Tuesday, 10 June 2025

Who Do You Think You Are? - Aisling Bea, Fred Sirieix and Will Young

 

I have three episodes of Who Do You Think You Are? to catch up on with my little write-ups

 - sorry for the delay, but I've been busy the last couple of weeks, researching my wonderful customers' families.


A retro TV


Comedian and actress Aisling Bea's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? was, unsurprisingly, focussed on Ireland.

Aisling wasn't surprised at all - though she had been hoping for some variety in her family's past, the result was one she had been expecting. Her family are and were, very Irish.


This was a solid Irish-centred episode, taking in the famine and the fight for independence.

Especially notable was the link to the Irish language as a form of resistance and cultural heritage, as well as the uncomfortable history of those who benefitted from the famine - including Aisling's relatives.

History is not always as straight-forward as good and bad, and what Aisling found was the story of a young widow doing her best for her family, against a background of disaster.


Much as Aisling's episode was definitely Irish, TV personality Fred Sirieix's episode was most definitely French.

It made for an interesting episode - we rarely get to see history from a French perspective here in the UK, and as one of our closest neighbours, we should perhaps know more about French history than we do.


We covered a lot of ground here - both wars, Bordeaux wines, and Parisian orphans were all on the roster, and Fred led us through them all.

The explorations of the wars were particularly interesting - we are, of course, familiar with the history from the British perspective, but the 'home front' was very different in France, and that difference is important for us here to understand.


Will Young's family history also included tales of World War Two - which has been something of a theme this series.

In fact I think that Will's grandfather, considered by many in the family to be a 'bit of a loser' was one of the few relatives Will thought he could be proud of, by the end of the episode!


Will's family were very, very, posh.

And very, very, involved in the British Empire. Including the slavery part - and it just kind of got worse from there.

It's not often that the celebrity is actively hoping for their ancestors to get their comeuppance... but Will had good reason to, in fairness.

Another reminder that history is what it is - much as we'd sometimes like to change it!



Ready to start your own family history journey? I offer a range of professional genealogy services, check out my website for more details. 

Tuesday, 20 May 2025

Who Do You Think You Are? - Layton Williams

 

vintage-style tree


Actor Layton Williams' episode of Who Do You Think You Are? aired last Monday, rather than Tuesday, due to BBC scheduling conflicts.

Layton's episode was a lot of fun - and worth the watch just for the energy and personality he brings to everything.

The episode looked at both Layton's British family and his Jamaican roots, starting with the British side.


On his British side, Layton carried on the theme of Ross Kemp's episode last week by following the World War Two experiences of his great-great-grandfather.

He learned that the family moving to Bury (where Layton was born,) was as a direct result of his ancestor's war work.

(The name 'cat nana' to describe Layton's beloved great-grandmother in this part of the episode is extremely cute!)

Beyond the war, the episode looked at Layton's links to London and an ancestor with musical links.


Moving on to Jamaica, Layton follows his father's line into the dark history of slavery.

Although the link is not 100 per cent certain due to the lack of record-keeping in some periods of Jamaica's history, there is a high likelihood that the show was able to trace the enslaved people in Layton's ancestry.

One of his likely female ancestors in Jamaica was recorded as having been born in Africa, meaning that she would have been transported against her will to Jamaica aboard a slave ship.

The history is poignant, and important, and Layton's positivity shines through without dulling the truth of an inhuman situation.



Ready to start your own family history journey? I offer a range of professional genealogy services, check out my website for more details.

Tuesday, 13 May 2025

Who Do You Think You Are? - Ross Kemp

 

acorn


Actor and TV presenter Ross Kemp's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? aired last Tuesday.

Much, though not all, of Ross' episode was focussed on his great-grandfather, 'Pop,' (short for 'Popeye,' because he was a sailor,) and his war-time service in the Merchant Navy.

The Merchant Navy is a civilian force of trade vessels - one which did vital work during both world wars in terms of supply chains and troop movements.


Ross was especially keen to find out why his mother seemed to have a memory of Pop returning from sea in a US army uniform

 - something that I'm not going to spoil here, and which you'll have to watch the episode to get to the bottom of.


Other stand-out moments of the episode include the story of a previously unknown great-great-uncle who had a problem with alcohol that led to other problems.

...Not least the problems between himself and his parents and siblings, who were threatened by his often violent and unpredictable behaviour.


This was a solid episode on the approach to this series' half-way point, and certainly worth the watch if you have an interest in the history of seafaring and World War Two.




Ready to start your own family history journey? I offer a range of professional genealogy services, check out my website for more details.

Tuesday, 6 May 2025

Who Do You Think You Are? - Mishal Husain

 

oak tree


Journalist and broadcaster Mishal Husain's surprising and interesting episode of Who Do You Think You Are? (WDYTYA?) aired last Tuesday.

Mishal started her journey where she expected to - in India and Pakistan, in the days of the British Empire. 


From there she followed the 'Anglo'-Indian (or, in this case, Irish-Indian,) part of her family, and a hard-working doctor named Thomas Quinn.

Thomas managed to break the barriers placed in the way of mixed-race people in British India, eventually becoming the private doctor to a maharaja.

Following her European ancestry, Mishal learned of her family's life in a Danish-Indian trading port, as well as in French-Indian settlements.


The big twist (and if you haven't seen it - you might want to stop reading here!) - came when she learned that one of her white ancestors was not European... but American.

Travelling to the USA, and clearly more than a little surprised by the turn of events, Mishal ended up in the prestigious halls of Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and beyond that to the founding of the United States as a whole.


This was an extremely interesting episode - not only in its own right, but also as an example of how interconnected we all are, across many different countries, whether or not we know it.




Ready to start your own family history journey? I offer a range of professional genealogy services, check out my website for more details.

Tuesday, 29 April 2025

Who Do You Think You Are? Series 22 - Andrew Garfield

 

vintage suitcase


You can be forgiven for not knowing that the new series of Who Do You Think You Are? is up and running - I didn't, and ended up watching Andrew Garfield's episode on iPlayer when I realised I'd missed it.

I'm glad I was able to catch-up because this was a solid episode to open the series.


Actor Andrew Garfield followed his father's family on both sides of the Atlantic, with a search that encompassed Poland, Britain, and the US.

The episode highlighted some of the more tragic aspects of researching Jewish family history - the Holocaust, the ghettoes, and pogroms - as well as featuring some of the glamour of old Hollywood.


The mix between the glamour and the tragedy clashed a little - but I think in less skilled presenting hands, it would have been more jarring.

Andrew Garfield did a lot of the work to bridge the tonal gaps and connect the family's story, bringing perspective to the family's lives in America, and the poetic justice of a cousin who worked with the famous Monuments Men in World War Two to reclaim art stolen by the Nazis.


The beating heart of this episode was undoubtedly Garfield's trip to Treblinka, where masses of memorial stones represented ghettoes - each standing in for thousands of people murdered at the camp.

Family stories such as this provide some small piece of justice to the Holocaust's victims, by preserving the names and stories of those who were murdered senselessly by the Nazi regime.



Ready to start your own family history journey? I offer a range of professional genealogy services, check out my website for more details.