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Sir Lenny Henry to Receive Edinburgh TV Festival’s Outstanding Achievement Award

The comedy legend, actor, and activist will be honored for five decades of boundary-breaking brilliance — and says he’s going commando to celebrate.

Next month, the pioneering comedian, actor, and activist, Sir Lenny Henry will receive the Outstanding Achievement Award at the Edinburgh TV Festival, a fitting tribute to a career that spans 50 years and has left an indelible mark on British television, culture, and social change.

In his words:

“I’d like to thank the Edinburgh TV Festival and all who sail in her for this magnificent honour. I’m very humbled to receive it and will wear a kilt and go commando to celebrate. Excelsior. Big love.”

From his early days on “Tiswas” and “Three of a Kind,” to the cult-classic sitcom “Chef!” in the ‘90s, and more recently, standout turns in “Broadchurch,” “The Witcher: The Blood Origin,” “The Syndicate,” and Amazon’s “The Rings of Power,” Henry has built a body of work that refuses to be boxed in.

And the accolades don’t stop at acting. Henry is a vocal advocate for diversity and inclusion, using his platform and his production company Esmerelda — where he serves as joint co-managing director alongside BAFTA-winning executive producer, writer, and director Jon Sen — to champion underrepresented talent across the industry.

He also co-founded Comic Relief, the charitable juggernaut that has raised over £1 billion ($1.37 billion) for global causes since 1985. As if that weren’t enough, he established the Centre for Media Diversity at Birmingham City University, driving forward the fight for more equitable representation behind and in front of the camera.

This year’s Edinburgh TV Festival — its 50th anniversary — is shaping up to be one for the books. Alongside Henry’s honour, Shonda Rhimes will receive the festival’s inaugural fellowship, and the ceremony will see “Adolescence,” “Slow Horses,” “Blue Lights,” “Severance,” and “Baby Reindeer” among the nominees vying for awards. Comedian and actor Nick Mohammed will host.

While the spotlight will shine brightly on a wide-ranging roster of talent, there’s something especially fitting about celebrating Lenny Henry now: a trailblazer whose work has made generations laugh, think, and ultimately, left British culture richer and more inclusive.

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