
Apple TV+ unveils first look of ‘Hannah Waddingham: Home for Christmas’; holiday special to release on November 22
The Hindu
Apple today unveiled a first-look photo for the highly anticipated Hannah Waddingham: Home for Christmas
Apple today unveiled a first-look photo for the highly anticipated Hannah Waddingham: Home for Christmas and announced that the holiday special will debut globally on November 22.
In the musical event, Emmy-winning star Hannah Waddingham will ring in the holidays as she welcomes special guests for a musical extravaganza at the London Coliseum. The special was recorded live in front of an audience, and audiences around the world will be able to join Waddingham in celebrating her favourite time of year as she performs festive classics accompanied by a spectacular big band.
Hannah Waddingham: Home for Christmas is produced by Done + Dusted, the same team behind Apple’s hit Mariah Carey’s Magical Christmas Special. Done + Dusted has also produced Beauty & The Beast: A 30th Celebration, John Legend’s A Legendary Christmas with John and Chrissy, The Little Mermaid Live!, and the opening and closing ceremonies of the London Olympics.
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Waddingham, Katy Mullan, Moira Ross, Raj Kapoor and Nick Todisco have served as executive producers. The holiday special will be directed by BAFTA Award winner Hamish Hamilton.

The ongoing Print Biennale Exhibition at Lalit Kala Akademi, Chennai, unfolds as a journey far beyond India’s borders, tracing artistic lineages shaped by revolution and resistance across Latin America and nNorthern Africa. Presented as a collateral event of the Third Print Biennale of India, the exhibition features a selection from the Boti Llanes family collection, initiated by Dr Llilian Llanes, recipient of Cuba’s National Award for Cultural Research, and curated in India by her daughter, Liliam Mariana Boti Llanes. Bringing together the works of 48 printmaking artists from regions including Mexico, Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, the exhibition is rooted in the socio-political upheavals of the 1980s and 1990s. It shows printmaking as both a political and creative tool, with works that weave stories across countries and continents.












