THEY may not have won Eurovision, but UK hopefuls Electro Velvet say it’s been an unforgettable time for them.

The duo, primary school teacher and Mick Jagger tribute Alex Larke and former Voice contestant Bianca Nicholas, came away with a disappointing five points for their track Still In Love With You.

Talking after the contest, they said: “Obviously it is disappointing to finish on the right hand side of the board but we have had the most amazing, brilliant, unforgettable time being part of this unique competition in this special year.”

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Sweden was crowned the winner of the 60th Eurovision Song Contest, fighting off competition from Russia and Italy to take home the prize and be confirmed as next year’s hosts.

TV star Greg Davies has told of his painful year after both his father and the man who played his on-screen dad – Rik Mayall – died.

The Young Ones star Mayall, who played Davies’ father in the Channel 4 sitcom Man Down, died at the age of just 56 last year.

Davies, 47, said: “My dad died a couple of months after Rik… it was a difficult year. It’s a unique set of circumstances. It was incredibly sad. I was very close to my dad.

“Rik was the dream casting for me. He was a childhood hero of mine, and I look like him. And he was beloved, as you saw when he died.”

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Davies spent 13 years as a drama teacher, an unhappy period in which he was “lost at sea” and felt “absolute self-loathing” before becoming an actor.

WELSH choir group Cor Glanaethwy and dance group Entity Allstars have become the first acts to go through to the Britain’s Got Talent final.

Cor Glanaethwy automatically made the final after receiving the majority of the public vote yesterday evening (Monday, May 25).

The judges – Simon Cowell, Alesha Dixon, Amanda Holden and David Walliams – had to pick one act from the other two acts in the top three and plumped for Entity Allstars.

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Every night this week contestants will bid for a place in the final, with the hopes of winning the £250,000 cash prize and the opportunity to appear at the Royal Variety Performance.

FINALLY, Hollywood star Martin Sheen has told how he felt “powerless” to help his troubled son Charlie during his public meltdown.

Charlie, 49, was the highest paid actor on US TV before he was spectacularly fired from hit show Two And A Half Men over his erratic behaviour.

His father, 74, said: “What he was going through at that time, we were powerless to do much. Except to pray for him and lift him up.”

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The West Wing star’s last TV show Anger Management, which also featured his son, was axed and he now stars alongside Jane Fonda in Grace And Frankie, a Netflix series about two men who leave their wives for each other.