George Webster | |
---|---|
Born | Rawdon, West Yorkshire, England | July 29, 2000
Occupations |
|
Known for | Presenting CBeebies |
Awards | Best Presenter - British Academy Children's Award (2022) |
George Webster (born 29 July 2000) is an English television presenter, actor, dancer and writer. He was discovered while volunteering at his local Parkrun by a Sky UK television crew, who made him the subject of an episode of Jessica's Parkrun Heroes in 2019. This film prompted Mencap to refer him to a filmmaker who was making S.A.M., a short film that was broadcast online in October 2020. After being scouted by the BBC, Webster recorded a video for BBC Bitesize, which went viral. He then began presenting for CBeebies, for which he won Best Presenter at the British Academy Children's Awards 2022. He has also appeared in The Railway Children Return , Casualty , World on Fire , and the 2022 Strictly Come Dancing Christmas special. From 2023, he began publishing books, and has released This Is Me and Why Not?.
Webster was born on 29 July 2000 [1] in Rawdon, West Yorkshire with Down syndrome. [2] Growing up, he struggled to enunciate properly, prompting him and his family to learn Makaton; [2] Mr Tumble was his role model due to his use of the language. [3] He attended St. Peter's Primary School, Benton Park School, [4] and Shipley College. [5] Aged eight, he joined Stage Door, [6] a performing arts and music school in Guiseley, which he was a member of until he was 19. He also later joined Mind the Gap, [7] a performing arts college in Bradford, [8] and spent a few years at a drama class at Elev8 in Horsforth. [8]
In 2016, he started spending his Saturday mornings volunteering at a Parkrun in Woodhouse Moor in Leeds, [9] the Hyde Park Harriers. [10] He later took over the course himself and became a Parkrun ambassador. [9] While volunteering, a Sky UK TV crew who were filming nearby asked if they could film him for a day for a series they were making. [2] They released a film about his running in 2019, [9] which aired as part of Jessica's Parkrun Heroes, which was presented by Jessica Ennis-Hill. [11] That year, Webster took a post at Café 21 Co in Leeds, [12] a café launched in 2019 and staffed by people with Down's syndrome. [13] He has credited the café with giving him "a sense of independence", and stated in 2024 that he still put in shifts there when he could. [12]
Mencap saw the film and asked if he would become an ambassador, [2] before referring him to a filmmaker who was making a short film intended to challenge perceptions about disability. He was given a lead role in S.A.M. opposite Sam Retford, [2] playing one of two Sams. The show was broadcast online as part of the Iris Prize LGBT+ Film Festival, which ran from 6 to 11 October 2020. Will Stroude of Attitude wrote that Webster "plays Sam from the posh houses with a calm assurance and wonderful screen presence", giving "his Sam an emotional availability that Retford matches to make their romantic journey credible and heart-warming". [14]
After being scouted by the BBC following his work with Mencap, [9] he recorded a video for BBC Bitesize called Busting Myths, [2] in which Webster talked about common misconceptions of Down's syndrome. [9] The clip went viral on social media, prompting CBeebies to contact him and offer him an interview, [2] and he began presenting for the channel as a guest presenter. [15] His first CBeebies show, broadcast 20 September 2021, saw Webster perform Saturday Night Fever -style dance moves, make a smoothie, and recite a poem. A clip of this went viral on Twitter, and within two days of broadcast it had been viewed over 1,200,000 times. [15] Hayley Newman of the i wrote that Webster had "effervescence, bubbly charm, a quick wit", "a trendy vibe that his viewers aspire to emulate", and "an extra chromosome", [16] while his appointment was praised by Sally Phillips, Mencap, and Cerrie Burnell. [17] He was later hired as a full-time presenter, and won Best Presenter at the British Academy Children's Awards 2022. [2]
Webster then appeared with Bethany Asher in Bebe A.I., [6] a sci-fi short which aired as part of the Oska Bright Film Festival in March 2022, [18] in which he and Asher played a couple with Down's syndrome who were fighting to save an android baby they wanted to adopt. [6] He then played a telegram boy in The Railway Children Return. [2] In 2022, he participated in that year's Strictly Come Dancing Christmas special, where he performed a Charleston to "Good News" from Nativity! The Musical . [4] He and his dance partner Amy Dowden practiced for three weeks beforehand, as often as they could fit into Webster's schedule. [9] His other competitors were Nicola Roberts, Larry Lamb, Rickie Haywood-Williams, Rosie Ramsey, and Alexandra Mardell, who won the episode. [4] He later appeared on Casualty , [10] where he played the drug dealer Josh Milner, [19] and World on Fire , where he played Ted. [20] On World Book Day 2023, [3] he published an autobiography, This Is Me, [2] which initially stemmed from the poem he read during his first day presenting on CBeebies. [3] A further book, Why Not?, was published in 2024. [12]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2019 | Jessica's Parkrun Heroes | Himself | Episode: "George Webster" |
2020 | S.A.M. | "Sam from the posh houses" | |
2022 | Bebe A.I. | Jonny Stormer | |
2022 | The Railway Children Return | Telegram boy | |
2022 | Strictly Come Dancing | Contestant | |
2023 | Casualty | Josh Milner | Episode: "Fight or Flight" |
2023 | World on Fire | Ted | Episode: "Wrong" |
CBeebies is a British free-to-air public broadcast children's television channel owned and operated by the BBC. It is also the brand used for all BBC content targeted for children aged six years and under. Its sister channel, CBBC, is intended for older children aged six to twelve. It broadcasts every day from 6:00 am to 7:00 pm, timesharing with BBC Four.
Daniel John-Jules is a British actor, singer and dancer. He is best known for playing Cat in the sci-fi comedy series Red Dwarf, Barrington in the comic children's series Maid Marian and Her Merry Men, and policeman Dwayne Myers in the crime drama Death in Paradise. He was also a protagonist in the hit CBBC children's spy drama M.I. High, in which he portrayed Lenny Bicknall, the caretaker.
Paul Joseph Mercurio is an Australian actor, choreographer, dancer, TV presenter and politician. Mercurio is best known for his lead role in the 1992 film Strictly Ballroom and his role as a judge on TV series Dancing with the Stars.
Reginald Yates is a British television presenter, actor, writer and director with a career spanning three decades on screen as an actor, television presenter and radio DJ. Yates played Leo Jones in Doctor Who and has worked at the BBC in radio and television–presenting various shows for BBC Radio 1 for a decade as well as hosting the BBC One singing show The Voice UK, hosting the first two series with Holly Willoughby.
Nicholas Simon Augustine Knowles is an English television presenter, writer and musician. He has hosted several television programmes including Real Rescues (2007–2013), Who Dares Wins (2007–2019), Break the Safe (2013–2014), 5-Star Family Reunion (2015–2016), and DIY SOS (1999–present).
Something Special is a British children's television programme presented by Justin Fletcher. It was created and produced by Allan Johnston. It is broadcast by the BBC, debuting on 1 September 2003. It is designed to introduce children to Makaton signing, and is specifically aimed at children with delayed learning and communication difficulties. It is aired on the CBeebies channel and is currently the longest running CBeebies programme and the longest running preschool series in Britain. In the past, it was also broadcast as part of the CBeebies programme strand on BBC One and BBC Two.
Anita Rani Nazran, better known as Anita Rani, is a British radio and television presenter.
Justin Fletcher is an English children's television presenter, actor and comedian, appearing mainly on the BBC pre-school television channel CBeebies. Speaking and performing in various, often self-created, roles, he specialises in slapstick comedy and works with children with special educational needs through his show Something Special.
Christopher John McCausland is an English comedian and actor. He is known to television audiences for his role as Rudi in the CBeebies show Me Too!. He regularly appears at comedy venues around the UK, including The Comedy Store. McCausland is blind due to retinitis pigmentosa.
Benton Park School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form located in Rawdon, West Yorkshire, England. Formerly a technology college, it has over 1,400 students.
Secret Garden is a 2010 South Korean television drama starring Ha Ji-won, Hyun Bin, Yoon Sang-hyun, and Kim Sa-rang. It aired on SBS from November 13, 2010 to January 16, 2011, on Saturdays and Sundays at 22:00 (KST) for 20 episodes.
Thomas Jessop is a British actor. He is the first actor with Down syndrome to star in a primetime BBC drama, the first professional actor with Down syndrome to tour theatres as Hamlet, and the first to become a full voting member of BAFTA. In 2021, he was awarded an Honorary Doctor of the Arts by the University of Winchester and became an Ambassador to Mencap and to the National Down syndrome Policy Group.
Sarah Gordy, MBE is a British actress who has Down syndrome. She is best known for her roles as Katie Thorne in The A Word and Ralph & Katie, Orlando Quine in Strike: The Silkworm, Lady Pamela Holland in the BBC TV series of Upstairs Downstairs, and Lucy Craddle in The Long Call. She has also acted in episodes of Call the Midwife, Holby City and Doctors. As well as these TV shows, she has acted in short films, radio dramas, commercials, and many theatre productions. In 2018 she became the first woman with Down syndrome to be made an MBE and the first person with Down syndrome to receive an honorary degree from a UK university.
Jonathan Benjamin Gill also known professionally as JB Gill, is a British singer and television presenter. He is best known as a member of the boy band JLS, who were runners-up to Alexandra Burke on the fifth series of The X Factor in 2008. With JLS, he went on to achieve five no. 1 singles, over 10 million record sales worldwide, two Brit awards, and five MOBO awards, before the band split up in 2013. His later career saw him presenting television shows Down on the Farm (2015) and Songs of Praise (2017).
Daniel Meirion Walker is a British journalist, newsreader and television presenter from Crawley, England. He currently presents 5 News on Channel 5 and the weekday breakfast show on Classic FM.
Samuel Connor Hornby is an English professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for EFL League Two club Walsall.
Aneesh Sheth is an Indian-American actress and transgender activist.
Rose Lucinda Ayling-Ellis is an English actress. Deaf since birth, she is a British Sign Language user. On television, she is best known for her role as Frankie Lewis in the BBC soap opera EastEnders (2020–2022) and for winning the nineteenth series of Strictly Come Dancing with Giovanni Pernice in 2021; she was the programme's first deaf contestant.
Hamza Ahmed Yassin is a British wildlife cameraman and presenter, known for his role as Ranger Hamza on the children's television channel CBeebies and his work on shows such as Countryfile and Animal Park, as well as presenting programmes about Scottish wildlife. In 2022, he won the twentieth series of the BBC contest Strictly Come Dancing.
This article details the Bradford Bulls rugby league football club's 2023 season. This is the Bulls' fifth consecutive season in the Championship.