Chuck Norris, the martial arts grandmaster and action star whose roles in “Walker, Texas Ranger” and other television shows and movies made him an iconic tough guy — sparking internet parodies and adoration from presidents — has died at 86.
Norris died Thursday, in what his family described as a “sudden passing.”
“While we would like to keep the circumstances private, please know that he was surrounded by his family and was at peace,” the family said in a statement posted to social media.
Before he would become a star in movies and on TV, Norris was wildly successful in competitive martial arts. He was a six-time undefeated World Professional Middleweight Karate champion. He also founded his own Korean-based American hard style of karate, known sometimes as Chun Kuk Do, and the United Fighting Arts Federation, which has awarded more than 3,300 Chuck Norris System black belts worldwide. Black Belt magazine ultimately credited Norris in its hall of fame with holding a 10th degree black belt, the highest possible honor.
Advertisement
Born Carlos Ray Norris in Ryan, Oklahoma, on March 10, 1940, he grew up poor. At age 12, he moved with his family to Torrance, California, and joined the U.S. Air Force after high school, in 1958. It was during a deployment to Korea that he started training in martial arts, including judo and Tang Soo Do.
Chuck Norris, actor, mixed-martial arts champion and Air Force veteran, speaks during a promotional tour of “The Delta Force” movie in San Francisco on Feb. 4, 1986. (Steve Ringman/San Francisco Chronicle via AP, File)
Advertisement
Chuck Norris, actor, mixed-martial arts champion and Air Force veteran, speaks during a promotional tour of “The Delta Force” movie in San Francisco on Feb. 4, 1986. (Steve Ringman/San Francisco Chronicle via AP, File)
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
“I went out for gymnastics and football at North Torrance high,” he told The Associated Press in 1982. “I played some football, but I also spent a lot of time on the bench. I was never really athletic until I was in the service in Korea.”
Advertisement
AP AUDIO: Chuck Norris, martial arts master and actor whose toughness became internet lore, dies at 86
AP’s Lisa Dwyer reports on the death of a beloved action star.
After he was honorably discharged in 1962, he worked as a file clerk for Northrop Aircraft and applied to be a police officer, but was put on a waitlist. Meanwhile, he opened a martial arts studio, which expanded to a chain, with students including such stars as Bob Barker, Priscilla Presley, Donny and Marie Osmond, and Steve McQueen, whom he later credited with encouraging him to get into acting.
Advertisement
From one studio to another
Norris made his film debut as an uncredited bodyguard in the 1968 movie “The Wrecking Crew,” which included a fight with Dean Martin. He had also crossed paths with Bruce Lee in martial arts circles. Their friendship — sometimes, as sparring partners — led to an iconic faceoff in the 1972 movie “Return of the Dragon,” in which Lee fights and kills Norris’ character in Rome’s Colosseum.
He went on to act in more than 20 movies, such as “Missing in Action,” “The Delta Force” and “Sidekicks.”
“I wanted to project a certain image on the screen of a hero. I had seen a lot of anti-hero movies in which the lead was neither good nor bad. There was no one to root for,” Norris said in 1982.
Advertisement
Chuck Norris speaks to reporters during a media availability before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, on Nov. 6, 2016. (AP Photo/Larry Papke, File)
Advertisement
Chuck Norris speaks to reporters during a media availability before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, on Nov. 6, 2016. (AP Photo/Larry Papke, File)
Advertisement
Advertisement
In 1993, he took on his most famed role, as a crime-fighting lawman in TV’s “Walker, Texas Ranger.” The show ran for nine seasons, and in 2010, then-Gov. Rick Perry awarded him the title of honorary Texas Ranger. The Texas Senate later named him an honorary Texan.
“It’s not violence for violence’s sake, with no moral structure,” Norris told the AP in 1996, speaking about the show. “You try to portray the proper meaning of what it’s about — fighting injustice with justice, good vs. bad. … It’s entertaining for the whole family.”
Advertisement
Norris also made a surprise comedic appearance as a decisive judge in the final match of the 2004 movie “Dodgeball.” He only on occasion had taken acting roles in recent years, including 2012’s “The Expendables 2” and the 2024 sci-fi action movie “Agent Recon.” He’s due to appear in “Zombie Plane,” an upcoming film starring Vanilla Ice.
A toy Oscar is left on the Hollywood Walk of Fame star of the late actor Chuck Norris, who died Thursday at 86, Friday, March 20, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
Advertisement
A toy Oscar is left on the Hollywood Walk of Fame star of the late actor Chuck Norris, who died Thursday at 86, Friday, March 20, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Chuck Norris: the man, the meme, the legend
It was around the time of “Dodgeball” that his toughman image became the stuff of legend, literally: “Chuck Norris Facts” went viral online with such wildly hyperbolic statements as, “Chuck Norris had a staring contest with the sun — and won,” and, “They wanted to put Chuck Norris on Mt. Rushmore, but the granite wasn’t tough enough for his beard.”
Norris ultimately embraced the absurdity of the meme craze, putting together “The Official Chuck Norris Fact Book,” which combined his favorites with supposedly true stories and the codes he aimed to live by. He would also write books on martial arts instruction, a memoir, political takes, Civil War-era historical fiction and more.
“To some who know little of my martial arts or film careers but perhaps grew up with ‘Walker, Texas Ranger,’ it seems that I have become a somewhat mythical superhero icon,” Norris wrote in the forward to the “Fact Book.” “I am flattered and humbled.”
That book raised money for a nonprofit he founded with President George H.W. Bush that promoted martial arts instruction for kids.
Advertisement
Then a Republican presidential hopeful, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, right, appears with actor Chuck Norris on Jan. 20, 2008, in Navasota, Texas. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan, File)
Advertisement
Then a Republican presidential hopeful, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, right, appears with actor Chuck Norris on Jan. 20, 2008, in Navasota, Texas. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan, File)
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
The intentionally outlandish statements featured in the 2008 Republican presidential primary, when Norris endorsed Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and shot an ad playing on the “Chuck Norris facts.”
Advertisement
“Chuck Norris doesn’t endorse. He tells America how it’s going to be,” Huckabee said in the campaign ad.
President Donald Trump’s supporters later promoted “Trump Facts” in the same vein, and political pundits tried it as well, describing the commander-in-chief’s decision to seize Venezuela’s sitting president, Nicolas Maduro, as a “Chuck Norris Moment,” and its initial effect on oil prices a “Chuck Norris Premium.”
Norris was outspoken about his Christian beliefs and his support for gun rights, and backed political candidates for years — he even went skydiving with Bush for the former president’s 80th birthday. As for Trump, Norris endorsed him in the 2016 general election and wrote guest columns praising him without explicitly endorsing him in the days before the 2020 and 2024 elections.
Norris is survived by five children: stunt performers Mike and Eric with his late ex-wife Dianne Holechek, twins Dakota and Danilee with his wife Gena Norris, and Dina, the result of an early 1960s “one-night stand” revealed in his autobiography.
Advertisement
Norris celebrated his birthday just over a week before his death, posting a sparring video on Instagram.
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian military personnel have shot down Iranian-designed Shahed drones in multiple Middle Eastern countries during the Iran war, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, describing the operations as part of a broader effort to help partners counter the same weapons used by Russia in Ukraine.
Zelenskyy made his first public acknowledgment of the operations Wednesday in remarks to reporters that were embargoed until Friday. He said Ukrainian forces took part in active operations abroad using domestically produced interceptor drones proven in countering Iranian-designed Shahed drones used by Russia in Ukraine.
“This was not about a training mission or exercises, but about support in building a modern air defense system that can actually work,” Zelenskyy said.
Ukraine took part in the defensive operations before the tentative ceasefire in the Middle East was reached among Iran, the United States and Israel this week.
Advertisement
Zelenskyy did not identify the countries involved but said Ukrainian personnel operated across several nations, helping strengthen their air defense systems. He previously said that 228 Ukrainian experts were deployed in the region.
In exchange, Ukraine is receiving weapons to protect its energy infrastructure, along with oil, diesel and, in some cases, financial arrangements, he said.
The Ukrainian leader said the agreements would bolster Ukraine’s energy stability and described the partnerships as something that would “be marketed” as Kyiv seeks to formalize and expand its defense export role.
“We are helping strengthen their security in exchange for contributions to our country’s resilience,” he said. “This is far more than simply receiving money.”
Advertisement
Ukraine will face more pressure
The disclosure comes amid concerns that conflict in the Middle East could divert Western military support from Ukraine, particularly air defense supplies.
But Zelenskyy said that partners were continuing to supply missiles for Patriot systems, adding that a new batch had arrived in recent days and that Ukraine was working with all partners to ensure its air defense remained in place.
He warned that the coming spring and summer would be difficult for Ukraine, with growing political and battlefield pressure as the United States turns to domestic politics and elections.
Zelenskyy said he had urged U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to visit Kyiv and proposed a trilateral format with Moscow. It remains unclear whether they will come or if talks will instead take place in a third country.
Advertisement
U.S.-led talks have made no progress on key issues, as Washington’s attention shifts to the Middle East conflict while Russian and Ukrainian forces remain locked in fighting along the roughly 1,250-kilometer (800-mile) front line.
Advertisement
Sign up for Morning Wire:
Our flagship newsletter breaks down the biggest headlines of the day.
Separately, Zelenskyy said he expects Western allies to restore full sanctions on Russian oil, warning that any easing could allow Moscow to sustain its war effort and offload key energy assets. Russia has been profiting from a surge in global energy prices, brought on by damage to oil and gas infrastructure in the Gulf and Iran’s blocking of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital sea route for global oil supplies.
Advertisement
Ukraine has stepped up strikes on Russian energy sites to cut oil revenues as prices rose and U.S. sanctions eased. Zelenskyy said partners had urged Kyiv to scale back attacks during Iran’s disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, but he argued Russian oil has a limited impact on global markets.
“I won’t say who asked us to do this. But partners did ask — it’s a fact. They asked at different levels, from political to military leadership.”
Putin declares Easter truce and Ukraine ready to reciprocate
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine is ready to mirror any ceasefire steps after Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a temporary Easter truce.
“We proposed a ceasefire during the Easter holidays this year and will act accordingly”, Zelenskyy said Friday on X. “People need an Easter free from threats and real movement toward peace, and Russia has a chance not to return to strikes after Easter as well”.
Advertisement
Putin on Thursday declared a 32-hour ceasefire over the Orthodox Easter weekend, ordering Russian forces to halt hostilities from 4 p.m. Saturday until the end of Sunday.
Previous ceasefire attempts have had little impact, with both sides accusing each other of violations.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described Putin’s move as a “humanitarian” gesture, but said Moscow remains focused on a comprehensive settlement based on its longstanding demands — a key sticking point that has prevented the two sides from reaching an agreement.
Peskov also confirmed that Putin’s envoy, Kirill Dmitriev, is in the United States for meetings focused on economic issues. He noted that Dmitriev is conducting the meetings within the framework of a group on economic issues that he has led, adding that he is not involved in the talks on the war in Ukraine and his trip “doesn’t mean the resumption of the talks.”
Advertisement
Dmitriev’s visit to the U.S. comes just before the termination of the 30-day sanctions waiver for Russian oil.
The incident occurred on the Ravenhill Road in the city on Thursday evening, April 9
A man has been taken to hospital after being punched and then attacked on the ground during an assault in Belfast.
Advertisement
Police are appealing for information following the attack which took place at around 11.40pm in the Ravenhill Road area on Thursday evening, April 9, when a man was reportedly punched in the face and then assaulted as he lay on the ground by another male. The victim suffered facial injuries and had to be taken to hospital for treatment.
Police are asking anyone who may have information regarding the attack or dashcam footage of the area at the time to contact them.
Detective Sergeant Stevenson said: “It was reported at around 11.40pm that a man was punched in the face and assaulted as he lay on the ground by another male.
Advertisement
“The victim sustained facial injuries as a result of the incident, and was taken to hospital for treatment.
“Our enquiries are ongoing, and we are asking anyone who witnessed what happened, or who might have any information which might assist, to get in touch. We would be particularly keen to hear from anyone who might have any dash cam footage which might assist.
“The number to call is 101, quoting reference number 1789 of 09/04/26.
“You can also submit a report or information online using the non-emergency reporting form via www.psni.police.uk/makeareport, or contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or online at www.crimestoppers-uk.org/.”
WASHINGTON (AP) — Since the ceasefire between Iran and the U.S. was announced, leaders in President Donald Trump’s administration have been quick to say Iranian military and arms capacity have been all but wiped out during weeks of fighting.
But there is also an acknowledgment that Tehran retains some capabilities, whether to strike back or defend itself.
Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, this week said the U.S. military has hit more than 13,000 targets. He listed high percentages for attacks or destruction to Iran’s air defenses, navy and weapons factories.
Independent data from Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, a U.S.-based group that tracks conflicts around the world, shows Iranian strikes persisted at a relatively steady and uninterrupted pace since the war began Feb. 28 through Wednesday.
Here’s a look at what the U.S. says has been targeted, has been degraded or remains from Iran, by the numbers:
About 80% of Iran’s air defense systems ‘destroyed’
Caine told reporters Wednesday at the Pentagon that the U.S. has struck more than 1,500 air defense targets, more than 450 ballistic missile storage facilities and 800 one-way attack drone storage facilities. He said, “All of these systems are gone.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth similarly claimed that “Iran no longer has an air defense” and that “we own their skies” before conceding soon afterward that Iran “can still shoot — we know that.”
Advertisement
Hegseth later elaborated, saying that while the Iranians may “have a system here or there,” they no longer had an air defense “system that’s capable of defending their skies.”
Neither Caine nor Hegseth said what the remaining 20% of Iran’s air defenses looked like or which parts of the country have the ability to carry out the sporadic fire they described.
Caine offered no new details about what kind of weapon the Iranians used to shoot down a U.S. F-15E Strike Eagle last week. It was the first time an American military jet was shot down during the war, showing Tehran’s continued ability to hit back despite assertions from the Trump administration.
Trump described it on Monday as a “handheld shoulder missile, heat-seeking missile.”
Advertisement
More than 90% of Iran’s regular Navy fleet ‘sunk’
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Wednesday that the Iranian navy was “completely annihilated.”
While 150 Iranian ships “are at the bottom of the ocean,” Caine said, only half the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard’s small attack boats — ships the government used to swarm and harass warships and merchants in the Strait of Hormuz — have been sunk.
Caine also said that after more than 700 strikes, the military believed it has destroyed more than 95% of Iran’s naval mines.
Advertisement
Sign up for Morning Wire:
Our flagship newsletter breaks down the biggest headlines of the day.
Advertisement
Since the U.S. has not said how large Iran’s stockpile was before the war, it’s unknown how many naval mines make up the remaining 5%. Semiofficial news agencies in Iran published a chart Thursday suggesting the Revolutionary Guard put sea mines into the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial trade route for oil, during the war.
Caine said Wednesday that the military “destroyed Iran’s defense industrial base” while pointing to the fact that the U.S. and allies attacked “approximately 90% of their weapons factories.”
Advertisement
He also said, “nearly 80% of Iran’s nuclear industrial base was hit, further degrading their attempts to attain a nuclear weapon.”
While he noted that Iran was no longer able to produce certain components like solid rocket motors, he stopped short of saying that Iran could not eventually rebuild or get weapons in other ways or that the factories attacked had actually been destroyed or rendered unusable.
Trump acknowledged this possibility when he warned countries against arming Iran.
“A Country supplying Military Weapons to Iran will be immediately tariffed, on any and all goods sold to the United States of America, 50%, effective immediately,” Trump said in a social media post on Wednesday.
Advertisement
More than 90% interception rate in Israel
Meanwhile, Israel’s military pointed to how many drones or missiles it has been able to stop from landing. It said it had an interception rate of more than 90% through its aerial defense systems.
Over the decades, Israel has developed a sophisticated system capable of detecting incoming fire and deploying only if a projectile is headed toward a population center or sensitive military or civilian infrastructure.
Israeli leaders say the system isn’t 100% guaranteed but credit it with preventing serious damage and countless casualties.
___
Advertisement
Associated Press writer Sam Mednick in Tel Aviv, Israel, contributed to this report.
As a result, a return to winning ways after three league games without one is imperative for Arne Slot’s side, especially with Chelsea facing Manchester City and Brentford facing Everton across the weekend.
Fulham, meanwhile, are very much in contention to qualify for Europe – whether that be the Europa League or the Conference League – and head to Merseyside in decent form having won three of their last five league matches.
Date, kick-off time and venue
Liverpool vs Fulham is scheduled for a 5.30pm BST kick-off on Saturday, April 11, 2026.
Advertisement
The match will take place at Anfield, in Liverpool.
Where to watch Liverpool vs Fulham
TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised live on Sky Sports. Coverage starts at 5pm BST on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Premier League.
Live stream: Sky Sports subscribers can also catch the contest live online via the Sky Go app.
Advertisement
Live blog: You can follow all the action on matchday via Standard Sport’s live blog.
Liverpool vs Fulham team news
Liverpool will be without Alisson Becker once again through injury, while Conor Bradley, Giovanni Leoni and Wataru Endo are long-term absentees.
Kenny Tete, Harrison Reed have been ruled out, as has Fulham’s club-record signing Kevin after undergoing successful surgery on an injury to his fifth metatarsal last month.
Advertisement
Calvin Bassey, however, is fit having recovered from a back problem that forced him to pull out of the Nigeria squad during the international break.
Mohamed Salah could return for Liverpool against Fulham
Liverpool FC via Getty Images
Liverpool vs Fulham prediction
Advertisement
Liverpool will need to regain a spark in the Premier League having gone three games without a win. Facing a Fulham side more than capable of getting a result makes this a tricky test for the hosts.
Though, confirmation that a top-five finish will earn Champions League qualification should ease the pressure on Slot who continues to face speculation regarding his future.
We expect Liverpool to have too much quality for Fulham and secure a much-needed win to boost confidence going into a season-defining week.
Head to head (h2h) history and results
Advertisement
Arne Slot, as Liverpool head coach, is yet to record a win over Marco Silva and Fulham in three attempts, drawing two and losing one.
The co-owner said they want guests to feels as though they have been “transported to an island”
A venue offering crazy golf with a karaoke and cocktail bar that feels as though you have been “transported to an island” is set to open in a Cambridgeshire town where there is “nothing quite like it”. Starting renovation in December last year, Volcano Valley is due to open on Saturday, April 11, in Wisbech.
Advertisement
The venue will open in the former Frankie & Benny’s unit on Cromwell Leisure Park in Wisbech. Developed by Chris Atkins and Chris Gooderson, the new venue will feature indoor crazy golf, a cocktail bar, karaoke rooms, and SMARTS darts. The venue aims to provide a family-friendly daytime activity and an evening venue for adults.
When it came to choosing a location, co-owner Chris Atkins said: “I just looked at it [the site] and thought this would be absolutely perfect”. He added that this business idea was ideal in Wisbech because “there is nothing quite like it in the area”.
He said: “What we find ourselves is whenever we want to go and do something, we end up having to either drive to Cambridge or Norwich or Peterborough to do it, and I thought, how many other people think the same thing.”
Combined with sand flooring, blue ceilings, a tiki bar with a thatched roof, and the golf course, Chris Atkins said that the “second you walk in we want to make you feel transported off to an island”.
Advertisement
The golf course takes you through three zones starting at the beach, going to the jungle, and finishing off at the volcano area. The course is priced at £8.95 for adults and £5.95 for children. The darts will be £25 for each lane per hour and a private karaoke room for guests to sing their hearts away in will be £25 for the hour.
Volcano Valley will be open from 10am to 6pm on Mondays to Thursdays, 10am to 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays, and 10am to 5pm on Sundays.
Locals are divided over England’s first ever cycle street being built in Cambridge. Some say that it offers a ‘sustainable option’, while others believe “there are better things to invest money in”.
The project is hoping to create safer travel for cyclists around the city and is part of the Greater Cambridge Partnerships (GCP) Comberton Greenway.
Work on turning Adams Road into a cycle street started on Monday, October 13, and is expected to take around 30 weeks to complete. The road has been blocked off to cars with signs providing drivers with diversions around the area.
Adams Road is one of the busiest cycle routes in Cambridge and is used by around 3,000 cyclists at peak times. The project aims to improve the safety of cyclists by reducing on-road parking to remove blind spots, redesign junctions, and offer wider footpaths.
Advertisement
Jenna McKone, 33, has lived in Cambridge for five years. She said: “I am always for better cycling infrastructures and I think if we can pair better infrastructure with fixing the main roads for cars that would be ideal.”
Jenna explained that she “loves that Cambridge is a friendly city for cycling” especially because she cycles to most places. On the other hand, she also regularly drives for work, and in general, she likes that money is being spent on cycling infrastructure but “would like to see it equal on other roads”.
Mary Stillman, 21, said that the cycle street “sounds like a pretty good idea” and will contribute to “help traffic flow better”. However, Mary raised concerns about whether it could cause safety hazards for pedestrians and put them at risk.
She added: “I imagine there are better things to invest money in. It will also take a while so there’s a lot of blocks which is quite inconvenient.” The 21-year-old explained that she used to cycle a lot and that the new cycle street would encourage her to start again.
A 25-year-old, Emma Noble, who has lived in Cambridge for over a year, works for a climate organisation. Due to this, she thinks the new cycle route is “really exciting” and said she is looking forward to seeing “more sustainable options”.
Advertisement
Emma is hoping to start cycling again and now there’s a “safer option” for cyclists, it has encouraged her to do so. The 25-year-old believes that it is a “good use of money” and it is “good for the climate and people”. Promoting and creating a cycle street will encourage more people to use a bike rather than a car, she believes.
A lady, gave her name as Kris, commented that she thinks it is a good idea because she believed it is a very bike-orientated city.
Yuening Du is 23 and lives in Cambridge. Yuening believed that it is “causing inconvenience due to the road construction” and it is taking “more time to get to the destination”.
The 23-year-old dislikes that there has been “a lot of noise” made by the construction team. However, she cycles in Cambridge so believes it “is an improvement to have somewhere specific you can cycle”.
Undertone is the terrifying feature film debut from Canadian director Ian Tuason, which promises to be the “scariest movie you will ever hear”.
Evy (Nina Kiri) is a podcast host caring for her dying mother (Michèle Duquet) at home. Told only from Evy’s perspective, the film moves from initially creepy to utterly horrifying over a tense, tight 93-minute running time.
Evy’s Undertone podcast explores supernatural phenomena. Her co-host Justin (Adam DiMarco) is in another time zone, so they record online in the middle of the night, Evy’s time. This veers close to the “witching hour”, but as Evy is the podcast’s resident sceptic – the voice of reason opposing Justin’s belief in the paranormal – she is unbothered. Until she’s not.
For this week’s instalment, Evy and Justin react to a series of mysterious recordings involving a couple: Jessa (Keana Lyn Bastidas), who has begun talking in her sleep, and her husband Mike (Jeff Yung), who records her. These clips lend the story a naturally escalating structure, as the material grows increasingly distressing and the sense of dread intensifies.
Advertisement
As elements from the recordings seep into Evy’s world and her sense of reality begins to shift, Kiri proves superb in the role. Alone onscreen aside from her unconscious mother, she balances a raw fragility with intense emotional control. Kiri carries the film almost entirely, with supporting characters reduced to voices in her headphones or on her phone.
Undertone’s domestic setting has an uncanny familiarity to it, with soft furnishings, lamps and religious artwork bathed in cold, often unpredictably flickering light. Compounding the disquiet is the fact that Tuason used his childhood home in Toronto as his filming location, inspired by caring for his own ailing parents.
The result is an uneasy intimacy which blurs the line between personal memory and horror. This, combined with Evy’s mother’s impending death and the harrowing implications of the audio clips, makes the film a disturbing yet consistently absorbing experience.
Advertisement
At times, though, Tuason leans too heavily on religious iconography to generate unease, diluting some of the originality. The film also flirts with shock value using inherently distressing subject matter, rather than fully earning its impact.
Sound as terror
Sound design is Undertone’s real strength. As podcast host Justin says: “Don’t be afraid of the dark, be afraid of the silence.”
The film captures the sound of podcasting with close, warm, immaculately clear voices and achieves an intimate, studio-polished quality. Building the sense of unease, there are authentic-sounding sleep-talking recordings, nursery rhymes played backwards, exaggerated household noises such as taps and whistling kettles, and prolonged silences.
Other horror films such as Berberian Sound Studio, The Black Phone and Keeper have harnessed the unsettling potential of sound in recent years, exploring the eerie power of disembodied voices.
Advertisement
Vertigo Releasing UK
This is a lineage Undertone joins while carving out a more intimate horror. Tuason’s film also makes narrative use of the podcast hosts’ editing skills to great effect, as they speed up, slow down, reverse and replay the recordings over and over, trying to glean some sense from them. In doing so, sound becomes Undertone’s primary source of terror, placing its audience in the same position as Evy.
Undertone is a confident debut from Tuason, who understands exactly where the film’s power lies. By grounding its horror in voice and sound, the film becomes an experience that feels immediate and inescapable.
In placing us so firmly within Evy’s singular perspective, Undertone crosses the boundary between listener and participant, resulting in a work which fulfils its promise of terror. It is not for the faint of heart.
A new book has been published to mark 100 years since the birth of east Belfast man Danny Blanchflower
10:28, 10 Apr 2026Updated 10:32, 10 Apr 2026
He was born in Belfast, in a place where the streets were narrow and the arguments were not. It was a city that demanded something of you early — a willingness to stand your ground. Danny Blanchflower learned those lessons long before he became a footballer. Identity came first. Football followed.
There is a new book out now — Danny Blanchflower: A Glorious Life by Mike Donovan — published to mark 100 years since his birth. It arrives not as a nostalgic exercise but as a timely reminder. Because Blanchflower does not sit easily in the modern game. He belongs to a different tradition — one where football was never just about the transaction.
Advertisement
He once explained his relationship with the sport in a way that felt disarmingly simple.
Danny Blanchflower never fell out of love with football. “Because I never had illusions to start with.”
There is honesty and a kind of defiance in that. He saw the game clearly — its beauty, its flaws, its limits — and chose to believe in it anyway. Not blindly but deliberately.
For all that clarity, he still spent a career striving for something close to perfection. Not perfection in the modern, statistical sense, but in the way a team should play, the way players should think, the way a dressing room should function.
Advertisement
Donovan’s book sets out to ensure that legacy endures.
“I want to make sure these players are not forgotten,” the author says. “Particularly Danny Blanchflower, because he was the guy who orchestrated everything. The ’61 side was the greatest in Spurs’ history. And he was the leader of that team.”
Leader, though, feels insufficient.
Blanchflower was the axis around which everything turned. He dictated tempo, shaped matches and set standards that went beyond the pitch. He had presence. When he spoke, people listened.
Advertisement
“Football was never about money,” he said.
There is a story, often told, that captures that ethos. At the height of his career, Blanchflower was offered a pay rise. He refused it. Asked for it to be distributed among his team-mates instead. It was a gesture that summed up the collective purpose he believed in.
In 1961, they achieved something that had been considered beyond reach. The League and FA Cup double — the first of the 20th century. It has been repeated since, often enough that it risks feeling routine. But at the time, it was anything but.
Blanchflower believed it could be done before anyone else did.
Advertisement
“He was the first to say it was possible,” Donovan says. “He was adamant.”
What followed was not just success, but a style of success that has endured in memory. Spurs did not simply win. They entertained. They dominated with a kind of elegance that made the game look expansive and generous.
“They crucified teams,” Donovan says, “but did it with style and grace.”
Advertisement
For a brief period, they may have been the finest side in the world. Real Madrid were ageing. Spurs were at their peak. Their European campaign came a year too late to confirm it, but the sense remains.
It was the greatest team in Tottenham’s history.
And at its centre was Blanchflower – one of only four Irishmen to captain an English club to their top division title – Roy Keane, Johnny Carey and Noel Cantwell being the others.
Donovan says: “We’ve had great players — Gascoigne, Klinsmann, Greaves, Bale, Kane,” Donovan says. “But that was our best team. And Blanchflower was the leader. I would say he is the most important player in Spurs’ history.”
Advertisement
He influenced the game in other ways too. He is credited with pioneering the defensive wall at free-kicks, a detail that now feels so embedded it is almost invisible. He thought about the game differently. He looked for solutions others had not yet considered.
And when leadership required words, he found those as well.
Before the 1963 Cup Winners’ Cup final, he felt manager Bill Nicholson had given too much respect to Atletico Madrid. Too much caution. Blanchflower addressed the players himself. He reminded them of their own quality, their own identity.
It was a moment that mattered. Spurs won. The players credited his intervention.
Advertisement
“He could command a room,” Donovan says.
That authority extended beyond club football.
In 1958, Northern Ireland embarked on a World Cup journey that defied expectation. Drawn against stronger, more established nations, they progressed through qualification and then beyond the group stage itself.
Blanchflower, alongside Peter Doherty, helped shape that achievement. It was more than a football story. Catholic and Protestant, different backgrounds and experiences, united by a shared purpose.
Advertisement
They saw off Italy, West Germany, Argentina and Czechoslovakia to reach the quarter-finals. Fatigue ended the run, but not the significance of it.
Blanchflower later returned as manager, motivated by a sense of obligation.
“I owed the game a debt,” he said. “I owed Northern Ireland a debt.”
There was always humour too, often dry, occasionally cutting. When a player asked about a win bonus, he replied: “We have no money and we don’t win matches. Therefore there is no bonus and no problem.”
Advertisement
He died in 1992, his final years affected by Parkinson’s and dementia. There is a sadness in that, an unavoidable one. A man whose life was built on clarity and memory gradually losing both.
But what remains is substantial.
Players are often remembered for moments — goals, trophies, flashes of brilliance. Blanchflower is remembered for what he valued.
That is why Donovan’s book feels important now.
Advertisement
If we don’t write about these heroes, if we don’t remember them, then what have we got?
History matters. Men like Blanchflower created legacies. May that always be remembered. And may he never be forgotten.
DANNY BLANCHFLOWER, A GLORIOUS LIFE The Authorised 100th Anniversary Biography of a Global Football Icon By Mike Donovan Publisher: Pitch Publishing Ltd
Lava flowed from the summit of Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano on Thursday 9 April, with fountains reaching heights of 625ft (190M), according to the United States Geological Survey.
The geological agency said the eruption began at 11:10am local time (21:10 BST).
Kilauea, one of the world’s most active volcanoes, has been erupting on and off since December 2024, this latest eruption marks the 44th episode since then.
Pubs have their dominion, though you do not seek one out for a blade-cold martini any more than you lean on a bar counter hoping for a half of best drawn by hand. When London begins to abrade, a bar can still salvage the hour. Better light, better seating, better company. A drink made by someone who understands temperature, timing, and the difficult art of making a stranger feel briefly restored. Visiting these bars, I found in them not only relief, but proof that London still knows how to receive people properly. It is no accident that eight of the 10 are in hotels. London handles such bars better than most cities because it understands they are not annexes for overnight guests, but some of its finest public rooms.
What stays with me from these bars is not simply what was in the glass, but who stood across it. Thanos and Markus at The Savoy. Angelos Niakas at The Lanesborough. Michele at The Ritz. Simone at GŎNG. Monica at Tayēr + Elementary. Andrea at The Goring. James at Thirteen. Lucas at Dukes. Eder at Gambit. Angelos at Câto. This is not a list of interiors, but a route through London by way of the people who keep teaching it how to drink better, host better, and feel briefly improved. I went to every one. You should do the same.
Everything begins here. Opened in 1893, the American Bar gave London its first enduring grammar of mixed drinks, though it was Ada Coleman, running the room from 1903 to 1926, who turned bartending into authorship. The hanky panky was her calling card. Made for the actor Sir Charles Hawtrey, who asked for something with a bit more punch, it arrived with gin, sweet vermouth and Fernet-Branca, and left him exclaiming, “By Jove! That is the real hanky-panky.”
What matters is not only the anecdote, but what it shows: Coleman was not simply mixing drinks, she was writing character into the glass. When I visited, that sense of lineage still held. Thanos Tzanetopoulos ran the room with the ease of a man who makes difficulty vanish before it reaches the guest, while Markus Basset, guiding the wider drinks programme, kept the line between inheritance and living relevance taut. Sit at the slim run of stools and the American Bar still feels like the source, not a preserved artefact.
The Library Bar, The Lanesborough
Advertisement
Press handout
The Lanesborough has all the credentials one could ask of Hyde Park Corner — leather, chandeliers, stature, one of the capital’s grand addresses — though the Library Bar works as more than a handsome room. The martini trolley reduces luxury to first principles: temperature, dilution, garnish, each handled with absolute assurance, while the back bar extends to pre-phylloxera Cognacs and ancient Scotch. Still, what stays with me is Angelos Niakas, sometimes known as the Fallen Angel. He arrived from Greece in 2018, began polishing glasses, then rose to run the room. I met him after he had seen off a table of Texans at 4am, yet the welcome never faltered. His drinks arrive fully resolved, including his negroni charentaise, sharpened with brandy and served in a coupe. Then come the details which make you want to return: martini sundays, his corgi, Mayfair, and Lilibet, the cherished Siberian Forest cat who is part of the address itself. In lesser hands, this bar might have remained handsome but remote. Niakas makes it land.
Press handout
The Rivoli Bar, in its current form, has occupied its gilded corner since 2001, though the bigger story is that The Ritz has never been content to coast on pedigree alone. Investment continues, new wings are being added, and the hotel remains bent on preserving its top rank by strengthening it. When I visited, Michele Saladino held the room with technical authority and charm. Behind the scenes sits a formidable preparation lab producing distillates, tinctures and calibrated batches, allowing the team to serve up to 500 guests a day from the minute counter without losing rhythm. The Ritz 110 still delivered its gold-flecked flourish, now poured more than a thousand times each month, though beneath the glitter sat real method. Saladino’s newer drinks, referencing the biodynamic calendar, show the same reach: mars drawing saffron-redistilled gin through Campari, Antica Formula and aged sherry, moon building a Martini line from pear eau-de-vie, Manzanilla and white miso. It is a bar which preserves the aura of The Ritz while proving it has no wish to live on inheritance alone.
GŎNG, Shangri-La The Shard
Press handout
Bars with panoramic views often lean too heavily on the glass, as if altitude alone were enough. GŎNG, which opened in 2014 on the 52nd floor of The Shard, works because the drinks keep pace with the outlook. When I ascended, Simone Ghiozzi brought the assurance of someone who has spent much of his London career close to the river, the city’s lifeline. Buckwheat had a nutty lift. Flower bent the French 75 through chrysanthemum and tea with grace. Best of all, perhaps, was sugar cane, made with cane pressed each morning from Borough Market, which gave the drink a snap no bottle could fake. Then there is the improbable shard-side myth which suits the site so well: during construction, a fox made its way near the top of the building, surviving on scraps left by workers. Only London could produce a story so absurd, and a bar so suited to it — urban, vertiginous, ridiculous, yet wholly persuasive.
Advertisement
Tayēr + Elementary, Old Street
Tayer & Elementary
When Tayēr + Elementary opened in 2019, Monica Berg and Alex Kratena did more than unveil a new address beside a demonic roundabout. They reset the tempo of modern London drinking. I went to see both halves in action because the split is the point. Elementary, at the front, is bright, brisk, and immediate, built for draught cocktails, quick pleasure and the sort of appetite which arrives before overthinking does. This is where the one sip martini belongs — tiny, freezing, complete; its vodka, Fino sherry, Ambrato vermouth and Gorgonzola-stuffed olive making their point at once. Tayēr, behind, moves differently. Darker, tighter, more focused, it centres on a bespoke bar system and drinks of far greater intricacy. Together they form one of the clearest statements any London bar has made in years, and Monica’s exacting influence runs through both.
Nick Rochowski Photography
The Goring Bar, refreshed in 2019 and revisited in 2024, succeeds not through novelty but tone. When I took my comfy swivelling stool amid the plaster mermaids and mermen, with the garden softening the room beyond, it felt at once welcoming and properly formed. Andrea Ferrante has understood exactly what this bar should be. At the start of the menu sits a prompt, complete with mirror, asking guests to describe themselves and let the team build something around them. Even the pink flamingo (Chambord, Italicus, fig liqueur, jasmine and Champagne) reads like the first drink of a very good day, bright and scented and entirely unembarrassed by its own charm. It is one of the friendliest counters in London, and all the better for it.
Thirteen at Chateau Denmark
Advertisement
Press handout
Thirteen arrived with dial8 on Denmark Street in February 2023 and, on visiting, what struck me most was how fully it belonged to Soho rather than merely borrowing its old voltage. James Warren, formerly of the Groucho Club, is central to that. Upstairs, Thirteen runs on music, appetite and late-hour propulsion. Downstairs, dial8 takes the register darker and pushes further into the small hours. Beyond the bars, Chateau Denmark stretches across 16 buildings and 44 bedrooms, with in-room “maxi bars” which tell you a good deal about the house appetite. The whole site feels less like a single venue than a fresh district folded into Soho’s bloodstream. Warren gives it exactly the social intelligence it needs to stop the concept slipping into fancy dress.
The Delany Drawing Room, Dukes
Press handout
Opened in December 2025, The Delany Drawing Room gave Dukes a second axis beyond the martini bar next door, and, after visiting, I came away thinking it may now be the finer room in the building. Elegant Lucas Paterson is a large part of the reason. Under his watch, whisky and darker spirits are handled with assurance and ease, through accessibly priced flights presented on oak staves, and a take on the negroni from a 10-litre cask in the room itself. The guiding figure is Mary Delany, the 18th-century artist and letter writer famed for her extraordinarily exact botanical collages, and that spirit of close observation runs through the entire proposition. Meanwhile, in the foyer, people still queue for martinis like puddings waiting to be spooned, seemingly unaware that the more interesting bar may be the one they have just wandered past.
Helen Cathcart
Gambit opened with The Newman in February 2026. Beneath the hotel, Eder Neto has made a vast, Art Deco-leaning room feel open rather than submerged, and that ease carries into the list. His background runs from Hakkasan to the opening team at The Standard London, with the added distinction of becoming Britain’s first certified sake sommelier. Most striking is the fact that each alcoholic cocktail has a non-alcoholic counterpart built as a drink in its own right rather than a dutiful substitute. Angels and demons appears in both forms, the original built on butter-infused tequila, the other on Lyre’s and blood orange, each with real length and shape. Chess nights and music give the copper-topped room life, while nods to Nancy Cunard and Aleister Crowley add just enough Fitzrovia colour. Neto makes the bar feel welcoming, broad-minded and unusually inclusive for people not drinking, which remains rarer in London than it should be.
Advertisement
Press handout
Câto, which opened in February 2026, earns its inclusion by providing such a sharp contrast to the smoother hotel-led addresses elsewhere. Created with Angelos Bafas, better known as Mr Ungarnished, it occupies a former gentlemen’s club and feels hand-built in the best sense. When I settled in, serendipitously beside Thanos of The Savoy, the drinks came stripped back until only their point remained. Pollens, cask-raised mead, ingredient-led construction, all handled without frippery. The oyster martini, served with oysters and mint-chilli mignonette, sounds like the sort of idea which might enjoy hearing itself talked about, until it arrives and proves entirely coherent. Bafas has built a room with tactility and nerve, and London needs bars like that as much as it needs gilt and chandeliers.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login