dimanche 12 juillet 2026

England get away with it

My week in the eye of the Harry and Meghan storm | The summer health mistakes to avoid
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Sunday, 12 July 2026

Issue No. 504

Good morning.

And breathe. Two goals from Jude Bellingham – and perhaps a teeny bit of help from Spidercam – have sent England through to a World Cup semi-final. Oliver Brown reports from Miami on an agonisingly tense game and another astonishing Bellingham performance. Now bring on Lionel Messi and Argentina.

Plus, police last night arrested a man on suspicion of murdering Ann Widdecombe. The 28-year-old, who is a white British national, was held in South Yorkshire. We have the latest developments.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. As a valued reader, we’re giving you exclusive early access to our Summer Sale. Join us today and try one year of The Telegraph for just £19. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

My week in the eye of the Harry and Meghan storm

He lost his son in Gaza, now he’s coming for Netanyahu

Plus, the summer health mistakes to avoid

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

Summer of sport

Remorseless Tuchel is driving England to greatness

Jude Bellingham was England’s talismanic hero – again

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer, at Hard Rock Stadium, Miami

 

“Hey Jude” was the only refrain you could hear as exhausted, elated England fans streamed out into the Miami night. And with good reason, after another astonishing display by Jude Bellingham broke Norway’s resistance and launched his team into only a fourth semi-final in the nation’s World Cup history.

In a match of agonising tension, Bellingham emerged once more as the talisman, scoring two nerveless goals, despite the broiling Florida humidity, to leave his country just one match from a first World Cup final since 1966. To reach it, they will need to overcome Lionel Messi’s Argentina, the defending champions, in Atlanta on Wednesday. You could scarcely ask for a duel more tantalising.

Tuchel was not happy with England’s performance

It is already a huge achievement by England to come this far, with Thomas Tuchel remorseless in his ambition to put a second star on the shirt. The more the manager galvanises these players, the more you wonder whether he might just satisfy a yearning that has been building for 60 years. For while he was euphoric at the result, Tuchel was far from thrilled with the performance, claiming that it lacked speed or discipline or technical quality. Brutal? Perhaps. But how refreshing that standards are being set so high, and that platitudes are giving way to brutal honesty.

Bellingham seemed peeved by Tuchel’s verdict. “Whatever,” he shrugged, when the remarks were put to him afterwards. But regardless of the strains in their relationship, both men have shown themselves at this tournament to be truly world-class. England will need to improve again if they are to find a way past a streetwise Argentina and the luminous brilliance of Messi. It will be, in every sense, the game of their lives.

Tuchel hits out at ‘lucky’ England

Bellingham the magician sends England to another World Cup semi-final

Watch: Norway fury as ball ‘hits Spidercam’ before England goal

. . . and it’s Argentina next after Alvarez’s stunning winner

 

What a turbo-charged Burnham mansion tax could mean for your home

Benedict J Smith

Benedict J Smith

Money Writer

 

When Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, announced a “mansion tax” on £2m homes in her November Budget, many predicted that, sooner or later, the goalposts would move.

Now Andy Burnham, who has previously described property as an undertaxed asset, is reportedly preparing to take a bigger slice of Britain’s £7tn housing wealth.

Analysis by The Telegraph reveals that reducing the threshold for the surcharge on high-value homes to £1.5m would bring an estimated 271,000 properties in England into scope.

This would mean a levy originally aimed at the super-wealthy would increasingly hit owners of relatively modest homes, without ostensibly breaking Labour’s manifesto pledge not to increase taxes on working people.
This article is for subscribers only.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Daniel Hannan Headshot

Daniel Hannan

Count Binface is no laughing matter. He embodies why Britain is in such a mess

The novelty candidate is a symptom of a much deeper malaise: we don’t want to live within our means

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

Britain’s mad lockdown experiment has damaged a generation of young people

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Michael Deacon</span> Headshot

Michael Deacon

Here’s the real reason why Labour’s never had a female leader – but no one wants to admit it

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Weekend reads

The King and Queen seemed to take delight in the animals they encountered at London Zoo on Thursday

The week the Royal family avoided the ‘Sussex circus’

While the Duke of Sussex kicked off his trip to Britain in a flurry of headlines, the Royal family had a conspicuously busy week, writes Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor.

The King literally put on a helmet and Prince William went to Hastings (where Harold, lest we forget, took one in the eye in 1066). The Princess of Wales got a new penpal, Queen Camilla watched water flow under a bridge, and Princess Anne kept calm and carried on.

It was a typical royal week in most senses, although there was some good news about the King’s health if you looked closely. On Friday evening came the news, confirmed calmly by Buckingham Palace, that the King and Queen had hosted the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and their children at Highgrove. Here is how the real royal week unfolded and how, on the King’s terms, it finally came to pass.
Continue reading

Meanwhile, Victoria Ward, our Deputy Royal Editor, has been with Prince Harry as he hits the road to promote next year’s Invictus Games.
For subscribers only

 

Anne Robinson with her dog, Martha, at her home in Gloucestershire

Anne Robinson: Why I’m ready to leave my £4m converted Cotswolds barn

Anne Robinson, the journalist and television presenter, is best known for hosting the BBC game show The Weakest Link. Here, the 81-year-old charts the eras of Cotswolds inhabitants from the Thatcher years to the tech bros and explains why she’s ready to move to the capital.

Continue reading

 

Gadi Eisenkot is Benjamin Netanyahu’s main challenger for the premiership

He lost his son in Gaza, now he’s coming for Netanyahu

Gadi Eisenkot is uncharismatic, stocky and gruff, but he’s coming for Benjamin Netanyahu. Carrying with him the agony of losing a son in Gaza, this former general is now ahead of the veteran prime minister in some opinion polls. Analysts believe it’s his perceived authenticity and lack of showmanship that makes him such a threat.

Continue reading

 

Nick Ross, 79, has personal experience of police inadequacies

Nick Ross: ‘Britain is a country run by amateurs’

When Nick Ross, the former Crimewatch presenter, was violently assaulted last summer, he expected justice. Instead, the veteran broadcaster was left entirely in the dark by the police and the Crown Prosecution Service. Britain’s criminal justice system has, he says, become a “conveyor belt by lawyers for lawyers”, which completely excludes the victims of crime.

Continue reading

 

Your Sunday

The summer health mistakes to avoid, from aloe vera to iced drinks

Whenever the sun makes an appearance, our summer health instincts should kick into gear. Whether it’s always using a high SPF or waiting 30 minutes after a meal before going for a swim, there is a lot we can do to protect ourselves. However, despite our best intentions, some well-meaning habits can end up doing more harm than good. Here are seven common mistakes to watch out for this summer.

Continue reading

 

Devil’s Advocate

The narcissistic cult of exercise has gone too far

Image of man riding on a burger
David Alexander

David Alexander

Deputy Head of Newsletters

 

Once upon a time, exercise was something to avoid. It meant labour: ploughing the fields, toiling in a factory, struggling down a mine. Liberation and happiness were to be found in a sedentary life.

This was the right approach. Exercise was an incidental aspect of a nobler aim – namely, providing for yourself and your family.

Now that we aren’t compelled to exercise, we fetishise it. Sets, and reps, and active recovery. Compound movements and progressive overloads. This is vanity’s modern vocabulary.

It is not enough to live in moderation nowadays. To exert ourselves usefully in the course of normal life: cycling to work occasionally; carrying heavy shopping; going for the odd ruminative wander.

To live like this is now considered pathetic. Rather, you should always have one eye trained on your body’s metrics, making a constant effort to burn fat and shred your poor, embattled muscles until they man up and become beefier.

“I don’t exercise just to look good!” I hear some readers protest, barely audible as their voices travel across their immense, protruding pectorals and into earshot. “I exercise because it makes me feel good.” Yeah, well, loads of physical activities may feel good, even when performed excessively. I’m thinking of overeating, the sister habit of heavy exercise.

Both are manifestations of the same misguided urge. A hyper-toned musculature represents over-indulgence just as much as a pot belly. They’re equally signs of obsessive self-absorption. We’re highly developed beings and we shouldn’t blindly pursue the sweet treat of an endorphin rush.

I’m not being a snob. I don’t think that gym bros should drop the dumbbells and pick up War and Peace, although that, done enough, would have the same effect on your biceps.

Books and culture retrieve you from your own self-absorption, though. So does going to the pub. Or visiting a cafe. We’re social beings who lived happily without mirrors for millennia. So stop gazing into them, get out of the gym and get off that Peloton.

Find a generous shirt that hides your drooping stomach, or wear one that’s too tight and let the world know that you have the correct priorities. In doing so, you will have forgotten how to exercise and remembered how to live.

Do you agree with David? Send your replies here, and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

 

One great life

Patricia Greene, voice of Jill Archer whose 68-year stint on The Archers set a world record

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/obituaries/2026/07/10/patricia-greene-jill-archer-archers-bbc-radio-4/

Patricia Greene with her MBE at Buckingham Palace in 1997

Patricia Greene, who has died aged 95, was the voice of farmer’s wife Jill in The Archers for 68 years, writes Jake Kerridge, Chief Obituary Writer.

She earned a place in the Guinness World Records as the world’s longest-serving actor in a soap opera, though when she joined the show in 1957 on a six-week contract she did not expect to stay long.

She was so inexperienced as a radio actress that when the script called for Jill to throw a glass of water over Phil Archer, she did it for real and drenched her co-star in the studio.

Greene remained with the programme for nearly 70 years, with Jill Archer evolving from a vivacious “sexy blonde” into the upright, sometimes meddlesome matriarch of a large and rather neurotic family.

Patricia Greene, second left, as Jill Archer, with Gwen Berryman, Norman Painting and Harry Oakes, admiring new-born twins in 1957

Jill became the radio serial’s most prolific baker, and her 60th anniversary on The Archers was marked with a storyline in which she was arrested for throwing a home-made flapjack at a celebrity chef while taking part in a protest against food waste.

Patricia Greene worked on The Archers until last year, latterly recording her lines from a care home.
Read the full obituary here

 

On this day

1985 | Doctors discover a cancerous growth in President Ronald Reagan’s colon

1998 | France beat Brazil 3-0 in the World Cup final

2018 | Donald Trump arrives in Britain for a four-day visit amid protests (and our front-page coverage from the following day can be found below)

Birthdays:
Malala Yousafzai (29), Annabel Croft (60), Sir Gareth Edwards (79)

Front page
 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was BIOMARKER. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. Please share your thoughts on the newsletter at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

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samedi 11 juillet 2026

Widdecombe’s retirement cut short in the most sinister way

King reunited with grandchildren | England prepares to face Norway
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Saturday, 11 July 2026

Issue No. 503

Good morning.

Ann Widdecombe’s peaceful home on Dartmoor is now a crime scene following the shocking news that the former Conservative MP was allegedly murdered. Gordon Rayner, our Associate Editor, looks back on a day that shocked the political world. Samuel Montgomery also reports from the scene.

Elsewhere, the King has been reunited with his grandchildren, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, after four years. Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, says that the “grown-ups” may have finally taken control of the Sussex circus.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. As a valued reader, we’re giving you exclusive early access to our Summer Sale. Join us today and try one year of The Telegraph for just £19. If you’re already a subscriber make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Can Reform survive without Nigel Farage?

The 20 best action films of all time – ranked

Plus, what ageing experts do to prolong their lives

Get early access to our Summer Sale

One year of free-thinking journalism, puzzles and more – all for just £19.

 

Widdecombe earned her quiet retirement – it was cut short in the most sinister way

Ann Widdecombe at her home at Haytor, Devonshire, in 2014

Gordon Rayner

Gordon Rayner

Associate Editor

 

Ann Widdecombe loved the peace and isolation of the home she called Widdecombe’s Rest, where she intended to live out her days surrounded by the beauty of her beloved Dartmoor.

This morning it is a crime scene, following the shocking news that the former Conservative MP was allegedly murdered, having been found dead with “serious injuries” on Thursday morning.

The safety of MPs is back on the agenda and the country’s security forces are understood to be reviewing the arrangements for Reform UK. Widdecombe had joined Reform and acted as the party’s spokesman on immigration and justice.

Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, said he now feared that for “anybody in public life, or especially in the political space, things have become even more dangerous”.

Police presence

Police presence will remain significant around Widdecombe’s property for several days

A 26-year-old man, arrested on Friday on suspicion of murder, has been released from custody and is no longer part of the investigation, Devon and Cornwall Police said.

The police cannot discuss any possible motive for the alleged murder of Widdecombe.

What is not in doubt, however, is that at the age of 78, the former Tory minister’s life has been cut short by what Kemi Badenoch, the Leader of the Opposition, described as “a nasty, horrific attack”, and that the country has lost a public servant whose forthright views and sense of humour made her one of a kind.

Samuel Montgomery

Samuel Montgomery

News Reporter

 

Roadblocks cordoned off the area around Widdecombe’s home in Devon as forensic teams worked on the site on Friday evening. Officers could be seen scouring the grounds behind her house, moving photography equipment as they walked around the outdoor pool.

Anne Newton, 72, said news of her neighbour’s death had come as a great shock. Newton, who has lived in the village for 25 years, told me: “I have known Ann ever since she came here. It is a great loss. It came out of the blue.

“She was a very outspoken person but she had a heart of gold. Ann was Ann, you either loved her or hated her. She was a wonderful character.

“I couldn’t believe it. We saw it on the news. When they said murder, that is why all our doors are locked now. This door is usually open.”

George Mowat-Brown, 78, said Widdecombe had felt safe in Devon. The retired lecturer said: “She always left her front door open. It is a safe place. The police were telling us to lock our doors, garages and cars earlier, before the man was arrested.”

Mowat-Brown said he had been told about suspicious activity on the day of Widdecombe’s death: “I was speaking to the chap who runs the local garage. He saw an odd car parked close to Widdecombe’s house on Thursday.

“He knows all the cars around here but didn’t recognise this one.”
Read the full story


Suspect in Ann Widdecombe murder investigation released from custody

 

King reunited with grandchildren Archie and Lilibet

Meghan, Archie and Lilibet at home in California

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

At the start of the week, there was one question on royal-watchers’ lips: will the King be able to see his Sussex grandchildren for the first time in four years?

Then came the drama, the court ruling, and the Buckingham Palace room reshuffle, and the family reunion at the heart of Prince Harry’s trip to Britain was almost forgotten.

The Sussex circus rolled on, and Buckingham Palace went silent.

Those in the know predicted that tea with the King remained on the cards, all in good time and on his terms, and so it proved.

Last night, calmly and factually, came confirmation that the King and Queen had hosted the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet at Highgrove yesterday afternoon.

The venue is significant. King Charles’s favourite private residence has a famous garden for children to run around and a treehouse once played in by William and Harry as children.

Away from “Monarchy HQ”, it was a deft way of distancing the King and Queen from the Duke of Sussex’s pronouncements on everything from the judiciary to the Home Office, and to keep things personal.

The visit will have been an important moment for the family. It may open the door for more. For those who have despaired at the chaos with which this week has unfolded, it feels, possibly briefly, that the grown-ups have taken back control.
For more exclusive analysis from Hannah, sign up to Your Royal Appointment

King reunited with grandchildren Archie and Lilibet

 

World Cup diary

The biggest week of their lives

David Beckham joined Jordan Pickford and Declan Rice for training in Miami

Oliver Brown

Oliver Brown

Chief Sports Writer

 

Here in the sapping humidity of Miami, England’s players stand on the verge of a week that could define them forever. It is that heady sensation only a World Cup quarter-final can create, reminding this team that they are potentially just three matches from immortality. Is it premature even to entertain that notion? Not if you ask Thomas Tuchel, who, true to his philosophy of pressure being a privilege, is embracing the magnitude of the occasion. “I understand,” the head coach said, when asked what he took from the Three Lions refrain: “Football’s coming home”. “It’s England, the motherland of football. It should be coming home.”

But first they must overcome Norway, who have been propelled into the last eight by the nonchalant brilliance of Erling Haaland. The Manchester City striker cemented his iconic status in his homeland with his two exquisitely taken goals to beat Brazil in the last round. Now he has the chance to inflict the ultimate pain on the country where he plies his trade. It is a delicious match-up and one, on the balance of power, in which England should prevail. As many as 30,000 England supporters are expected to converge on southern Florida in anticipation, while millions at home will relish the 10pm Saturday night kick-off time. It promises to be a truly intoxicating cocktail.

The Madrid summit that unlocked the Bellingham and Kane ‘brotherhood’

Guehi and Rice available to face Norway in boost for Tuchel

How box-office Beckham is taking over Miami

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

Farewell, Ann. Middle England saw you for the sterling human being you were

A redoubtable and fearless battler, she dedicated her life to championing truth. We must pray she did not also die for it

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Anita Singh</span> Headshot

Anita Singh

Prince Harry has finally found his calling: the king of TV chaos

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Rowan Pelling</span> Headshot

Rowan Pelling

The secret to a happy marriage? Keeping the rest of the world out of it

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

weekend reads

Reform cannot survive without Nigel Farage

You might as well ask about Ernie Wise without Eric Morecambe. Or the status of the Vatican without a pope. This week’s events may force Nigel Farage’s biggest supporters to start thinking the unthinkable: who would replace him if he walks away from Reform UK, and what would his departure mean for the party he leaves behind?

For subscribers only

 

Andrew Crook, a chippy owner, says he’s seeing far more diversity of fish on his menu

Why your local chippy could soon serve octopus

As climate change heats the seas around Britain, the waters are becoming a haven for some species and uninhabitable for others, writes Patrick Galbraith. Cod are heading north in search of cold-water plankton, while populations of anchovies, bluefin tuna and octopus are surging. Your typical chippy is undergoing a sea-change, diversifying its menu with species such as sea bass and dogfish. Could this help to save a declining industry?

Continue reading

 

The 20 best action films of all time – ranked

Uma Thurman in Kill Bill Vol 1

John Wick or Mad Max? Jason Statham or Tom Cruise? Fight scene or car chase? Cinema’s tough nuts battle it out in Telegraph critic Tim Robey’s ranking of the most adrenaline-pumping action films of all time. If your favourite’s not there, feel free to fight it out in the comments or send us an email.

Continue reading

 

Your Saturday

What ageing experts do to prolong their lives

Can you really add healthy years to your life? Longevity expert Michael Clinton has spent two years interviewing the world’s leading researchers. Here, he shares the practical advice they all agree on, from the best exercise to how much you should really be eating.

For subscribers only

Here is another article that I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

  • From fruity to truffle-infused, our Wine and Drinks Correspondent has selected the very best flavoured gins, and the ones to avoid.
 

Food for thought

Do you have plans for this weekend? Whether you’re staying in or going out, we’ve got you covered. Every week, Diana Henry, The Telegraph’s award-winning cookery writer, brings you three recipes for a perfect weekend meal. Meanwhile, William Sitwell shares his view from the culinary world – and a recommendation or two.

If you’re staying in...

Hibiscus agua fresca can be made using dried hibiscus flowers or hibiscus tea bags

Diana Henry

Diana Henry

Food writer

 

A weekend of cooling food is in order. One of my favourite cold drinks is hibiscus agua fresca, made using dried hibiscus flowers or hibiscus tea bags (you can easily get the tea bags in supermarkets these days). I keep a big bag of the dried flowers in the larder. They just need to be simmered to produce a brilliant crimson liquid. I add minimal sugar and keep the drink in the fridge all day. It’s made in both Mexico and the Caribbean. Pretend you’re on holiday!

Salmorejo is a fresh tomato soup from southern Spain

There are so many chilled soups, but I tend to go for the less well-known. Salmorejo is a Spanish cold soup and one with a bit of heft as it’s served with strips of Serrano ham and chopped boiled egg. It’s quite different to traditional gazpacho as it’s thicker. Chuck a few ice cubes in it before you take it to the table.

Last week, the heat was so unrelenting that I bought a Solero for the first time in years. It got me thinking about ice lollies, ice cream and sundaes. You can make the original knickerbocker glory but there are so many combinations that you can give yourself a different treat from now until the end of the summer. This “Sicilian” sundae – completely made up – has pistachio ice cream as its focus. What is it with pistachios? For years we more or less ignored them, but now the shops are full of pistachio chocolate, pistachio butter and pistachio cream. It’s one of the most expensive nuts so concentrate on its flavour as you’re eating this. The Sicilian town of Bronte grows particularly good ones.

Easy-peasy ice cream sundaes

Find me here every Saturday and in my Recipes newsletter, which you can sign up to here.

If you’re eating out, make sure you pick a good bottle of wine to go with the meal. William Sitwell’s column this week might be of assistance.

William Sitwell

William Sitwell

 

It’s one thing attempting to maintain high professional standards – from kitchen hygiene to a well-laid table – but as a restaurateur I increasingly find myself burdened by my own personal hang-ups too.

I cannot help but impose them at The White Hart, because these are the values and ideals which underpin my vision for the business. You see, I’m a wine snob. I’m the son of a big sipper and a person in constant and thirsty pursuit of great sips and knowledge.

Anyone who knows anything about wine knows that this search will never be fully satisfied, which is the point and the fun of it. It also comes with rules and restrictions. After some 40 years of experimenting – our father encouraged my siblings and me to enjoy wine from early on, and by 15 I regularly shared a glass with him at the dinner table – I have concluded that life is too short for a poor sip.

That moment, be it midday or 7pm, of a first sniff and glug should never be wasted, which means a good wine in a proper glass. The latter I have imposed on my restaurant without issue (except that, as I have written, they’re so nice that folk pinch them). As for the wine, it’s more complicated.
Read William’s full column

 

Your say

Food, glorious food

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Thanks to everyone who replied to this week’s newsletters. In response to Thursday’s edition, you’ve been hymning the glories of British food. Forget the cheap jibes of the French (and, more recently, The New York Times): the time has come to cast off our longstanding culinary cringe.

Readers have praised pork pies and lauded lard. “My speciality”, writes Shannon Carr, “is good old-fashioned shepherd’s or cottage pie. Lots of seasoning and veg, depending on which you make. Creamy mash with a bit of cheese as well. My grandchildren loved it and always asked for more. No supermarket ready meals in this house.”


 

Another reader recalls: “One memory from my 1950s Manchester childhood is of Mum making a Sunday special of suet plum duff and custard, using late-season Victoria plums when the price had dropped.

“Her other masterpiece was wimberry pie, but this was very occasional as wimberries were expensive and not often available. Woe betide anyone who dropped it on the tablecloth.”


 

There was also a distinctly patriotic flavour to the replies to Monday’s edition on the golden age (or ages) of television. Yes, the Americans might have a bit of a knack for prestige drama, but our own offerings are not to be sniffed at.

Alan Wild writes: “My favourite drama/comedy series from the 1980s to the present include Rumpole of the Bailey, Inspector Morse and The Other Bennet Sister.”


 

Meanwhile, Laura Soto Barra, writing from Maryland, contended: “Foyle’s War is better than any American series. We’ve watched it three times and we always love it. Second for us is Inspector Morse.”

That’s all from me for this week, folks. I’ll be back on Monday to bring you the best Telegraph talking points. In the meantime, you can contact me here.

 

Andrew Baker’s Saturday quiz

Have you been paying attention to our newsletters this week?

1. Who was the self-confessedly “rusty” guest host on LBC’s 10am-1pm slot the morning after England’s match against Mexico?

2. Released 30 years ago, Wannabe was the wacky, nonsensical debut single of which band?

3. What is Tim Spector, our health expert, now taking after avoiding them for almost a decade?

4. A popular conspiracy theory holds that surveillance drones are all around us, disguised as what?

5. Which actor is “divine” in the title role of the new West End production of Jesus Christ Superstar?

Plus, can you tackle The 1% Club? Scroll down to see if you got the questions right – and play for free on our website and app.

 

On this day

1960 | To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is published

1982 | Italy beat West Germany 3-1 to win the World Cup (and the sports back page from the following day below)

2015 | Mexican drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán escapes from a maximum-security prison in Mexico

Birthdays: Caroline Wozniacki (36), Craig Charles (62), Mark Lester (68)

Telegraph sport page
 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was DEHYDRATE. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me at fromtheeditor@telegraph.co.uk.

Quiz answers:

  1. Angela Rayner
  2. The Spice Girls
  3. Statins
  4. Birds
  5. Sam Ryder
 

1% Club answers:

  1. Squirrel Monkey
  2. Oliver
  3. 1
 

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