Posts From My Facebook, Twitter and Instagram For Those Not On Those Social Media Platforms. 2nd April 2026.

Welcome to a new post.

PATREON: A Way To Support My Website and my work.

Hello everyone and welcome to this new post.

The Morse Universe is a labour of love, and I want to take it to new heights with your support. By becoming a Patreon, you’re not just contributing financially; you’re becoming a crucial part of a passionate community that believes in the power of the Morse, Lewis and Endeavour series.

Your support directly fuels the growth and improvement of my website, YouTube Channel, Twitch and all other social media sites I use to promote the Morse Universe. Whether it’s upgrading equipment, or expanding the scope, your contribution plays a pivotal role in making The Morse Universe website the best it can be.

By becoming a Patreon supporter you will gain early access to videos I create. Patreon supporters will have access to new vidoes etc one week before it is published anywhere else. Also, Patreon supporters will get at least one exclusive video per month. That exclusive video will not be published anywhere else for three months.

Patreon supporters receive a free copy of any new book I publish. Books for 2024 are a second edition of my Lewis book, a guide book to all the Oxford locations used in the Morse, Lewis and Endeavour series and a comprehensive, book on the Morse series.

Becoming a Patreon is quick and easy. Simply visit https://www.patreon.com/morseandlewisandendeavour to explore the membership tiers and find the one that resonates with you. Every contribution, no matter the size, makes a meaningful difference.

Thank you for considering joining the my Patreon family. Your support means the world to me, and I can’t wait to embark on this journey together.

If you have any questions or just want to chat, feel free to reach out. Here’s to creating something extraordinary! Contact me via morselewisendeavour@gmail.com

Here is my Patreon account where you can read more about ithttps://www.patreon.com/morseandlewisandendeavour

For as little as $5 a month (less than a magazine subscription) you can help to support my website, YouTube etc.

Warm regards,

Chris

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Hello and welcome to a new post. As the title of this post states, this post is for those who don’t do social media. I hope you enjoy the following.

Up first, From Abigail Thaw’s Instagram. 28th March 2026.

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The next photo is in relation to the Morse play, House of Ghosts.

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John Thaw and Benjamin Whitrow in a production of The Wind and the Rain at the Liverpool Playhouse, 1960.
This appears in the book, An Actor’s Place: The Liverpool Repertory Company at Liverpool Playhouse, 1911 – 1998.
Thank you to Candice for supplying the photo.
Benjamin Whitrow appeared in the Morse episode, The Daughters of Cain as the Oxford don, Brownlee.

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Next up from the Liverpool Echo.

ITV Betrayal Shaun Evans’ Scouse accent admission and incredible gesture during filming
Shaun Evans stars as John Hughes in the ITV show. 8th February 2026.

Shaun Evans returns to screens tonight in the lead role of new ITV drama, Betrayal. The 45-year-old plays MI5 officer John Hughes in the new show, which follows him investigating a case while trying to keep his personal life intact.

The four part series starts at 9pm as the ITV synopsis reads: “On a hunch John meets a British Iranian man with links to the Stockport gangland who claims he has intelligence about a plot on UK soil. Before he can share intel, the informant is executed, and John kills the assassin in self-defence.

“John soon finds himself under internal investigation, facing scrutiny from his superiors, including Simone Grant (Nikki Amuka-Bird), while his partner Claire (Romola Garai) grapples with the secrecy that defines his world.”

Shaun has enjoyed an incredible career in film and television over the past 25 years with notable roles in Endeavour and Vigil. While he is renowned for his versatility, Shaun uses his natural Scouse accent for the role as John in Betrayal.

The actor hails from Walton and is proud to be representing his home city on screen with parts of Betrayal filmed in Liverpool last year. He said: “I spend a lot of time in Liverpool because my family are all there, so to be up north was brilliant.

“They were a really funny, hard-working crew, and to be seeing parts of Liverpool in a way that I hadn’t seen them, having access to certain parts of the city, that was just amazing. A very special time in my life.”

Shaun’s Scouse roots are referenced in Betrayal during the show as an Everton fob is visible. Quizzed on whether he is a supporter of the Toffees, Shaun remained tight lipped as he said: “My brother is, let’s just leave it at that. He’s going to be delighted to see those little touches in the show!”

Shaun isn’t the only Scouser as part of the cast as Paddy Rowan also features in Betrayal. Speaking to the ECHO in an exclusive interview, Paddy shared how he worked with Shaun to show to the next generation of kids in Liverpool that a career in acting is within reach.

The 27-year-old said: “Shooting in Bootle Strand is mad for me. I went to Hillside School so I spoke to Shaun and asked, ‘Is there any chance we can get the kids to come down from my old school?’

“[After he gave the go ahead] I got in touch with my drama teacher and said, I’m shooting a new show. She brought kids down and they got to see a working set, watch some of the rushes, have a laugh with me and [co-star] Corrin Silva. It was surreal to be in that position to be able to do that so I feel really grateful for that.”

Paddy also joked that Shaun’s ability to act outside of his Scouse accent made him question whether he was from the city. He said: “I’ll be honest, I thought he was a bit of a wool when I’d seen him on stuff. And then I got to meet him and I was having a laugh with him and he was proper giving me it back. I thought, ‘You know what, he’s a proper Scouser.'”

Shaun has opened up on why he wanted to act in his native Scouse accent for Betrayal as he told Radio Times: “We expect MI5 officers to be from Oxbridge, but it’s no longer the case.”

“When I first started, I wanted to play parts far away from me, to transform into someone else and leave any of my baggage behind. In a weird way, when you play someone with your own accent, you have to work harder to make the leap.”

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Tom Chambers stars as Morse in the play, House of Ghosts.

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Abigail Thaw is appearing in the new series of Patience.

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This has just turned up on YouTube. Full episode.

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Anton Lesser answering 10 questions in the London Theatre’s 1 in 10 profile series. Click below.

Tell Us In 10: Anton Lesser

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‘I’ve played a lot of sneery bastards’: Roger Allam on bad singing, big paydays and Elgar’s level of ‘gitacity’ 

From the Guardian newspaper. By Imogen Tilden 31st October 2025.

He launched a thousand memes as the beleaguered Tory MP in The Thick of It, and starred in the original production of Les Misérables. Now the actor is making not-so-sweet music in the Alan Bennett-scripted film The Choral. But there are plenty of things he draws the line at …

Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for IMDb

 

A key plot point of The Choral revolves around Roger Allam singing badly. This is the man who originated the role of Javert in Les Misérables back in 1985, who was Olivier-nominated for his performance in Cy Coleman’s musical City of Angels and who once contemplated a career as an opera singer.

Talk me through that, I say: the bad singing. We’re at his home in southwest London. He’s very busy, filming, but a small window of time was found to meet – did I mind coming to his house? No, of course I didn’t, and here I am on a blustery Monday morning, perched on a chair next to him, sat in the corner on the sofa in a comfortable but anonymous front room looking on to a leafy street.

“Well, I’m slightly relieved,” he says with a laugh. “The part in Gerontius” – that his character attempts to sing – “is the tenor solo, which is endless and terribly difficult and very high. And I – as you hear – have a baritone voice, quite a low one as well. And I haven’t sung for about 15 years. And so I was rather glad that it had to be bad!”

The Alan Bennett-scripted film, directed by Nicholas Hytner, is set in 1916 in a Yorkshire factory town on the cusp of huge societal change, hollowed out by grief as its young men die in foreign fields. The choral society is at the heart of this community, but even there it’s far from business as usual: Bach’s St Matthew Passion is verboten (German music). There’s a new chorus master. And so urgent is the need for new singers, they might have to look beyond the ranks of the respectable middle-classes. Allam plays the gentle local mill owner, who funds “the choral”, and so finds a way to assuage his own grief.

It’s full of glorious period detail, wit and subtle wisdom, and Elgar’s oratorio The Dream of Gerontius plays a starring role. Allam’s only prior experience of the piece had not been positive. “Not long before we started filming there was a performance in London I went along to and I’m afraid to say I found it rather boring,” he admits. “But singing it was tremendously exciting.”

For the most part, it’s the actors themselves whose voices we hear. “The chorus passages I found terribly moving: the effort of singing all together and trying to make it good. My father was a vicar, so I was in his choir, and one at school, and I toyed with the idea of doing classical singing at university. Music and singing have always been a part of my life.”

One of the splashiest turns in the film is Simon Russell Beale’s cameo as an inordinately pompous Elgar who, on realising this amateur choral society has rearranged and reimagined his work, retracts his permission for the performance. Does Allam know if there is any truth in Bennett’s script? Can the composer really have been, quite frankly, such a git?

“I don’t know!” he says. “I think maybe Elgar was a bit pissed off that he wasn’t as revered as he thought perhaps he should be. The first performance of Gerontius had gone really, really badly. I guess it’s understandable if he pushed back at that. But as to his ‘gitacity’ – I’m not qualified to say.”

We move to a character whose gitacity is unambiguous: Javert, the villain of Les Misérables, now back in the public eye as the musical celebrates its 40th birthday. Allam was asked to be involved in the celebrations, he says, but wasn’t free. Did he, then a young RSC actor in his early 30s, have a sense of the phenomenon that the show was going to be?

“No! The reviews were very mixed although there were some people who really loved it from the get-go. When we opened at the Barbican, it felt too long. Transferring into the West End, some bits were taken out. And straight away it was full all the time.” To what does he attribute its huge success? “It is a kind of feelgood musical in the sense it made people feel like they were good people; morally good for being in sympathy with the characters. It works the same way big spectacular melodrama works: it stirs you.”

Likewise Game of Thrones, in which Allam sported a magnificent beard with Viking-style plaits. “I’m hardly in it!” he protests. “I’d just been doing Falstaff at the Globe” – for which he won an Olivier award – “so I was completely broke. It was only a couple of episodes. But it inflated the bank balance enough to get through the year.”

He hadn’t seen a second of the show until the pandemic, when he and his younger son resolved to sit through the whole thing. “And some of it’s absolutely brilliant! There’s one battle scene which is just marvellous, makes you realise what a terrifying species we can be. And some of it’s just shit!”

Allam is, as you might expect, wonderfully unfiltered. A little like one of his best-known creations, The Thick of It’s Peter Mannion: a suave but beleaguered Tory MP, and the stuff of a thousand memes. “They were such glorious scripts,” he smiles of the show, whose 20th anniversary falls this year. “It was the beginning of that time – which is still going on – when politics seems to have become just about making announcements. As long as you can make announcements and get a bit of attention …”

What does he think Mannion would be doing now? “Oooh, some shady business somewhere. Feathering his own nest as much as possible. But I don’t think he’d be joining Reform.”

That’s the show he’s recognised by young people for – though for those younger still, it’s the charming CBeebies animation Sarah and Duck, for which he provides friendly voiceover. “On the train into town I sometimes get parents coming up to me saying thank you, because it was the only thing that would get their child to sleep, or asking me if I’d mind saying ‘Happy Birthday, Chloe’ in my Sarah and Duck voice.”

Does he mind? “No, of course not! It’s sweet. It’s not like I’m being pursued down the street by rabid mothers with pushchairs.”

Another voice role that sees him held in huge affection is Radio 4’s Cabin Pressure, written by the comic genius John Finnemore. “That was a joy to do,” he says. Does he have a favourite episode? He reflects. “I do love otters.” He means Ottery St Mary, in which, among other things, his character, Douglas, explains the origins of the name of the Devon town, and he, Benedict Cumberbatch’s Martin and Finnemore’s Arthur consider how many hypothetical otters could be fitted into a small plane.

Many of the roles Allam has played lean into his appeal as a languid middle-class sex symbol, quick of wit but large of heart. It’s that come-to-bed voice, perhaps, which is the clincher: deep, rich and smooth. In 2010’s Tamara Drewe he was an oleaginous crime novelist who romanced Gemma Arterton – and ended up trampled to death by cows, and in French farce Boeing-Boeing he juggled three separate fiancées. Radio 4’s ongoing Conversations from a Long Marriage sees him as Joanna Lumley’s exasperated but loving husband as the two discuss friends’ divorces, descaling kettles and whether it’s reasonable to expect dancing and sex on the same night.

Yet despite this distinctive persona, Allam is not at ease as simply himself, he says. “I’d feel uncomfortable going on television and just being me. I wouldn’t like that at all.” Bookers for Celebrity Traitors or Bake Off should try elsewhere; even panel shows are not his bag, he says, despite his manifest gift for comedy and brilliant delivery of one-liners. “No, I’d hate that. I’d be no good.”

It’s telling, too, that he feels most kinship not with those roles one might assume most closely mirror the real-life man, but with DI Fred Thursday in the Inspector Morse prequel Endeavour. “Having played a lot of sneery middle-class bastards, I was immediately attracted to the character because this was more from my actual family background – working class. One grandfather was a labourer on a building site, the other was a stonemason,” he says.

“Thursday is absolutely someone of my parents’ generation. My mother was born in 1912, my father in 1914, his brother Fred was born in 1916. Playing him was an opportunity to explore and remember the 1960s and the lives of people like my own family.”

The Choral, too, taps into this interest in the past lives of everyday people who coalesce to make beauty amid hardship. “Singing in a choir is a way of bringing communities together. Art and music, drama – these are the things we do best. And we don’t kill each other in our millions over it.”

He pauses. “It made me think maybe I should join a choir or have some lessons and see where my voice is … if it still exists in some form.”

The Choral is in UK cinemas from 7 November, US cinemas from 25 December and Australian cinemas from 1 January 2026.

 

I hope you enjoyed this update. take care.

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Author: Chris Sullivan

Up until a few years ago I was my mum's full time carer. She died in, 2020, of Covid. At the moment I am attempting to write a novel.

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