The filing added that Walliams’ mental health had suffered as a result of the issue. This included a withdrawn £1M contract for appearing in the 2023 season of Britain’s Got Talent. The High Court document estimated that Walliams’ loss of earnings from “appearances and performances” totaled nearly £1.8M ($2.2M) since The Guardian’s article was published. Walliams also claimed that the BBC withdrew part of its funding for an animation series based on his children’s book Gangsta Granny, while he said that Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Really Useful Group ended its involvement in a musical based on the same novel. The legal document listed offers of work that had been “withdrawn,” including a “travelogue across India on Channel 4.” The project was said to have been canceled “entirely.”Ĭhannel 4 declined to comment, though it is understood that the early-stage development was not taken forward for reasons unconnected to Walliams’ Britain’s Got Talent remarks. In a High Court legal filing seen by Deadline, Walliams claimed that his “reputation and earnings have been severely damaged” as a result of The Guardian’s story. 'Dope Girls': Julianne Nicholson & Eliza Scanlen To Lead BBC Drama About Female Crime Boss In Soho Filming Underway
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