Lizzie Cundy slams 'sensitive and overdramatic' Hannah Waddingham after she berated a photographer for asking

By Laura Fox and Joanna Crawley For Mailonline
Published: 11:15 BST, 16 April 2024 | Updated: 11:56 BST, 16 April 2024
Lizzie Cundy has slammed Hannah Waddingham as 'sensitive and overdramatic' after she berated a photographer for asking her to 'show some leg' on the red carpet at the Olivier Awards.
The TV personality, 55, insisted the actress 'should have worn a trouser suit' if she didn't want to show her legs at the event.
Hannah was captured by a fan on X shouting to a photographer 'you'd never say that to man,' before threatening to leave if the comments continued.
Speaking on the GB News Breakfast Show, Lizzie said: 'I think Hannah was sensitive and totally over the top and over-dramatic and unnecessary.
'She's not dressed up to do the ironing at home has she, she wants to get pictured, and she's put on a dress that has got a slit in it. If she didn't want them to say ''show us your leg'' then wear a trouser suit.


Lizzie Cundy has slammed Hannah Waddingham as 'sensitive and overdramatic' after she berated a photographer for asking her to 'show some leg' on the Oliviers red carpet


Hannah was captured by a fan on X shouting to a photographer 'you'd never say that to man,' before threatening to leave if the comments continued
'She's got to play the game, and she'd be the one that is so upset if she wasn't in any of the papers the next day, and obviously this worked for her because she got everywhere.
'But if she wasn't happy she should have worn a trouser suit, not a dress with a slit.'
She went onto add: 'She's being over the top and sensitive and you know it, there's no harm. She's been in this industry a long long time.
'She knows what the photographers are like, she's dressed up to the nines and she's actually got her dress that is showing her leg. If she didn't want that, wear a trouser suit!
'I think we're getting a bit over-offended and oversensitive. If a builder whistles at me at my age I'm very happy about it!'
On Sunday Hannah called out a photographer on the Olivier Awards red carpet after she was asked to 'show a leg.'
Video shared by a fan on X captures the moment the Ted Lasso star, 49, was posing outside the Royal Albert Hall before a photographer apparently requested she 'show leg.'
The photographer's remarks are inaudible but Hannah is seen shouting over to the crowd of photographers: 'Oh my God, you'd never say that to a man, my friend.'


Lizzie said: 'if she wasn't happy she should have worn a trouser suit, not a dress with a slit'


Video shared by a fan on X captured the moment Hannah was posing outside the Royal Albert Hall before a photographer apparently requested she 'show leg'


The photographer's remarks are inaudible but Hannah is seen shouting over to the crowd of photographers: 'Oh my God, you'd never say that to a man, my friend'
As fans applaud her she then threatens to leave if the comments continue saying: 'Don't say 'show me leg.' No.'
Walking away Hannah continued to argue with the snapper, pointing at him and adding 'have some manners'.
Hannah hosted Sunday night's Olivier Awards, which celebrated another stellar year of UK theatre.
She wowed in a custom Marchesa gown, adorned with sparkling embellishments on the semi-sheer gown for her red carpet moment before making three outfit changes during the glittering ceremony.
Sunset Boulevard came out on top with an impressive seven wins, while Sarah Snook and Andrew Scott's play also won big.
Nicole Scherzinger was handed the Best Actress in a Musical prize for her performance in Sunset Boulevard while her leading co-star Tom Francis took home the Best Actor in a Musical gong.
Jamie Lloyd won the Sir Peter Hall Award for Best Director and the show also won Best Musical Revival.
Elsewhere, Jack Knowles took home the White Light Award for Best Lighting Design; Alan Williams won for the Outstanding Musical Contribution award for his musical supervision & musical direction and Adam Fisher won the d&b audiotechnik Award for Best Sound Design.
Pop star Nicole joked that she first wanted to thank God for stopping her from tripping on the way to accept her Best Actress in a Musical gong.
The US actress and singer also said that she 'was coming for blood' on Broadway ahead of her taking Sunset Boulevard to New York.


Walking away Hannah continued to argue with the snapper, pointing at him and adding 'have some manners,'


She wowed in a custom Marchesa gown, adorned with sparkling embellishments on the semi-sheer gown for her red carpet moment
She said 'thank God for saving me from that trip right there', before adding that she was 'nothing without him'.
The Pussycat Dolls singer also said that 'coming from really humble beginnings I always wanted to be a singer and do musicals'.
She added that she wanted to do 'so many roles' and joked that the failing Hollywood star, Norma Desmond, depicted in the musical was not 'one of them'.
After weeks of accolades it was almost inevitable that Sarah Snook might lead the winners as the 2024 Olivier Awards got underway on Sunday evening - and so it proved as the Australian star was named Best Actress, and rightly so.
Snook - best known for her starring role in HBO series Succession - scooped the award for her mesmerising one-woman performance in a new West End production of Oscar Wilde's The Picture Of Dorian Gray.
The Australian actress takes all 26 roles in the production, among them Basil Hallward, Sibyl Vane and of course Gray himself.
Elsewhere there was triumph of sorts for Andrew Scott, who surprisingly lost out on the award for Best Actor but found himself among the winners after VANYA, director Stephen Simon's contemporary rendering of the Anton Chekhov classic, claimed the award for Best Revival during the event at London's Royal Albert Hall.
Olivier awards 2024: Full winners list
Best actor in a musical
David Cumming for Operation Mincemeat
Tom Francis for Sunset Boulevard - WINNER
Daniel Mays for Guys and Dolls
Charlie Stemp for Crazy for You
Best actress in a musical
Natasha Hodgson for Operation Mincemeat
Caissie Levy for Next to Normal
Nicole Scherzinger for Sunset Boulevard - WINNER
Marisha Wallace for Guys and Dolls
Best actress
Laura Donnelly for The Hills of California
Sophie Okonedo for Medea
Sarah Jessica Parker for Plaza Suite
Sheridan Smith for Shirley Valentine
Sarah Snook for The Picture of Dorian Gray - WINNER
Best actor
Mark Gatiss for The Motive and the Cue - WINNER
Joseph Fiennes for Dear England
James Norton for A Little Life
Andrew Scott for Vanya
David Tennant for Macbeth
Best new play
Dear England by James Graham - WINNER
The Hills of California by Jez Butterworth
The Motive and the Cue by Jack Thorne
Till the Stars Come Down by Beth Steel
Best new musical
The Little Big Things, music by Nick Butcher, lyrics by Nick Butcher and Tom Ling, book by Joe White
Next to Normal, music by Tom Kitt, book and lyrics by Brian Yorkey
Operation Mincemeat, music, lyrics and book by David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson and Zoë Roberts - WINNER
A Strange Loop, music, lyrics and book by Michael R Jackson
Best actress in a supporting role in a musical
Grace Hodgett Young for Sunset Boulevard
Zoë Roberts for Operation Mincemeat
Amy Trigg for The Little Big Things - WINNER
Eleanor Worthington-Cox for Next to Normal
Best actor in a supporting role in a musical
Jak Malone for Operation Mincemeat - WINNER
Cedric Neal for Guys and Dolls
David Thaxton for Sunset Boulevard
Jack Wolfe for Next to Normal
Best actor in a supporting role
Will Close for Dear England - WINNER
Paul Hilton for An Enemy of the People
Giles Terera for Clyde’s
Luke Thompson for A Little Life
Zubin Varla for A Little Life
Best actress in a supporting role
Lorraine Ashbourne for Till the Stars Come Down
Priyanga Burford for An Enemy of the People
Haydn Gwynne for When Winston Went to War With the Wireless - WINNER
Gina McKee for Dear England
Olivier Tanya Reynolds for A Mirror
Noël Coward award for best new entertainment or comedy play
Accidental Death of an Anarchist by Dario Fo and Franca Rame
Stephen Sondheim’s Old Friends, music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim
Stranger Things: The First Shadow by Kate Trefry - WINNER
Vardy V Rooney: The Wagatha Christie Trial, adapted by Liv Hennessy
Best Family Show
Bluey’s Big Play by Joe Brumm
Dinosaur World Live by Derek Bond - WINNER
The House With Chicken Legs adapted by Oliver Lansley
The Smeds and the Smoos adapted by Tall Stories
Gillian Lynne award for best theatre choreographer
Fabian Aloise for Sunset Boulevard
Ellen Kane and Hannes Langolf for Dear England
Arlene Phillips with James Cousins for Guys and Dolls - WINNER
Mark Smith for The Little Big Things
Susan Stroman for Crazy for You
Best Costume Design
Bunny Christie and Deborah Andrews for Guys and Dolls
Ryan Dawson Laight for La Cage Aux Folles
Hugh Durrant for Peter Pan
Marg Horwell for The Picture of Dorian Gray - WINNER
Best Revival
The Effect by Lucy Prebble
Macbeth by William Shakespeare
Shirley Valentine by Willy Russell
Vanya by Anton Chekhov, adapted by Simon Stephens - WINNER
Best musical revival
Groundhog Day, music and lyrics by Tim Minchin
Guys and Dolls, music and lyrics by Frank Loesser, book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows
Hadestown, music, lyrics and book by Anaïs Mitchell
Sunset Boulevard, music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, lyrics and book by Don Black and Christopher Hampton - WINNER
Best Sound Design
Paul Arditti for Stranger Things: The First Shadow
Dan Balfour and Tom Gibbins for Dear England
Adam Fisher for Sunset Boulevard - WINNER
Gareth Fry for Macbeth
Outstanding Musical Contribution
Tom Brady for Musical Supervision and Arrangements and Charlie Rosen for Orchestrations for Guys and Dolls
Matt Brind for Musical Supervision, Arrangements and Orchestrations for Just for One Day
Steve Sidwell for Orchestrations and Joe Bunker for Musical Direction for Operation Mincemeat
Alan Williams for Musical Supervision and Musical Direction for Sunset Boulevard - WINNER
Best set design
Miriam Buether for Stranger Things: The First Shadow WINNER
Bunny Christie for Guys and Dolls
Es Devlin and Ash J Woodward Dear England
Soutra Gilmour and Nathan Amzi and Joe Ransom for Sunset Boulevard
Best lighting design
Jon Clark for Dear England
Jon Clark for Stranger Things: The First Shadow
Paule Constable for Guys and Dolls
Jack Knowles for Sunset Boulevard - WINNER
Best new opera production
Blue by the English National Opera
Innocence by the Royal Opera - WINNER
Picture a Day Like This by the Royal Opera
The Rhinegold by the English National Opera
Outstanding achievement in opera
Antonio Pappano for his role as Musical Director of the Royal Opera House - WINNER
Belarus Free Theatre Company for King Stakh’s Wild Hunt
Marina Abramović for 7 Deaths of Maria Callas
Outstanding achievement in dance
Isabela Coracy for her performance in NINA: By Whatever Means, part of Ballet Black: Pioneers - WINNER
Jonzi D for his artistic direction of Breakin’ Convention 2023 International festival of hip-hop Dance theatre
Rhiannon Faith for her community focused conception of Lay Down Your Burdens at The Pit
Outstanding achievement in affiliate theatre
Blue Mist by Mohamed-Zain Dada at the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs at the Royal Court theatre
A Playlist for The Revolution by AJ Yi at the Bush theatre
Sleepova by Matilda Feyişayo at the Bush theatre - WINNER
The Swell by Isley Lynn at Orange Tree theatre
The Time Machine: A Comedy by Steven Canny and John Nicholson at the Park theatre
Sir Peter Hall award for best director
Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin for Stranger Things: The First Shadow at the Phoenix theatre
Rupert Goold for Dear England at the National Theatre – Olivier and Prince Edward theatre
Jamie Lloyd for Sunset Boulevard at the Savoy theatre - WINNER
Sam Mendes for The Motive and the Cue at the National Theatre – Lyttelton and Noël Coward theatre