IN IT TOGETHER

Prince Harry, Kate and Wills enlist a host of stars including Professor Green and Andrew Flintoff to shatter mental health stigma for Heads Together campaign

The royal trio released 10 videos today featuring celebs and ordinary people talking about their problems

FORMER England cricket captain Andrew Flintoff, rapper Professor Green and comic Ruby Wax are some of the stars talking publicly about their mental health battles in a series of new films.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry have released the 10 films that feature celebrities and ordinary people describing the life-changing conversations where they opened up about problems such as anxiety or depression.

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Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Price Harry have released 10 films as part of their Heads Together campaign

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The royal trio’s videos feature celebrities and ordinary people opening up about problems such as anxiety or depression

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They launched the campaign last May to try and shatter the stigma around mental health

The royal trio commissioned the films – directed by leading figures such as My Beautiful Launderette creator Stephen Frears – as part of their Heads Together mental health campaign to encourage the nation to talk about their psychological issues.

William, Kate and Harry said: “Since we launched Heads Together last May, we have seen time and time again that shattering stigma on mental health starts with simple conversations.

“When you realise that mental health problems affect your friends, neighbours, children and spouses, the walls of judgment and prejudice around these issues begin to fall.

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In one of the films Ruby Wax and her husband, Ed Bye, discuss her mental illness

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The couple are two of a number of celebs involved in the campaign

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The Duchess of Cambridge, together with Princes William and Harry, launched the videos today

“And we all know that you cannot resolve a mental health issue by staying silent.

“Attitudes to mental health are at a tipping point. We hope these films show people how simple conversations can change the direction of an entire life.”

In one film, Green chatted to Flintoff about the moment he broke down while speaking about his father’s suicide to his grandmother during the filming of a documentary and how he was “petrified” at being seen at his “most vulnerable” but the conversation changed everything.

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The former cricketer, who has spoken of his battle with depression, said: “The hardest thing for me initially was talking. I’m not a big talker. I’m from the north of England, from a working-class family. We don’t talk about our feelings.”

Also featured in the films are Tony Blair’s former spin doctor Alastair Campbell chatting to his partner Fiona Millar about his well-documented fight against depression.

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Freddie Flintoff (left) and Stephen Manderson who are among the stars talking about their mental health battles

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The former cricketer, who has spoken of his battle with depression, said the ‘hardest thing was talking’

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Mark Austin and his daughter Maddy spoke about how she dealt with anorexia

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The broadcaster is best known for his role presenting ITV news

Broadcaster Mark Austin speaks to his daughter, Maddy, about how she dealt with anorexia, while comic Ruby Wax and her husband, Ed Bye, discuss her mental illness.

Heads Together has commissioned a YouGov poll which found nearly half (46 per cent) of 5,003 adults, questioned in February, have talked recently about mental health, with a quarter chatting about their own psychological problems.

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Alastair Campbell and his partner Fiona Millar talked about his well-documented fight against depression

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Campbell was former Prime Minister Tony Blair’s spin doctor

Eight out of 10 people who have talked about their own mental health found these conversations helpful.

Green, real name Stephen Manderson, who suffers from anxiety, made a successful 2015 documentary Professor Green: Suicide And Me, which highlighted the high rate of male suicide in the UK.

Speaking ahead of the launch of the films, he said it was important for public figures to be honest about their issues.


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