Joey Essex

Joey Essex: ‘I don’t want to make the same mistake my mum did. I know how much people hurt’

Reality star Joey Essex was ten when his mother took her own life. In advance of his BBC documentary Grief and Me, he tells Charlotte Edwardes why he’s finally confronting his trauma

Tom Bradby

Tom Bradby on the problem of being a royal favourite – and his own breakdown

As the face of News at Ten, Tom Bradby is happier breaking stories than being part of them. But he can’t help making headlines, whether he’s bringing Meghan Markle’s emotional struggles to the world’s attention, wrestling with his own mental wellbeing or staying neutral in the feud between his friends – princes William and Harry

Tom Daley

Thirteen years after he first stood on an Olympic diving board, Tom Daley has come out as gay, lost his father, got married and become a parent. Now his sights are set on 20 seconds in Tokyo and his bid for a gold medal. By Charlotte Edwardes

Vinnie Jones

There are many sides to Vinnie Jones, the former football hard man turned tough-guy actor, author, farmer and passionate conservationist. But right now it is grief that defines him, as he approaches the first anniversary of his wife’s death from cancer

George Osborne

George Osborne has been busy since his career went into freefall. He’s divorced, fallen in love, got fit and has a new job – as a newspaper editor. Now the former chancellor’s texting Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock about the pandemic. By Charlotte Edwardes

Jeremy Hunt

It’s less than a year since the former health secretary lost out in the Tory leadership race. But here’s the new Jeremy Hunt – admitting how much his political career cost his family and openly criticising the way the government has handled the Covid-19 crisis. He’s even got doctors on his side for once.

Ali Parsa

Matt Hancock is a fan. So are the 85,000 users who have signed up to Ali Parsa’s health app. Now that the local surgery is a no-go zone, will GPs come round to the idea of a digital revolution in the health service – and the former banker who believes he can deliver it?

Harriet Harman

Ahead of the 100th anniversary of women in parliament, Charlotte Edwardes talks to the longest continuously serving woman in the Commons about her experiences in Westminster, why Margaret Thatcher “was not a proper feminist” and why it’s still not safe for women in politics to cry