As a tell-all Netflix documentary arrives, we explore how Take That's internal dynamics created the UK's most successful boy band In 1990, five northern working-class men formed a band that would go ...
The remaining trio on breaking up, battling depression and performing with ‘sorer knees than in the Nineties’ Neil McCormick has been chief music critic for the Telegraph since 1995. His interviews ...
Take That fans have been left delighted with this morning's announcement that Gary Barlow, Mark Owen and Howard Donald are reviving their record-breaking tour. The trio will be embarking on a tour, ...
The 'Take That' documentary debuted on Netflix on Tuesday, Jan. 27 Ilana Kaplan is a Staff Editor at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2023. Her work has previously appeared in The New York ...
Take That fans are currently battling it out to see their favourite boyband on stage once again. The band's revamped Circus Live Tour is set to hit UK stadiums in the summer of 2026. The news, ...
The last time Take That agreed to a documentary, they had nothing to lose. It was 2005, and they'd been inactive for almost a decade. Gary Barlow and Mark Owen had lost their record contracts, Jason ...
This year, Take That will celebrate 30 years in the music business. With a BBC special to mark the occasion and some new music on the way from Gary Barlow, Mark Owen, and Howard Donald, it's a big ...
Take That fans are in for a treat. The beloved boy band is set to revive their iconic Circus tour, nearly twenty years after it first wowed audiences, coinciding with the release of their tenth studio ...
Once upon a time, everybody wanted to be NKOTB. As the new Netflix docuseries Take That describes, in the late 1980s, the massive success of New Kids on the Block was the model for a new five-headed ...
Take That's journey from Manchester to stardom is being explored in a new documentary series, which is said to be a "deeply personal" look back at the remarkable story of the UK's most iconic boy ...
The last time Take That agreed to a documentary, they had nothing to lose. It was 2005, and they'd been inactive for almost a decade. Gary Barlow and Mark Owen had lost their record contracts, Jason ...