for

sharing their story. We wish baby

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Ethan and his parents all the best.

We are joined now by Professor Bobby

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Gaspar, along with someone who is

living proof that early detection

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can be life-saving. Professor Bobby

Gaspar, when are we likely to see

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this pilot being rolled out?

Well,

we've been campaigning to have this

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implemented in the UK for six years.

Thankfully the committee has made a

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decision that there's going to be a

pilot study. On Monday next week we

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will have the first meeting to

decide where we should screen, how

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many babies we should screen, how

long we should screen for? And then

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hopefully we will start screening

next year.

That's such good news.

It

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is.

And you feel very strongly about

the figures, £2 50 per baby? That's

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right. It will cost a few million

pounds per year to screen all babies

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in the UK. That is a drop in the

ocean compared to the...

It's lives

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as well.

Exactly, but of course we

can't just spend money without it

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being value for money. There has

been a lot of research - is it

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cost-effective to screen rather than

not to screen? That has been done

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and it actually shows that it is

very, very likely to save money if

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we start screening, and that's

because when these babies are not

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screened, they get very ill, they're

in and out of hospital, often in

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intensive care, it is very costly.

But if we can screen them and

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diagnose them at birth, we can

protect them and give them a much

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easier transplant and course of

treatment and have a much better

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outcome. So it will not only save

lives but it should save money as

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well.

It is good news all round.

And

your connection with this started 17

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years ago, when you treated Jonah.

Evey, how did you know that Jonah

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had it?

We had a family history. I

was screened in pregnancy and once

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they found out I was carrying a boy,

we had Jonah's stem cells collected

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at birth, they were sent off and

tested and then we were admitted to

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Great Ormond Street on Dave two and

that's when we met Bobby and the

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rest of the team.

So, Jonah was

never ill?

No.

And is there any

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difference between you and your

mates now in terms of what you can

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do?

Not at all, I'm living a normal

active life, setting aside an hour a

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week to do my in fusions but I'm

playing hockey and doing everything.

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So, early detection really is key.

Have improved!

Mums want to be as

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protective as possible for their

children, but I mean, what has it

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been like, it obviously is an

incredibly active life he leads,

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what would be your advice?

Naturally

you're protective, but once you see

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that they are going to develop

normally, gradually you grow with

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them and you have to let them get on

and lead an independent life. There

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might be some mothers to be who are

worried and want their baby to be

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tested - how would they go about it?

This is a very, very rare condition,

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so we think there will be about 20

babies per year born in the UK with

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this condition. So, it is very rare.

My advice would be, if there is a

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family history with this, then

that's something where mothers could

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go and speak to the doctor about and

they may want to get tested,

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especially if there is a severe

problem. But I think for most other

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mothers, because it is so rare, you

shouldn't worry, and hopefully we

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will be able to do the pilot

programme and have a national

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programme.

Thank you all of you for

coming on and sharing your stories

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tonight. I know that your other sons

are here as well and they are big

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Star Wars fans! Having a great time!

Now, one of the good things about

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Star Wars is that it spans

generations. There is always that

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hope that maybe, just maybe, you get

to be a Star Wars hero! A long time

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ago, in a galaxy far, far-away, a

monument to event took place.

40

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years on, people still celebrate a

space phenomenon.

Among them, two

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middle-aged fan boys.

Those first

films came out when we were kids. We

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used to watch the VHS until it

was... Until they disappeared!

I was

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nothing but Luke Skywalker as a kid,

as soon as we played Star Wars. Had

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their hair and everything, blonde,

small, strong. You would make a

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great Darth Vader, obviously.

Thanks! You are no Han Solo! I just

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wanted to be those guys when I was a

kid.

Still do!

So do I, I want to be

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those guys NOW!

We have been given

the chance to play Star Wars just

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like when we were kids in a One Show

challenge.

Can recapture what we

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love about Star Wars...?

In just a

single shot?

We are so behind

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schedule, it is untrue. Can we pull

off our very own 62nd Star Wars?

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Roger Christian won the Oscar for

production design on Star Wars and

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he was one of the most important

members of George Lucas was no

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creative team.

I got to speak to him

in Belgium.

He is now a director.

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Oh, and he happened to make one of

the most iconic props in movie

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history.

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Where did you get the idea for the

light sabre?

We had so little money

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that I could not afford to make the

weapons and I decided to only use

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found objects. I went to a shop in

London and asked the owner and he

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said, go in the boxes under the

shelf and there were boxes covered

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in dust. They had not been looked at

for 15 years. When I opened it with

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the tissue paper there with these

things and I found the holy Grail.

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He had found the handle for stills

camera flash gun and with superglue

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and bits from a pocket calculator,

he had it.

I called George and I

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said, I think I have a light sabre.

He came to my office and said, that

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is the greatest confirmation, he was

more than happy.

And here is that

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very same prop.

It is an elegant

weapon with a civilised edge.

None

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of us ever imagined it would connect

like it has.

In the Star Wars saga

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fight scenes, light sabres defined

good and evil.

He was the King

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Arthur for the cinema age. I realise

when I read it this was actually a

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perfect myth he had created.

Whether

it is the props or the mythology, 40

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years on enthusiasm for the

franchise is not doomed. Most of us

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may have thrown away our

collections, but Jason Smith's keeps

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on growing.

It was one of the

break-out sci-fi movies at the time,

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but without the merchandising it

would not have had the big cultural

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impact it did.

Out of all the movies

what is the one iconic scene?

It has

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to be, because it was a shock for

everyone, it was the scene where

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Darth Vader reveals to look... I am

your father. That was such a shock.

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Because there was no social media or

spoilers and media at the time was

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clamped down, it was a shock for

most people who saw the film.

With

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the team back in the studio is still

working hard preparing for our 62nd

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Star Wars...

It is transitioning

through six shots, three different

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sets, three different lighting

scenarios, it is a challenge.

We

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need to get into costume. Look at

this. There is Han Solo. Look at

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that.

Never mind Hans Solo.

Now we

just need a passing freighter.

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The height of glamour, stuck in a

bus stop.

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The height of glamour,

stuck in a bus stop.

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You can see the return

of our Jedis later.

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And like Roger Christian

who designed the light sabre,

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you can see the British talent

who made the original Star Wars next

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Thursday in The Galaxy Britain Built

on BBC Four at 10pm.

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You will be into that.

My son

certainly will

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My son certainly will be.

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Let's welcome

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tonight's guests again.

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Comedian Sarah Millican and two

of the stars of Star Wars,

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Domhnall Gleeson and Andy Serkis!

0:18:470:18:57

Chewbacca is beside himself. The

night Star Wars film, the eighth

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episode, the most popular move I

franchise in history. It is out at

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midnight tonight, it is called The

Last Jedi. We met your characters

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two years ago. Explain for people

who have not seen it yet just to the

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characters are, General Hux and

supreme leader Snoke.

I play a

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person who works for the supreme

leader Snoke, who is not a nice

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person, who is intent on trampling

down the resistance and seeing some

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order in the galaxy.

Did you get

that? I have to do this. This hot

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water bottle is burning my back.

I

thought you were going to undo your

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bra!

You would imagine people would

jump at the chance to be a part of

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this franchise because it is so

huge, but, Domhnall, you had

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reservations. You were not sure

initially.

I think so, but everybody

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is really. It is not because I did

not want to do the job, I was

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concerned about the effect it might

have on my life. I had been in the

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Harry Potter at a tiny little bit.

Being out and about and being

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recognised I was a little bit... But

then I read it and it was really

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good and I decided not to care any

more.

And supreme leader Snoke.

He

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is a hologram, the leader of the

first order, a devotee of Darth

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Vader and he is when we meet him

here not in a happy state because

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General Hux is at odds with another

person and they have taken their eye

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off the ball and the first order is

still in control, but he is a leader

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who feels under threat and there is

fear his decisions.

It must be a

0:20:580:21:04

nightmare for you guys talking about

the movie because you do not want to

0:21:040:21:09

put out any spoilers. Everything you

are saying, you are listening to

0:21:090:21:12

your own sentence. Let's have a look

at the trailer. Let's see how strong

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the force is with The Last Jedi.

We

have a spark that will light the

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fire that will burn the first order

down.

This is not going to go the

0:21:320:21:41

way you think.

Fulfil your destiny.

Say no more.

Chewbacca is loving it.

0:21:410:21:57

The thing I spotted where the little

Porgs. They are like my little

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hamster.

They look sweet. And they

taste really good as well.

They are

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the top trending characters since

they saw the trail.

There are some

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that are adorable and some are

disappointing. I am in the second

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camp.

I am pro-Dem, I like the

Porgs. I lied to you, we are on TV.

0:22:240:22:37

You can have Porgs chops.

If you

were to be in Star Wars, what would

0:22:370:22:46

you be? What would you be attracted

to?

I would be working in the

0:22:460:22:54

canteen for sure.

You should be a

bad guy.

With this advice?

Is there

0:22:540:23:07

a row with slippers?

Do you like my

slippers? They are not really

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slippers.

They are halfway house.

We

do have a character that could wear

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them.

And it is poignant because of

the loss of Carrie Fisher and her

0:23:230:23:29

performance. We do not want to say

too much about it, but it must have

0:23:290:23:33

been quite difficult for you.

She is

an extraordinary person and is

0:23:330:23:37

utterly unique. She was a brilliant

person who totally lived in the

0:23:370:23:44

moment and was incredibly funny. She

was amazing company. This film is a

0:23:440:23:49

fantastic tribute to her. They have

created this amazing, artful

0:23:490:23:55

character.

No doubt she had a

presence at the premiere last night.

0:23:550:24:00

100%.

0:24:000:24:04

Let's return from a galaxy far, far

away back to our own Blue Planet.

0:24:040:24:07

The recent series has made us

all more aware of how

0:24:070:24:10

much our reliance on plastic

is causing havoc

0:24:100:24:12

with the environment.

0:24:120:24:13

It's prompted the Prime Minister

to announce yesterday

0:24:130:24:15

that the Government will look

at using foreign aid cash

0:24:150:24:18

to help tackle the issue.

0:24:180:24:19

So whilst a white Christmas

is important to some,

0:24:190:24:22

Lucy Siegle has found some smart

ways we can all make it

0:24:220:24:25

a greener Christmas.

0:24:250:24:28

With less than two weeks to go until

the big day I know you are in the

0:24:320:24:37

midst of the annual scramble to buy

gifts, decorators, Christmas trees.

0:24:370:24:42

But during the season, could we show

a little more goodwill towards the

0:24:420:24:46

planet? Especially since the BBC's

Blue Planet highlighted the

0:24:460:24:54

irreparable damage from the millions

of tonnes of plastic waste which

0:24:540:24:58

ends up in the oceans each year.

Here are the dos and don'ts. Tinsel,

0:24:580:25:06

loads of bits of plastic. Do not

throw this away. It be recycled.

0:25:060:25:12

Ultimately if we want to go plastic

free, we need to be zero waste. Get

0:25:120:25:18

creative, make your own garlands

from the fruits of the Forest. Here

0:25:180:25:22

they have used real fruits. Choose

paper chains and garlands, not

0:25:220:25:27

plastic. Go old school and use

popcorn instead. Christmas trees, by

0:25:270:25:35

a real one if you can afford it.

There are bargains to be had. This

0:25:350:25:40

one is great because it comes with

the roots, so you can plant a year

0:25:400:25:45

after year. The real thing is after

Christmas. They can be shredded and

0:25:450:25:52

turned into compost. The National

Trust has dug in over 15,000

0:25:520:25:57

recycled Christmas trees to create

fences across the sand dunes. If you

0:25:570:26:02

have a plastic tree, it is made from

oil and it is not biodegradable and

0:26:020:26:06

you need to use it for years and

years and years. This may sound

0:26:060:26:11

obvious, but do not use plastic

shopping bags. Take some cotton or

0:26:110:26:15

Hessian ones, they are more

fantastic than plastic. Do not use

0:26:150:26:21

that shiny plastic wrapping paper

because it cannot be recycled

0:26:210:26:25

through normal paper recycling. Go

for brown paper or what about this?

0:26:250:26:36

This is made from recycled plastic,

so make use of the abundant waste

0:26:360:26:40

material and it can be used again

and again. Do not use straws in your

0:26:400:26:47

Christmas cocktails. These are a

single use item and we utilise them

0:26:470:26:52

for 20 minutes, but they last for

centuries. No straws, cheers to

0:26:520:26:57

that. Do not use glitter. It is

basically ready-made micro plastic,

0:26:570:27:03

tiny fragments of plastic that

washed down drains and into the

0:27:030:27:07

water courses where it causes harm

to aquatic life and the food chain.

0:27:070:27:12

You are thinking, Lucy, you have

taken the sparkle out of Christmas.

0:27:120:27:16

I have not, this is eco-glitter, it

biodegrade in 90 days, leaving our

0:27:160:27:23

Christmas is shining and our oceans

pollution free. There we go, some

0:27:230:27:28

good advice on how to have a very

Merry, green Christmas.

0:27:280:27:33

You can always count on Lucy. Sarah,

you were saying you have had a green

0:27:330:27:39

Christmas for many years.

My husband

would never wrap presents, so he

0:27:390:27:43

would put the thing that he bought

you in his man bag and you had to

0:27:430:27:47

put your hand in in the dark will

stop with all the other stuff? Yes,

0:27:470:27:53

it was like a bush tucker trial, it

was horrendous. And then you go out

0:27:530:27:59

and have a tetanus jab. Is he

wrapping now?

Yes, he is. He will be

0:27:590:28:06

all over this film.

Your book, How

To Be Champion, is a mix of things,

0:28:060:28:11

it is very honest. In a good way. It

is a bit of a self-help book as

0:28:110:28:17

well.

Writing an autobiography is

quite arrogant, it is like, you want

0:28:170:28:23

to know all about me. I thought,

just weigh up the circle and put

0:28:230:28:29

some help in. I thought I would be

practical and I thought some of the

0:28:290:28:35

things that helped me might help

other people.

And it does. When did

0:28:350:28:40

you decide to be serious and funny?

It depends on the subject. Some

0:28:400:28:45

subjects you can undercut them with

humour. Others you cannot.

You have

0:28:450:28:50

to be honest. You are so honest on

stage and that is why people love

0:28:500:28:55

coming to see you because they know

they will hear it as it is. In the

0:28:550:28:59

book you want to give a bit more

because it is more in depth. Where

0:28:590:29:03

do you toe the line? How would you

stop yourself from saying, that is

0:29:030:29:08

too far?

I don't stop myself, I do

is put in everything. I read it to

0:29:080:29:15

my husband and if he winced I didn't

put it in, but he didn't wince at

0:29:150:29:20

all. I put it all in. I have to give

a bit more on stage.

And you do.

0:29:200:29:29

There are some lovely photos in

there as well. We are going to

0:29:290:29:32

remove the fireplace and put you in

there. Tell us what you feel about

0:29:320:29:39

these pictures.

That was my sister's

birthday party and I was put in the

0:29:390:29:45

corner. No Patrick Swayze around. Is

this a wardrobe of function? A side

0:29:450:29:56

boob on South Shields beach. South

Shields beach! Shouting in the park.

0:29:560:30:02

I still do that now. This is my

older sister and that is Bovril on

0:30:020:30:09

my nose, not what it might look

like. I thought I should clear that

0:30:090:30:13

up.

This is the first prestigious

competition you ever went into.

I

0:30:130:30:20

came third in a bonny baby contest

possibly because of the slacks. My

0:30:200:30:25

dad is saying, smile.

He looks a bit

like Paul McCartney.

He just wanted

0:30:250:30:32

me to smile.

It may be number one

and number two could get in contact

0:30:320:30:40

before the end of the show if you

recognise yourself in these photos.

0:30:400:30:48

Moving on, this basin haircut... Do

you know what, I think it was called

0:30:480:30:55

pageboy back in the day. I had the

same - horrible! Sarah! Is first

0:30:550:31:08

perm! You look like Sarah Jessica

Parker!

Look at the fake books are

0:31:080:31:17

behind!

So many perms over the

years! And the specs have always

0:31:170:31:25

been a really big part of you?

Yeah,

they have to be there, so I can see!

0:31:250:31:31

When did you first have them?

When I

was six I started wearing glasses.

0:31:310:31:35

And that's the chapter that I wrote

first. I decided to write a chapter

0:31:350:31:40

to see if I liked doing it and if it

was any good.

But it wasn't you who

0:31:400:31:45

was meant to have the glasses

initially?

No, I just went along for

0:31:450:31:49

the ride. My sister was having her

eyes tested and my mum did not have

0:31:490:31:53

anywhere to put meat so I came along

and my sister went away with 2020!

0:31:530:32:00

And I got bullied for years!

Are you

over that now? Yeah, I don't care

0:32:000:32:05

now.

Now, talk us through this...

Oh, no! Was Mrs, I worked in WH

0:32:050:32:13

Smiths and we were allowed to get

rest up for Christmas Eve and I was

0:32:130:32:18

Goldilocks.

Are they real?

No,

they're not real.

We can't go down

0:32:180:32:28

when relaying without having a look

at some of your early stand-up. Can

0:32:280:32:32

we show a little clip?

Oh, no, is

it...? I have got a boyfriend at the

0:32:320:32:40

moment and sometimes he and

sometimes he's not. To be honest I

0:32:400:32:43

prefer it when he's not. If ever I

miss him I do a big loud fat and it

0:32:430:32:50

is as if he is there! When your

bloke picks you up, whether and not

0:32:500:32:56

he says three, two, one...

You do

talk honestly about the fact that

0:32:560:33:05

you split up and then got married

again, so you've included some

0:33:050:33:08

breaking up tips. People feeling

sad, facing wrist must alone, not in

0:33:080:33:13

a relationship, top three?

A good

thing to do is to change the name of

0:33:130:33:20

your partner, ex-partner, in your

phone, to something sweary. It does

0:33:200:33:28

not have to be sweary, my friend

used DNR, do not resuscitate!

0:33:280:33:35

Because then you have that reaction!

Saying I love you, every time I felt

0:33:350:33:41

the need to say that I love to

somebody, I would say it to my

0:33:410:33:45

friend - which I thought was quite

nice. And also I went out and bought

0:33:450:33:49

all new knickers! But it was a bad

idea, I binned all of them and then

0:33:490:33:56

I just had to go shopping commando!

If you want more of Sarah! Top

0:33:560:34:00

tips... Quite literally! Hurlbut How

To be Champion is out now!

Now, we

0:34:000:34:10

know that you've got a bit of a

sweet tooth, so get your coat,

0:34:100:34:13

because we're going to head outside.

Outside we have got an historic

0:34:130:34:18

Christmas market.

Thank you, you're

an absolute trooper.

Come on, though

0:34:180:34:28

you are.

It is all because of a

wonderful finger licking new

0:34:280:34:33

programme which is on BBC to. Our

sweet makers have been grappling

0:34:330:34:47

with old implements and now they're

heading back to life as

0:34:470:34:52

confectioners in years gone by.

It

tastes like Christmas.

They will

0:34:520:34:58

discover how confectioners created

new sweet traditions in three

0:34:580:35:03

formative eras. Georgian

spectacle... To Victorian children's

0:35:030:35:12

novelties... And finishing with the

festive classics of a 1920s sweet

0:35:120:35:23

shop. Have a lovely Christmas!

Well,

the sweet makers are let's have a

0:35:230:35:29

look. And this time it's Christmas.

Candy canes, sugar mice, yule logs

0:35:290:35:34

chocolate oranges and chocolate

coins... All of that stuff is such a

0:35:340:35:37

big part of Christmas.

Tonight, we

have a selection of sweet makers

0:35:370:35:40

from the programme, each of them

have recreated treats of Christmas

0:35:400:35:45

past and present and they will be

revealing the recipes are that

0:35:450:35:48

everybody can have a go at home.

Sarah is troubling!

Stop talking!

0:35:480:35:55

Andy, what's in the pan?

Sugar mice.

I'm doing the starch mould, so it

0:35:550:36:04

will set. I made these earlier, if

you would like...

You're talking

0:36:040:36:09

about Victorian treats?

Yeah. The

price of sugar dropped by about 50%

0:36:090:36:16

and it became more widely available

to the general public and they

0:36:160:36:19

figured out how to mass-produce

things like this, so it became a lot

0:36:190:36:22

more available.

Can I just checked,

is it wool?

It is string, yeah.

0:36:220:36:34

Because I don't eat wool!

And

sugarplum is a real thing, isn't it?

0:36:340:36:40

It is an old-fashioned name for

anything which went in the middle of

0:36:400:36:45

what is called a comfit. It takes

about 200 layers of sugar to build

0:36:450:36:52

it up if if you imagine almond or

plum or a Raisin in the middle,

0:36:520:37:00

they're all sugarplums.

We're going

to put all of these recipes on the

0:37:000:37:04

website. And that is a yule log?

It

is.

Where did you find out about

0:37:040:37:11

Georgian cakes? They used to make

really elaborate ones. And the

0:37:110:37:17

Victorians took it one step further,

and they used to make sweet versions

0:37:170:37:22

of savoury dishes, like Prince

Albert's favourite that everyone has

0:37:220:37:25

seen. This was made from cake filled

with ice cream covered in chocolate

0:37:250:37:30

glaze and then decorated with

sweets.

Sounds delicious!

Fancy a

0:37:300:37:35

bit of chocolate?

Yeah, all of it!

Paul has been busy working back over

0:37:350:37:43

the last 200 years, being a

chocolatier 200 years ago, was it

0:37:430:37:49

very different?

It was quite

different but it was all dark

0:37:490:37:53

chocolate, not milk chocolate. Ox is

of chocolates and chocolates in foil

0:37:530:37:59

became popular in fancy boxes. At

our famous chocolate orange which we

0:37:590:38:04

all have now started out as an

apple...

No!

It did! But it didn't

0:38:040:38:10

taste of apple.

Why was it an apple,

then?

That's what we said! That's

0:38:100:38:17

what started the chocolate orange!

You can get chocolate apple but then

0:38:170:38:27

you just stop when you get to the

apple and you've been it!

They still

0:38:270:38:31

drank chocolate, have a mug each.

This is a port wine chocolate. Do

0:38:310:38:38

you want to have a taste? It is

lethal, it is port, chocolate, sugar

0:38:380:38:45

and spices. And they drank this at

Christmas.

It is lovely - and it is

0:38:450:38:51

lethal!

I tell you what, you know

the inside of a chocolate when you

0:38:510:38:57

bite into those alcoholic ones, it

is like a mouthful of that.

0:38:570:39:03

Apparently somebody has got a yule

log anecdote. What is the story with

0:39:030:39:07

the yule log? Well, the yule logs

started off as part of a tradition

0:39:070:39:13

to find the biggest log they could

find and burn it to warn off evil

0:39:130:39:18

spirits and also bring in anything

green as a sign of life during the

0:39:180:39:21

winter months. That transited into

covering it in chocolate to make it

0:39:210:39:30

look like a log.

This is

absolutely... It has got a kick! I

0:39:300:39:34

tell you what's! A big thank you to

one and all braving the cold out

0:39:340:39:39

here tonight. Sweet Makers: A

Christmas Treat is on Friday, BBC

0:39:390:39:43

Two at 9pm. All of the recipes are

on The One Show Facebook page.

That

0:39:430:39:50

looks nice. So, tonight, we've

sorted the Christmas treats, and

0:39:500:39:57

next we will be moving on to the

entertainment, a big festive

0:39:570:40:01

dance-off.

Whatever your age, we

want to see your dance moves. Maybe

0:40:010:40:06

have a mouthful of this before you

start, but anyway...! Dancing to

0:40:060:40:15

Elton John's Step Into Christmas...

Big creative, the video has to be

0:40:150:40:22

recorded in that landscape way, not

portrait.

Send them in by e-mail and

0:40:220:40:27

we will put them all together next

Wednesday.

Don't talk to me, I'm

0:40:270:40:33

still shovelling it in!

We'll leave

you here if you want to! Now, to a

0:40:330:40:40

story which began 100 years ago in

the midst of the First World War but

0:40:400:40:45

has since been long forgotten.

But

not by one journalist, as Baroness

0:40:450:40:49

Lola Young explains.

In June this

year, a mysterious package was left

0:40:490:40:56

on Swanage Pier in Dorset for a BBC

journalist.

I am almost certain that

0:40:560:41:02

this is the bell from the SS Mendi.

I have been looking for this bell

0:41:020:41:08

for 30 years, so this is an

emotional moment.

It comes from a

0:41:080:41:13

forgotten World War I wrecked off

the troopship SS Mendi, which sank

0:41:130:41:18

off the Isle of Wight in one of the

worst maritime disasters the

0:41:180:41:24

English, so had ever seen, in 1917.

But in war weary Britain, the fate

0:41:240:41:30

of the SS Mendi quickly faded from

memory. For years I've been

0:41:300:41:34

intrigued by why the SS Mendi came

to be forgotten. It's a Rec was only

0:41:340:41:40

discovered in on dockers 74 and

Graham Scott has researched it.

The

0:41:400:41:46

SS Mendi was hit on the starboard

side and it was such a heavy blow

0:41:460:41:49

that the holes flooded very quickly.

That was unfortunate, because these

0:41:490:41:55

holes were the dormitory is.

Who

were these men on board?

Most of the

0:41:550:41:59

people on board were not soldiers,

they were labourers, they were black

0:41:590:42:03

South Africans.

Thousand black South

Africans served on the front line in

0:42:030:42:09

support of the British army, which

by 1917 was desperately short of

0:42:090:42:14

troops. Living under oppressive

conditions in South Africa, they

0:42:140:42:19

sensed an opportunity for political

emancipation by signing up to help.

0:42:190:42:23

At the SS Mendi Memorial in

Southampton, I am beating the

0:42:230:42:26

curator of the museum on the Somme

are dedicated to these men.

It was

0:42:260:42:36

about their conditions in South

Africa, so the condition was, we are

0:42:360:42:39

going to participate in this war

which the expectation that after the

0:42:390:42:43

war the government will consider the

rights of the Africans.

What exactly

0:42:430:42:47

was the role of these young men?

Their primary task was to dig

0:42:470:42:53

trenches, repair roads, repair

railway lines. And then to assist

0:42:530:42:57

the fighting units, which was white.

On the pitch black warning on the

0:42:570:43:02

21st of February 1917, the SS Mendi

was struck not by the enemy but by a

0:43:020:43:09

British ship. The SS Mendi sank

within minutes.

The board of trade's

0:43:090:43:15

1917 report found the other vessel

entreaty to blame for the

0:43:150:43:18

commission. But incredibly the Darro

failed to help the SS Mendi in the

0:43:180:43:26

aftermath. The report also says that

no attempt was made to ascertain

0:43:260:43:29

what damage had been done or what

assistance might be rendered. We do

0:43:290:43:33

not know why the Darro's captain

failed to act but we do know that

0:43:330:43:39

almost 650 men drowned. The captain

of the Darro got nothing more than a

0:43:390:43:43

12 month license suspension. But a

few British investigators have

0:43:430:43:48

refused to forget the SS Mendi.

Journalist Steve Humphrey spent 30

0:43:480:43:53

years looking for the bell that was

missing from the wrecked when it was

0:43:530:43:56

first discovered.

30 years ago I was

working for a local radio station

0:43:560:44:02

and I started hearing stories about

the bell possibly having been taken

0:44:020:44:05

from the shipwreck and being

somewhere on the Dorset coast.

Steve

0:44:050:44:09

kept his ear to the ground and this

June it paid off when a local phone

0:44:090:44:14

him an honours sleep saying they had

the bell and they would drop it off

0:44:140:44:17

for him with a letter on Swanage

pier.

All the way through I thought

0:44:170:44:22

it could be a wind-up that I got out

of the car and there was something

0:44:220:44:26

which was so obviously a bell. With

that very, very poignant letter

0:44:260:44:31

inside. Could you please take charge

of this bell? I know of its

0:44:310:44:37

historical importance to South

African heritage. If I handed it in

0:44:370:44:40

myself it might not go to the

rightful place...

It is currently on

0:44:400:44:46

display at a museum in Southampton

while the UK Government works to

0:44:460:44:48

establish its legal owner. Today we

are going to see it for the first

0:44:480:44:52

time.

Look at this. I think it is

loaded with emotions.

Yes. It must

0:44:520:45:03

be...

You know, I mean, looking at

it, I see human beings.

So, after

0:45:030:45:13

100 years, finally, we've got this

solid presentation of what happened.

0:45:130:45:18

A story which was never told. This

brings it back to life. It sort of

0:45:180:45:23

says that it is never too late.

0:45:230:45:27

Tuvok

0:45:270:45:28

Thanks to Baroness Lola Young

and journalist Graham Scott.

0:45:280:45:31

It doesn't seem that

story will end there.

0:45:310:45:33

And if you want to go and see the SS

Mendi bell you can still see it

0:45:330:45:37

at Sea City in Southampton.

0:45:370:45:44

We have got a few minutes to talk

about up-and-coming projects. You

0:45:440:45:48

have got some presence.

And they are

all in sustainable wrapping paper

0:45:480:45:54

because Lucy would be going nuts

otherwise.

You have all got little

0:45:540:45:59

animals in there. This is the theme.

Sorry, I hit you in the face with

0:45:590:46:10

the wrapping paper.

Let's start with

you. We know that you are starring

0:46:100:46:19

with Mr MacGregor in Peter Rabbit

next year which we are very excited

0:46:190:46:23

about. Let's have a look at the

film.

0:46:230:46:31

APPLAUSE

It looks amazing.

It was really

0:46:490:46:58

cool, really exciting, a new thing

for me.

Was it quite tricky acting?

0:46:580:47:03

All the animals were not there at

the time.

What?

It takes ages. I

0:47:030:47:17

would also like to point out there

are lots of tickets available for

0:47:170:47:21

Star Wars. Making Peter Rabbit was

brilliant.

We will leave it there.

0:47:210:47:29

Andy, on that theme of animals and

what have you, you have got a bear.

0:47:290:47:33

Next year will see a version of

Jungle Book which will be called the

0:47:330:47:41

Mobley, which is coming out in the

fall of next year.

How has it been?

0:47:410:47:50

How have you found all of that?

It

is great, we had the most amazing

0:47:500:47:58

cast and we have got christian bale

and this is using performance

0:47:580:48:03

capture technology, the technology I

have been associated with all over

0:48:030:48:08

the years.

If anybody can do it, it

is you.

There is christian bale and

0:48:080:48:14

then we have got Cate Blanchett and

an amazing cast of other actors. It

0:48:140:48:22

is PG-13, a bit darker and closer to

the tone of Rudyard Kipling's books.

0:48:220:48:30

We were also want to talk about

Breed, another film.

It is a

0:48:300:48:37

beautiful love story based on a true

story about a man called Robert

0:48:370:48:43

Cavendish, a polio person and he

lived for decades and he was

0:48:430:48:56

supposed to live for a couple of

weeks and he lived on a respirator

0:48:560:48:59

and it is a really beautiful story.

Sarah Millican. The elephant in the

0:48:590:49:04

room. That is not me.

That is a bit

rude. I am not going to mention

0:49:040:49:14

mine. I have got a Radio 4 pilot

which is a panel show with all women

0:49:140:49:19

and one man, the reverse of the

usual. It is called Elephant In The

0:49:190:49:25

Room. Mine is not as fancy. But at

least I know what the seasons are

0:49:250:49:32

here.

0:49:320:49:36

here.

0:49:360:49:38

Now, our own One Show Star Wars

sequel, starring two grown men

0:49:380:49:40

realising their dreams

and creating their own one-take

0:49:400:49:42

version of Star Wars.

0:49:420:49:49

It is 40 years on from the release

of Star Wars in 1977.

That film

0:49:490:49:57

captured our imaginations and define

our childhood.

Now we are going to

0:49:570:50:00

be kids again playing two of our

favourite characters, Evelyn died

0:50:000:50:07

they'd stop and the boyish hero Luke

skywalker. Can we celebrate Star

0:50:070:50:12

Wars with a parody of the drama

captured in a single take?

For the

0:50:120:50:20

past two days our crew has been

preparing a studio outside Bristol.

0:50:200:50:25

We will not recreate the spectacular

sets of Star Wars on our down to so

0:50:250:50:31

we have enlisted the help of artist

Joe Hill.

He specialises in

0:50:310:50:38

anamorphic art, 2-D illustrations

that when viewed from the right

0:50:380:50:41

angle gives the appearance of being

3-D.

They have massive film sets and

0:50:410:50:47

sprawling areas and I have got a bit

of wall and floor in my studio. I am

0:50:470:50:52

going to frame in a shot and use

perspective to create expands

0:50:520:50:57

beyond. I am going to create this

big world. There is a sweet spot

0:50:570:51:03

with all these pictures, a single

spot where if you stand and look at

0:51:030:51:08

the picture, the 3-D illusion comes

to life.

The fight scenes, the

0:51:080:51:15

costumes, the sets. Here is how we

are hoping to capture what grown-up

0:51:150:51:21

fans still love about Star Wars.

Because it is one shot the

0:51:210:51:27

choreography is complicated and Dan

is going to condition from Emperor

0:51:270:51:31

to dark Lord. As I go from Luke

skywalker to Obi-Wan Kenobi and back

0:51:310:51:36

again in the middle of a fight

scene.

We are this close to

0:51:360:51:42

perfection. There are pieces of set

to wheel in and out. Before we end

0:51:420:51:52

with a shot of Joe Hill's artwork.

It is very warm.

I bet it is.

It is

0:51:520:52:02

like putting your head in an oven.

After two days of set building,

0:52:020:52:07

lighting and rehearsals...

Here is

our version of Star Wars.

0:52:070:52:18

Great work, Darth Vader. You were

splendid.

I was, yes.

I was born to

0:53:030:53:11

be Luke skywalker.

APPLAUSE

0:53:110:53:23

And we have got some more Star Wars

fans in the studio, but these did

0:53:230:53:27

not go to a local fancy dress shop.

Did you, Chewbacca?

These are super

0:53:270:53:35

enthusiasts to say the least, some

of whose creations have gone on to

0:53:350:53:39

appear in Star Wars movies. One

might well be in the brand-new Star

0:53:390:53:43

Wars film.

Are we allowed to say

that?

BB9E and BB8 are playing

0:53:430:53:55

around. They are playing around on

the red carpet.

They look really

0:53:550:54:02

sweet.

James Bruton has built how

many?

That is the third version of

0:54:020:54:11

BB8 and BB9E is the latest version.

It is unbelievable technology just

0:54:110:54:18

to make that.

Yes, it is adjusting

its speed and direction is about 50

0:54:180:54:23

times a second and is running on a

fast loop. It drives in one axis and

0:54:230:54:32

it can spin and it has got a head

control that moves another three

0:54:320:54:36

axis and it is all controlled by

software.

Magic. Lee, you are part

0:54:360:54:42

of the group who run the R2-D2

Society.

We are the builders. But

0:54:420:54:50

you make them for the film.

That is

right.

How did that come about?

In

0:54:500:54:56

2013 there was a convention and they

saw the builders at that event and

0:54:560:55:04

they jokingly said, if you need a

builder, we are the people you

0:55:040:55:08

should ask. Six months later a

fellow builder, Oliver Steeples and

0:55:080:55:13

myself, were called to Pinewood

Studios and little did we know it

0:55:130:55:18

was a job interview and I have been

there ever since.

A hobby became a

0:55:180:55:22

full-time job.

Yes.

And the R2-D2s?

That was in the force wakens. Some

0:55:220:55:35

of the others are Pinewood Studios

with the others that we built.

Let's

0:55:350:55:40

talk about the storm troopers. This

is your domain.

We do this for fun.

0:55:400:55:52

We are all volunteers and we raise

money for charity. They invited some

0:55:520:55:59

of us to go along for the force

wakens and to be storm troopers.

The

0:55:590:56:05

design looks perfect.

These are the

original ones. These are the ones

0:56:050:56:15

that came out in 1977 and there is

an evolution. You can see how they

0:56:150:56:20

would have come along in 35 years.

It looks a bit restrictive.

Is it?

0:56:200:56:27

Yes, a little bit. If I was going to

a fancy dress and I was considering

0:56:270:56:33

storm trooper, would it be good?

I

am not sure.

It is out there and

0:56:330:56:39

Prince William and Prince Harry were

storm troopers as well. Do you know

0:56:390:56:42

what seemed they were in?

When I was

told the Royals were coming down I

0:56:420:56:47

thought it was Prince Philip and

Queen Elizabeth.

We do not know if

0:56:470:56:53

that is the shot they were in. Maybe

they were in there somewhere will

0:56:530:56:59

stop I am not sure.

Do you know?

I

have no notion. Everybody is scared

0:56:590:57:05

to say anything.

They have got to be

in there somewhere.

Colin, you have

0:57:050:57:11

been on the show before because you

build these mad things. One of the

0:57:110:57:16

maddest things was this fellow here.

But you have built a massive version

0:57:160:57:20

in your garden.

I measured this and

skills it up and build a 5.5 metre

0:57:200:57:27

playhouse and kids can go up and

down and inside it. This is Star

0:57:270:57:34

Wars.

You can get inside it, it is

remarkable.

You can all go inside

0:57:340:57:42

and rebuild everything from eBay.

This one is life-size. This is huge.

0:57:420:57:51

The real size one is 40 metres

across and about seven metres wide.

0:57:510:57:56

What do the neighbours think when

they look over the fence and CDs in

0:57:560:58:00

your garden?

That is not the most

they have to deal with, there are

0:58:000:58:05

other things.

Thank you for all the

things you have been sending in.

0:58:050:58:08

Linda made this decoration from

pasta.

Little Alex made this toilet

0:58:120:58:17

roll Nativity.

Laura and her

daughter Chloe made this plastic cup

0:58:170:58:23

snowman. And finally mark from

Bristol has made this Christmas cake

0:58:230:58:29

with half a bottle of brandy.

Getting! You ought to try that

0:58:290:58:35

chocolate stuff that we were trying

out there.

0:58:350:58:39

That's it for tonight.

0:58:390:58:41

Sarah's autobiography

How To Be Champion is out now

0:58:410:58:43

and Star Wars: The Last Jedi

is in cinemas from tomorrow.

0:58:430:58:47

Tomorrow, join me and Angela Scanlon

when we'll be joined

0:58:470:58:50

by Noel Gallagher.

0:58:500:58:51

R2-D2, roll with it.

0:58:510:58:54

He does.

Very good.

0:58:540:59:00

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