John Nolan, “Batman Begins” actor and uncle of Christopher Nolan, dies at 87

John Nolan, the English actor who appeared in films likeBatman Begins, has died.

Entertainment Weekly John Nolan in New York City on Nov. 7, 2015Credit: Mireya Acierto/FilmMagic

The performerdiedat age 87, theStratford-upon-Avon Heraldreported on Saturday.

Entertainment Weeklyhas reached out to representatives for Nolan for more information.

Nolan was best known for his collaborations with his nephewsChristopher Nolanand Jonathan Nolan. He portrayed Wayne Enterprises board member Douglas Fredericks inBatman BeginsandThe Dark Knight Rises, both of which were helmed by Christopher and the latter of which was co-written by Jonathan.

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John Nolan in 'Batman Begins'Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures

On the small screen, he appeared in 27 episodes of CBS'Person of Interest, which was created and executive-produced by Jonathan. On the show, he portrayed John Greer, a former MI6 operative intent on destroying the central Machine.

He also played a police officer in Christopher's 1997 feature directorial debut,Following, and portrayed a blind man in his 2017 Oscar-winning movie,Dunkirk.

This is a developing story.

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John Nolan, “Batman Begins” actor and uncle of Christopher Nolan, dies at 87

John Nolan, the English actor who appeared in films likeBatman Begins, has died. The performerdiedat age 87, theStratford-upon-Av...
Meghan Markle Makes Solo Stop at Women's Homeless Shelter in Australia

Meghan Markle visited a women's shelter in Melbourne as one of the first stops of her and Prince Harry's visit to Australia

People Meghan Markle serves up lunch to a resident at the center in Melbourne, Australia on April 14, 2026Credit: Jonathan Brady / POOL / AFP via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The couple's visit marks their first return to Australia since their 2018 royal tour

  • The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have a packed schedule on the continent, including a retreat in Sydney and a professional development summit in Melbourne

Meghan Marklehas made the first solo stop of her andPrince Harry's trip to Australia.

On the afternoon of Tuesday, April 14 (local time), the Duchess of Sussex, 44, visited a Homeless Services for Women Centre in Melbourne, where she put on an apron and served frittata to the users of the center.

After serving several people, Meghan asked, “Is anyone else hungry?" appearing relaxed and smiling at the press and guests at the location, PA Media reported.

Meghan then sat down at a table and joined people eating food at the centre, telling them: “We landed here this morning so my jet lag hasn’t quite hit yet.”

Meghan Markle serves lunch at the center in Melbourne, Australia on April 14, 2026Credit: Jonathan Brady-Pool/Getty

The center is run by McAuley Community Services for Women, which supports women and children experiencing family violence, homelessness and related challenges.

Prince Harry, 41, and Meghan's Australia visit marks their first time back on the continent since their royal tour in 2018. The trip is privately funded, andthe couple's children,Prince Archie, 6, andPrincess Lilibet, 4, will not be joining them.

The couple made their first public appearance of the visit on Tuesday morning, fora visit to the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne. Harry's mother,Princess Diana, had previously visited the Royal Children's Hospital on her royal tour of Australia in 1983.

Harry and Meghan were greeted and met by cheers from large crowds gathered along the walkways and balconies of the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne on Tuesday.

Novalie Morris, 12, a patient at the hospital who met the couple, told PEOPLE at the event, “I gave Harry flowers and he said 'thank you' and he told me to 'keep on being brave.' It cheered me up a lot and I’ll keep thinking about that."

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Earlier in the day, Meghan and Harry visited the Royal Children's Hospital in MelbourneCredit: JOEL CARRETT/EPA/Shutterstock

The youngest onlooker was six-week-old baby Millie who, after being released three days ago, returned to the hospital for a check-up. Her mother Zoe said it was a highlight for the family after a tough few weeks.

“One day, I’ll be able to tell her she met the prince," she told PEOPLE.

One 4-year-old patient, Lily, gave the couple a hand-drawn sign that said, “Welcome Harry and Meghan,” and presented a flower to the duchess, who hugged the little girl saying, “Oh my gosh, this is so sweet. I love it.”

Harry said, "Nice to meet you, Lily," and told her that the sign was "beautiful," asking, “How long did it take?”

During their trip, Prince Harry and Meghan are expected to attend a variety of public and private engagements,including Meghan headlining Her Best Life podcast's "girls weekend" retreatin Sydney and Harryserving as a keynote speaker on workplace mental healthat the InterEdge Psychosocial Safety Summit in Melbourne.

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Their last trip to Australia came in October 2018, when they embarked on an official royal tour that included supporting Prince Harry's Invictus Games in Sydney. The coupleannounced Meghan's pregnancywith their first child just before the tour kicked off, and Prince Archie was born in May 2019.

That 16-day tour of Australia, Fiji, Tonga and New Zealand included stops in Sydney, Dubbo, Melbourne, Fraser Island and the lakeside town of Rotorua in New Zealand.

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Meghan Markle Makes Solo Stop at Women's Homeless Shelter in Australia

Meghan Markle visited a women's shelter in Melbourne as one of the first stops of her and Prince Harry's visit to Australia ...
US, Indonesia discussing agreement allowing US military overflight in Indonesian airspace, Indonesian ministry says

(Refiles to fix slug)

Reuters

JAKARTA, April ‌13 (Reuters) - Indonesia ‌and the United ​States are discussing an agreement to give ‌U.S. ⁠military aircraft access to Indonesian ⁠airspace, Indonesia's defence ​ministry said ​on ​Monday, adding ‌that no deal has yet been reached.

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U.S. Defence Secretary Pete ‌Hegseth is ​set ​to ​meet ‌with his Indonesian ​counterpart ​Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin later on ​Monday.

(Reporting ‌by Stanley Widianto; ​Editing by David ​Stanway)

US, Indonesia discussing agreement allowing US military overflight in Indonesian airspace, Indonesian ministry says

(Refiles to fix slug) JAKARTA, April ‌13 (Reuters) - Indonesia ‌and the United ​States are discussing an agreement to give ‌U.S. ...
US-Iran peace talks end without agreement, Vance leaves Pakistan

By Saad Sayeed and Asif Shahzad

Reuters A man walks past a billboard near the media centre as delegations from the United States and Iran are expected to hold peace talks in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 11, 2026. REUTERS/Asim Hafeez U.S. Vice President JD Vance speaks during a news conference after meeting with representatives from Pakistan and Iran as Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, Special Envoy for Peace Missions, listen, on Sunday, April 12, 2026, in Islamabad, Pakistan. Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via REUTERS Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif meets with Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, as delegations from the United States and Iran are expected to hold peace talks, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 11, 2026. Office of the Iranian Parliament Speaker/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif pose on the day of a meeting for talks about Iran, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 11, 2026. Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via REUTERS

U.S.-Iran peace talks in Islamabad

ISLAMABAD, April 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Iran failed to reach an agreement to end their war https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/ despite lengthy talks that concluded on Sunday in the Pakistani capital Islamabad, jeopardising a fragile ceasefire.

Each side blamed the other for the failure of the 21-hour-long negotiations to end fighting that has killed ‌thousands nL1N3ZZ07R and sent global oil prices soaring since it began over six weeks ago.

"The bad news is that we have not reached an agreement, and I think that's bad ‌news for Iran much more than it's bad news for the United States of America," Vice President JD Vance, the head of the U.S. delegation, told reporters shortly before he left Islamabad.

U.S. CITES 'RED LINES', IRAN SAYS DEMANDS 'EXCESSIVE'

"So we go back to the ​United States having not come to an agreement. We've made very clear what our red lines are."

The U.S. delegation later left Pakistan, while the Iranians were to depart later on Sunday, two Pakistani sources told Reuters.

Vance said Iran had chosen not to accept American terms, including not to build nuclear weapons.

"We need to see an affirmative commitment that they will not seek a nuclear weapon, and they will not seek the tools that would enable them to quickly achieve a nuclear weapon. That is the core goal of the president of the United States, and that's what we've tried to achieve through these negotiations."

The talks in Islamabad, after ‌a ceasefire earlier in the week, were the first direct U.S.-Iranian meeting ⁠in more than a decade and the highest-level discussions since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency said that "excessive" U.S. demands had hindered reaching an agreement. Other Iranian media said there was agreement on a number of issues but that the Strait of Hormuz and Iran's nuclear programme were the main ⁠points of difference.

A spokesperson for Iran's foreign ministry said the talks were conducted in an atmosphere of mistrust. "It is natural that we shouldn't have expected to reach agreement in just one session," the spokesperson was quoted as saying by Iranian media.

"It is imperative that the parties continue to uphold their commitment to ceasefire," Pakistan's Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said in a statement after the talks. The two sides agreed on Tuesday to a two-week ceasefire in ​an ​attempt to wind down a war that began on February 28 with air strikes by the U.S. and Israel on ​Iran.

In his brief press conference, Vance did not mention reopening the Strait of ‌Hormuz, a choke point for about 20% of global energy supplies that Tehran has blocked since the war began.

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Vance said he had spoken with President Donald Trump https://www.reuters.com/world/us/donald-trump/ as many as a dozen times during the talks. But even as the negotiations continued, Trump said on Saturday that a deal was not entirely necessary.

"We're negotiating, whether we make a deal or not makes no difference to me, because we've won," he told reporters.

The U.S. delegation included special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner. Iran's team included Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi.

STRAIT OF HORMUZ

"There were mood swings from the two sides and the temperature went up and down during the meeting," a Pakistani source said in reference to an early round of talks, which carried on overnight.

Islamabad, a city of more ‌than 2 million people, was locked down during the talks with thousands of paramilitary personnel and army troops on ​the streets.

Before the talks began, a senior Iranian source told Reuters the U.S. had agreed to release frozen assets nL1N40U035 ​in Qatar and other foreign banks. A U.S. official denied agreeing to release the money.

As well ​as the release of assets abroad, Tehran is demanding control of the Strait of Hormuz, payment of war reparations and a ceasefire across the region, including ‌in Lebanon, according to Iranian state TV and officials.

Tehran nL6N40U01E also wants to ​collect transit fees nL1N40Q0L0 in the Strait of Hormuz.

Despite ​the differences in Islamabad, three supertankers fully laden with oil passed through nL1N40U04R the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday, shipping data showed, in what appeared to be the first vessels to exit the Gulf since the U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal.

Hundreds of tankers are still stuck in the Gulf, waiting to exit during the two-week ceasefire period.

Trump's stated goals have shifted, but as a ​minimum he wants free passage for global shipping through the strait and ‌the crippling of Iran's nuclear enrichment programme to ensure it cannot produce an atomic bomb.

Tehran has long denied wanting to build a nuclear weapon.

U.S. ally Israel has also been ​bombing Tehran-backed Hezbollah militants in Lebanon and says that conflict is not part of the Iran-U.S. ceasefire. Iran has insisted that the fighting in Lebanon has to stop.

(Reporting ​by Reuters bureaux worldwide; Writing by Idrees Ali, Lisa Shumaker and Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by William Mallard)

US-Iran peace talks end without agreement, Vance leaves Pakistan

By Saad Sayeed and Asif Shahzad U.S.-Iran peace talks in Islamabad ISLAMABAD, April 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. and Iran failed t...
Gabourey Sidibe Slams Critics of Her 23-Month-Old Twins' Hair, Says She 'Didn't Have Kids' for the Aesthetic

Gabourey Sidibe addressed criticism of her toddlers' hair, saying she "didn't have kids" for the aesthetic in a post on Instagram Threads

People Gabourey Sidibe and her twinsCredit: Gabourey Sidibe/Instagram; Robin L Marshall/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Sidibe also further explained that she and her husband, Brandon Frankel, "sometimes do their hair several times a day"

  • The actress welcomed her twins Cooper and Maya in April 2024

Gabourey Sidibeis shutting down criticism of her twins' hair.

In a post onInstagram Threads, theGive Me Back My Daughterstar, 42, slammed people who have made negative comments about her 23-month-old twins' hair. Sidibe, who shares her twins Cooper and Maya with husbandBrandon Frankel, said she'd be blocking anyone who left negative comments, adding she "didn't have kids" for the aesthetic.

"If you comment, telling me to do my toddlers[sic] hair, I'm blocking you," she wrote. "Their hair is always brushed, but they are active toddlers who play hard and aggressively launch into Head Shoulders Knees and Toes during lunch, so they get ketchup and eggs in it, so we sometimes do their hair several times a day."

"My daughter's hair is braided every week and when it gets fuzzy in an hour I don't immediately rebraid it because I didn't have kids for the esthetic[sic]," she added.

Sidibe continued telling her followers to "keep it cute," adding that "trying to impress the timeline with constantly manicured children isn't on my list of chores."

"So in closing, let's keep it cute cuz[sic] I'm fighting for my life as it is and trying to impress the timeline with constantly manicured children isn't on my list of chores," she wrote, before jokingly attaching a picture of her cat and wriitng, "Aaron will however be debuting the fresh box braids he got for his birthday trip to Punta Cana."

While Sidibe doesn't play when it comes to people criticizing her children, she can also find the humor in life as a parent of two. Back in February, the doting mom proved she'd do anything to make her kids look fabulous as she shared funny snaps of her children wearing her wigs onInstagram. TheEmpirealum joked that she was walking around bald, so her kids could look stylish in her hair.

"My head looks like this 🧑‍🦲 so that their heads can look this 👩‍🎤🧑‍🎤👨‍🎤," she joked.

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In the comments, her husband poked fun at the moment, writing, "You know you love them cuz you let them wear ya good wigs 😂😂❤️."

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Sidibe welcomed her kids in April 2024. Since then, she's shared the precious and special moments with them throughout the years. In November, she shared a picture onInstagramwith her twins as they visited her on the set of a project she was directing. In the picture, she held both of her twins while standing next to her director's chair.

"The twins visited me on set the other day. They STILL [aren't] allowed to watch screens tho," she captioned her post.

In the comments, Sidibe's husband showed some love to his wife. "Getting to watch them visit you at work and you simultaneously be a boss lady and the best mom is such an honor ❤️🥹."

Frankel also shared pictures from their visit on set on hisInstagram, expressing how proud he was of her.

"I'm really glad the twins and I were able to travel across the country so they could be reunited with mama@gabbysidibewhile she directed a new movie," he captioned his post. "Seeing them light up when they got to see her after weeks of her being gone (minus FaceTimes and videos daily) was magical. 🥹❤️ WE ARE SO PROUD OF YOU!!"

Read the original article onPeople

Gabourey Sidibe Slams Critics of Her 23-Month-Old Twins' Hair, Says She 'Didn't Have Kids' for the Aesthetic

Gabourey Sidibe addressed criticism of her toddlers' hair, saying she "didn't have kids" for the aesthetic in a post ...
Famed ESPN college basketball voice Dick Vitale facing another battle with cancer

Famed ESPN broadcaster Dick Vitale isfacing another battle with cancer.

Associated Press

Vitale said Monday that biopsy results had confirmed a diagnosis of melanoma in his lung and liver cavity, which will have him starting immunotherapy. It marks his fifth battle with cancer, which sidelined him from the airwaves for two years before his return shortly before March Madness in 2025.

“I've beaten melanoma,” the 86-year-old Vitale saidin a statement released by ESPN. “I've beaten lymphoma. I've beaten vocal-cord cancer. I've beaten lymph-node cancer. I'm 4 for 4 and I'm fully confident I'm going to make it 5 for 5."

Separate from his ESPN statement, Vitaleposted on social media Mondaythat he had gone through 10 days of testing that included scans, MRIs, bloodwork and a biopsy.

"I obviously did not get the report today that I was hoping for when my oncologist called,” Vitale said, noting he planned on “winning the battle” and adding: “Now at least I know what I face.”

Vitale has made himself a fixture in college basketball, earning the affectionate nickname “Dickie V” with his voice and exuberant style offering a soundtrack to some of the biggest moments in the sport's history. He's inching closer to five decades with ESPN going back to its 1979 launch, armed with a contract through the 2027-28 season as well asthe creation of a basketball event named in his honorthis past season.

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And every step of the way he's quick to tell anyone and everyone how “lucky” he feels to still be working after years of fighting cancer.

That started in 2021 with melanoma, followed by treatments for lymphoma. There were also chemotherapy treatments, radiation for vocal-cord cancer and surgery by summer 2024 to remove cancerous lymph nodes from his neck, while he was unable to speak for a time after the vocal-cord surgery, leaving him having to scribble on eraser-board messages to communicate.

Still, Vitale said in his ESPN statement that he feels “fantastic." And he quickly turned the focus of his statement to his long-running efforts to raise money for pediatric cancer research, notably withnext month’s annual gala in his namethat has raised more than $105 million in its two-decade history.

“At 86 years young, I've lived a hell of a life, and I'm more motivated than ever to raise money for kids battling cancer,” Vitale said, adding that he hopes to raise $12 million with the 21st “Dick Vitale Gala” set for May 1 in Sarasota, Florida.

AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Famed ESPN college basketball voice Dick Vitale facing another battle with cancer

Famed ESPN broadcaster Dick Vitale isfacing another battle with cancer. Vitale said Monday that biopsy results had confirmed a di...
Dan Levy Shares How 'Early Days' Growing Up with Sister Sarah Inspired His New Show “Big Mistakes” (Exclusive)

Dan Levy spoke with PEOPLE exclusively about how his "early days" growing up with his sister, Sarah Levy, inspired his new show, Big Mistakes

People Dan Levy; Sarah LevyCredit: Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty; Olivia Wong/FilmMagic

NEED TO KNOW

  • The dark comedy-crime series premiered on Netflix on April 9

  • Dan, who co-created the show with Rachel Sennott, stars as a pastor who, along with his sister, becomes accidentally drawn into an organized crime ring after she steals a diamond necklace from a local store

Dan Levysays his childhood dynamic with sisterSarah Levypartly inspired his new show,Big Mistakes.

While stepping out to the premiere of the Netflix comedy-crime series in New York City on April 6, theSchitt's Creekalum, 42, spoke to PEOPLE exclusively about which of his family members he thinks comes across most in the show.

"I would probably say the early days of me and my sister," he said of Sarah, 39. "We're in a far better place now that we're older and wiser. But drawing on … anyone who has a sibling, I think, will recognize themselves in the show."

Dan Levy and Sarah Levy in Los Angeles on March 30, 2026Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty

"And it was really about authenticating the experience of that sibling dynamic and just exacerbating all of the bickering in the light of, like, intense criminal activity," he continued. "So my hope is that anyone who comes from a yelling family, anyone who has a sibling, and anyone who's curious about what it is to have a sibling, or to come from a yelling family, will find a place in this show."

Dan co-created the series — which premiered on the streaming platform on April 9 — alongsideRachel Sennott. The show centers on siblings Nicky (Dan), a pastor, and Morgan (Taylor Ortega), a public school teacher, whose lives take an unexpected turn when they end up drawn into a local crime syndicate after Morgan shoplifts a necklace from a pawn shop.

The cast also includesLaurie Metcalf, Boran Kuzum, Jack Innanen, Abby Quinn, Jacob Gutierrez, Mark Ivanir andElizabeth Perkins.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Taylor Ortega and Dan Levy in 'Big Mistakes' on NetflixCredit: Spencer Pazer/Netflix

Reflecting on his return to TV following his six-season run onSchitt's Creek, Dan told PEOPLE, "When I leftSchitt's, I really wanted to make sure that the next thing I did in TV gave me that same sense of inspiration and passion and excitement and love and affection for the people I was working with, and it did."

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He went on to rave about hisBig Mistakescolleagues, saying, "I love these people so much. I'm so proud of this cast and crew. People are working at, like, 110%. All I did was set the table for these people, and they ate."

He added: "So, this is just the cherry on top of a really, really special experience, and I hope we get to tell this story for seasons and seasons and seasons."

Dan Levy at the N.Y.C. premiere of 'Big Mistakes' on April 6, 2026Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty

As theBig Mistakesstory relies on the actors creating a believable — albeit dysfunctional — family dynamic, the cast spent time rehearsing together on camera and bonding off-set, Dan previously told PEOPLE. That bonding included "serious" games of Boggle, complete withBig Mistakesscorecards.

"If you didn't believe the family, then you're not going to believe in the show," Dan explained in an interview ahead of the show's debut. "So it was really important that the cast know each other before the cameras started rolling, and we would play Boggle every opportunity we got, and we bonded through the love of games."

AtBig Mistakes' N.Y.C. premiere, Dan told PEOPLE that his family — including sister Sarah, dadEugene Levyand momDeborah Divine— have already seen the show and count themselves as fans.

"They're already quoting lines from it, and they're very excited to watch it again," he said. "So, that's all I could ask for."

Big Mistakesis now streaming on Netflix.

Read the original article onPeople

Dan Levy Shares How 'Early Days' Growing Up with Sister Sarah Inspired His New Show “Big Mistakes” (Exclusive)

Dan Levy spoke with PEOPLE exclusively about how his "early days" growing up with his sister, Sarah Levy, inspired his new sh...

 

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