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Christine Baranski says West End debut is a 'dream come true'

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US actress Christine Baranski has said it will be a "dream come true" to make her West End debut later this year, in a new production of Noel Coward's comedy Hay Fever.

The star, best known for Mamma Mia! and legal drama The Good Wife, will appear in the new adaptation opposite Richard E Grant, producers announced on Friday.

Baranski, 73, told BBC News it felt "extraordinary" to be coming to the West End at this stage of her career.

"It's been on my bucket list for years," she said. "It's going to be just wonderful, I can't tell you how excited I am. Believe me, I'm already studying the role, learning my lines, and working to polish an English accent."

The show will run for 12 weeks at the Wyndham's Theatre in London from 22 September.

Speaking to the BBC from New York, Baranski said she had been pining to return to her theatre roots for some time.

"The problem has always been my filming schedule," she explained, "which has not allowed me to carve out enough time to do a play, but if ever there was a play for me to do, it would be this one.

"The skill set involved is so to my liking – dusting off my light comedy skills and doing it with an ensemble cast of actors who are keen to revive Coward in that way."

Grant said he was "delighted" to be returning to the West End after a two-decade gap, and described his co-star Baranski as "sensational".

"Hay Fever premiered in the West End 101 years ago (but who's counting?)," he joked in a statement. "I love the theatre and am thrilled to return to it."

Despite being better known in recent years for Abba musicals and TV dramas, Baranski noted she started out as "predominantly a theatre actress" and initially had "no desire to be a television actor".

But, she recalled, her career "took something of a U-turn" in her early 40s when she was cast in US 1990s sitcom Cybill, starring Cybill Shepherd.

"That really transformed my career, and suddenly I was offered wonderful movie roles," Baranski said. "So to my astonishment, the latter part of my career has been film and mostly television."

The actress received six Emmy Award nominations for her role as Diane Lockhart in The Good Wife, and went on to star in spin-off The Good Fight.

She has also appeared in Chicago, Nine Perfect Strangers, Frasier, The Big Bang Theory, and is currently in HBO period drama The Gilded Age.

"This is the first opportunity where it's clear I have an opening where I will finish The Gilded Age in mid-August, and go into rehearsal for Hay Fever a few days later," she said.

Hay Fever is one of Coward's most enduring comedies, and follows the self-centred Bliss family – retired actress Judith, her novelist husband David, and their children Sorel and Simon.

All four separately invite a guest to stay for the weekend without telling the other family members, setting the scene for a weekend of chaos.

The lead female character has often been played by a British actress – Felicity Kendal took on the role for the show's last West End incarnation in 2015.

It's more unusual for a US actress to play the part, but Coward actually based the character on an American he'd met at a dinner party in 1921.

The playwright was fascinated by Broadway star Laurette Taylor and her abrupt manner with house guests, and based Hay Fever on her family.

"It's the most delightful story," said Baranski of the Taylor connection. "She had a husband named Hartley Manners, and they were so bohemian and so rude.

"Laurette Taylor was a famous and brilliant American actress, and Noel Coward renamed them Hardly Manners," she laughed.

"He was captivated by their rudeness, and he called this play a comedy of appalling manners."

Taylor, who died in 1946, somewhat distanced herself from the portrayal when she saw the show, famously remarking: "None of us is ever unintentionally rude."

Baranski has previously appeared in several other Coward plays, such as Fumed Oak, Private Lives and Blithe Spirit. "So I'm something of a Cowardian," she joked.

"I just love the quicksilver delivery and suave flamboyance of Coward, it's delightful to play."

The actress suggested the enduring popularity of classical plays in the West End and Broadway is down to the dialogue, something she "loves sinking my teeth into".

"Classical plays give you language, the ability to speak it and to give a kind of spin to a sentence that you don't have with modern playwriting," she said.

Grant shot to fame in 1987's Withnail & I, and has more recently appeared in Saltburn, Nuremberg and The Thursday Murder Club.

He and Baranski don't know each other well, but recently met via Zoom. "I was utterly captivated by him," Baranski said. "He's whip smart, wickedly funny."

Emily Burns will direct the new adaptation of Hay Fever, which is being produced by Wessex Grove and Gavin Kalin Productions.

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Artemis II crew: 'We left as friends – we came back as best friends'

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The four astronauts of Artemis II say their mission gave the world a sense of hope and unity at a time when both feel in short supply.

At their first Nasa news conference since returning last Friday, Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen said they left as friends and came back as something closer – bound by an experience that no earthly language can fully contain.

More than the technical milestones, the mission reminded them of what being human actually means: laughter, joy, tears, and an instinct toward one another that transcends borders.

And their message was clear: Landing on the Moon is not the distant dream it once seemed.

"We wanted to go out and try to do something that would bring the world together, to unite the world," Wiseman told reporters at Nasa's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

"We were certainly hooked on this mission, but when we came home, we were shocked at the global outpouring of support, of pride, of ownership of this mission… we want to thank the world. Thank you for tuning in."

He singled out the Orion spacecraft – named Integrity – and the Space Launch System as a symbol of what international partnership can still produce.

"Thank you to every single person that had a hand in building that machine," he said, "because it was a magnificent machine."

Artemis II carried its crew further from Earth than any humans have ever gone, swinging around the far side of the Moon in just over nine days. Victor Glover became the first black astronaut to reach deep space; Christina Koch the first woman; Jeremy Hansen the first Canadian.

For Koch, the scale of what they had done only became clear through others' eyes when her husband told her on a video call that the mission had cut through divisions and united people. She found herself undone.

"When my husband looked me in the eye on that video call and said, 'No, really, you've made a difference'," she told reporters, "it brought tears to my eyes, and I said, that's all we ever wanted."

Glover talked about it being an experience shared by the entire world.

"I think something that we all feel and we try to share is how much we want to reflect back to you all how we did this, not we as a crew, we as countries and as humans did this," he said.

Thinking about that, he said, brought to mind "the picture of the Earth as we started to go farther" as they traveled close to the moon and how they talked about "looking at you and how beautiful Earth is".

Hansen found that returning to Earth had deepened his faith in people.

"We don't always do great things. We're not always in our integrity, but our default is to be good and to be good to one another," he said. "What I've seen has brought me more joy, but more hope for our future."

Some experiences cannot be processed through rational thought. Wiseman described the moment the Sun passed behind the Moon – an eclipse seen from 250,000 miles away – as something that overwhelmed the capacity of the human mind.

Back on the recovery ship, he sought out the chaplain, needing a way to express what he had experienced that science had not given him.

"I'm not really a religious person," he said, "but there was just no other avenue for me to explain anything or to experience anything. So I asked for the chaplain on the Navy ship… and I broke down in tears.

"I don't think humanity has evolved to the point of being able to comprehend what we're looking at right now, because it was otherworldly."

Beyond the emotional weight, there was sheer visual wonder. Hansen found himself transfixed by the depth of space, as though seeing it for the first time. "We just saw so many amazing things," he said. "I kept seeing this depth to the galaxy that I just had never experienced before."

He described feeling "infinitesimally small, but yet this very powerful feeling as a human being, like as a group."

As the news conference wore on, the room filled with laughter. Koch described being so conditioned by weightlessness that back on Earth she had dropped a shirt expecting it to float – and was startled when it fell.

"I put a shirt in the air and it went – it actually surprised me," she said.

Not everything ran smoothly. The crew were candid about a persistent blockage in the toilet's primary vent line, saying it got "clogged up".

The Orion capsule, though, impressed its crew profoundly. And Wiseman, reflecting on how close they had come to the lunar surface, made a remark that will resonate in every Nasa planning room.

"If we had a first flight lander on board that thing," he said, "I know at least three of my crewmates would have been in it, trying to land on the Moon."

He chose his next words carefully, perhaps leaving out the word "giant" as a nod to the first words spoken on the lunar surface.

"It is not the leap I thought it was," he said. "Once we're around the Moon, in the vacuum of space, we've got a vehicle that's handling great. If you had given us two keys to the lander, we would have taken it down and landed on that Moon."

Time and again, the missions that matter most put a human face on the cosmos, allowing those watching from Earth to feel they too were along for the ride. Artemis II did that, through four people willing to cry in public, laugh about kicking each other in their sleep, and say that what they found out there was hope.

President John F Kennedy said America chose to go to the Moon "not because it was easy but because it was hard". This crew fits right in with the Apollo heritage.

"All of the what-ifs," said Koch, "all of the just coming up with every possible operational workaround for anything you might encounter – accomplishing the near impossible is exactly what we do, and what we just showed that we can do."

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Champions League in the Championship? Forest's juggling act goes on

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Morgan Gibbs-White scored the only goal on Thursday night against Porto

Championship game on a Saturday, Champions League match on a Tuesday?

While Nottingham Forest bask in the glory of Thursday's victory over Porto in the Europa League quarter-finals, their position in the Premier League means their short and medium-term future remains somewhat complicated.

Forest's battling 1-0 win to secure a 2-1 victory on aggregate means they will play Aston Villa in their first European semi-final for 42 years.

The winners of that all-English tie will head to Istanbul for the final on 20 May – against either Freiburg or Braga – as favourites.

And victory in Turkey will not only earn silverware but a spot in next season's Champions League.

Before that, however, they face crucial league fixtures against Burnley and Sunderland. If results in those games and elsewhere go against them, they could be in the relegation zone by the time that last-four tie with Villa arrives.

Despite being on their best unbeaten run of the season, could Forest really end up playing the likes of Bristol City and Real Madrid in the same week next season?

Villa & Forest progress – relive eight iconic all-English European ties

Winning the Europa League was a target for Forest at the start of the season, having spent around £180m on new players.

Owner Evangelos Marinakis was looking to build on last season's seventh-place finish, when Forest missed out on the Champions League on the final day.

Four managers – Nuno Espirito Santo, Ange Postecoglou, Sean Dyche and now Vitor Pereira – later and it remains realistic despite the self-inflicted chaos this season.

Postecoglou lifted the Europa League with Tottenham last May and told his Forest players he wanted to defend the trophy after he replaced Nuno in September.

During his 39 days in charge, Forest drew their opener 2-2 at Real Betis before a damaging 3-2 home defeat by Midtjylland saw fans turn on the Australian, who was sacked after seven winless games.

Dyche fared little better, although he at least guided Forest out of the Europa League group phase, but the turbulent nature of the season means Pereira must now balance domestic and European goals into May.

"They can do both [win the Europa League and stay up]," former England international Karen Carney told TNT Sports.

"The point against Aston Villa in the Premier League, this moment tonight finding themselves in the Europa League semi-finals, Burnley on Sunday… this could be a turning point for them this week."

Sunday's visit of Burnley remains key to Premier League safety with Forest having navigated three of their potentially season-defining games in the past seven days.

Pereira showed his hand both in his team selection and post-match comments after the first leg draw at Porto last week.

A much-changed side, including young defender Zach Abbott, Morato and Chris Wood's first appearance for six months after injury, underlined where the priorities were.

Sunday's 1-1 draw against Aston Villa, when Portuguese manager Pereira made nine changes to return to his strongest Premier League side, justified the minor gamble in Porto.

"The club said to me the priority is to keep the club in in the Premier League," said the former Wolves boss after the game in Portugal. "I agree. For the supporters, for everybody, for the club, for everybody. It's a disaster if we go to the Championship.

"We are competing with West Ham, Tottenham and Leeds and it's not easy to compete with these kind of clubs.

"If we are not in the Premier League, it will be a disaster and this is a disaster I don't want to have responsibility for.

"Of course, I want to win [the Europa League]. I had it as an assistant coach. We won the Europa League [with Porto in 2011] but I want to win it as a head coach.

"I want to keep my club in Premier League and to fight to achieve the final."

Forest have six games left as they look to beat the drop – potentially helping to relegate Tottenham for the first time since 1977 in the process.

Yet, if the worst happens, how will they juggle the relentless nature of the Championship with European football?

To give an idea of how the two schedules collide, Champions League teams played six fixtures in the league phase before Christmas, while there were five midweek Championship rounds during the same period.

All five of those Championship rounds coincided with Champions League games. There is no leeway.

Europe's elite competition expanded to 36 teams from last season. Add the Carabao Cup to that fixture list and it is a packed schedule that looks almost unmanageable.

League games – with English Football League clubs playing 46 in a campaign – would likely need to be postponed and moved. It would seem an impossible task.

Ipswich played in the Uefa Cup while competing in the second tier in 2002-03 having also played in the competition while in the Premier League the season before

Forest would not be a unique case of playing in Europe while in the second tier but they would certainly have more fixture congestion than previous teams, who faced fewer games in past versions of European competition.

In 2011, Birmingham stunned Arsenal to win the League Cup when Obafemi Martins' late goal earned the Blues their first major trophy.

Yet they were relegated from the Premier League three months later and faced the Europa League in the Championship.

The finished third in Group H, behind Club Brugge and Braga, to exit the competition despite losing just two of their six games and winning 10 points.

Their victory over Club Brugge in Belgium coming courtesy of a stoppage-time winner from current Forest striker Chris Wood.

Wigan Athletic followed two years later when they won the FA Cup and were relegated. They finished bottom of Group D which included Rubin Kazan, Maribor and Zulte Waregem.

Ipswich also reached the Uefa Cup despite being relegated from the Premier League in 2001-02 after they qualified via Uefa's Fair Play League.

All of the English teams above them in the Fair Play League had already made other European competitions.

While in the Championship they lost on penalties to Slovan Liberec in the second round, while Millwall – FA Cup runners up in 2004 – lost in the knockout stage to Ferencvaros in 2004-05.

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Why 'sensational' Palace & Conference League are good fit

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Crystal Palace are now three games away from European glory

Almost a year ago Crystal Palace fans experienced a day they will have felt could never be topped.

On Saturday, 17 May 2025, their side famously beat Manchester City to win the FA Cup – a first major trophy success in their 120-year history as a professional club.

It was a once-in-a-life-time moment for those connected with the Eagles – but they will now be pinching themselves once again as they find themselves just one step away from a first major European final appearance.

Making their debut in this competition, Palace booked a meeting with Shakhtar Donetsk in the Conference League semi-finals after overcoming Italians Fiorentina over two legs.

They lost the second leg on Thursday 2-1 but after winning the opener 3-0 at Selhurst Park, the fans who had travelled to Italy were determined not to let anything spoil their party.

Palace goalkeeper Dean Henderson summed up the feeling as he told TNT Sports: "This is unbelievable for this football club, sensational when you think of the FA Cup last season and then to keep going and create a new chapter in the book.

"The togetherness in the group is phenomenal and at the business end of the season, we come together.

"We've just got to keep pushing on and build momentum."

Palace hold off Fiorentina fightback to reach semis

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Crystal Palace fans travelled in big numbers to Fiorentina

When the Conference League was first introduced back in 2021 there were some who questioned the value of the competition.

But it has offered many teams the chance to do something they had never done before – win a major European trophy.

There were wild scenes of celebration when Roma became the inaugural winners, while the following year West Ham claimed a dramatic last-minute success against Fiorentina to end their 43-year wait for a major trophy.

Thousands gathered in the streets of east London to welcome back the victorious Hammers, underlining how much the win meant to the club and their supporters.

Palace fans will no doubt feel the same should their side go all the way and claim yet more silverware in a memorable 12 months.

Former Crystal Palace defender James Tomkins said on TNT Sports: "The last couple of seasons have been incredible.

"They never expected to be in a European competition a couple of seasons ago but now they are going from strength to strength in this competition.

"They will feel they can go all the way."

Midway through this season, though, it looked like things were derailing for Palace.

The man who had led them to their FA Cup triumph, Oliver Glasner, seemed on the verge of leaving after criticising the club's ownership in January for "abandoning" the team.

Palace were on a poor run of form at the time which had seen them drop down the table, while they finished 10th in the Conference League group phase.

On 16 January Glasner stated he would leave at the end of the season when his contract expired – an announcement that left Palace fans concerned about the rest of the campaign.

But after that confirmation and Glasner remaining in the post, the club's form steadily improved. After beating Zrinjski Mostar over two legs in their Conference League play-off, they have since beaten AEK Larnaca and now Fiorentina to reach the last four.

Key to their form in Europe has been striker Ismaila Starr, who scored his seventh goal in the competition in Thursday's 2-1 loss.

Five of those seven goals have come since February, while he has scored 17 in all competitions.

"The variety of goals he scores are key," said ex-Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott.

"He has always scored good goals but the less glamorous ones that are equally important, he has added them to his game."

Ismaila Sarr has scored seven goals in 10 Conference League games this season

Despite being debutants, Palace were installed as favourites to win the Conference League at the start of the season.

It took a while for them to live up to that tag, with many of their performances in Europe looking somewhat turgid.

But their 3-0 win against Fiorentina – two-time finalists in the Conference League – showed what they are capable of.

Next up for Palace is a two-legged semi-final with Shakhtar, with Strasbourg facing Rayo Vallecano in the other tie.

"They made light work of them [Fiorentina] really, but from here on in they will expect some really tough games, there is some good quality in the competition," added Tomkins.

"The question is whether they can bring the positivity from the first leg. That was the best I've seen them for a while, the three-week break did them the world of good and they looked like the team we saw early this season and last season."

The season will end with Glasner's departure, but it could also end with a European prize.

"Of course, that is what we all want," said the Austrian.

"We want to enjoy our life together, not just the football. The more successful you are, the more you enjoy your life.

"When you play the semi-final, you want to get it all at the end and that's what we will go for."

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