{"id":101736,"date":"2023-12-10T15:41:06","date_gmt":"2023-12-10T15:41:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritycovernews.com\/?p=101736"},"modified":"2023-12-10T15:41:06","modified_gmt":"2023-12-10T15:41:06","slug":"bbcs-lucy-worsley-admits-i-very-much-like-violence-ahead-of-new-sherlock-show","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritycovernews.com\/tv-movies\/bbcs-lucy-worsley-admits-i-very-much-like-violence-ahead-of-new-sherlock-show\/","title":{"rendered":"BBCs Lucy Worsley admits I very much like violence ahead of new Sherlock show"},"content":{"rendered":"

Killing Sherlock: Lucy Worsley on the Case of Conan Doyle trailer<\/h3>\n

Lucy Worsley has admitted that she would like more violent deaths in her professional future as she “very much” likes violence – but only as a way to understand the past. The historian – whose new TV show Killing Sherlock: Lucy Worsely On The Case of Conan Doyle launches tonight – is a big fan of true crime.<\/p>\n

She also hosts a podcast called Lady Killers which sees her investigate the crimes of women from the 19th and 20th Century from a contemporary, feminist perspective. \u201cI very much like violence,\u201d she admitted speaking exclusively to The Express and other media<\/p>\n

She made the statement when asked what was next for her following this latest literary investigation. \u201cThe next thing we’re going to be doing is a new season of our Radio Four, series and podcast…Lady Killers,” she admitted.<\/p>\n

\u201cAnd the lady killers are notorious murderers of the 19th and early 20th centuries, and we look at the crimes and we explore the world in which they lived really as a means of looking at the lives of other women like them. So sometimes they were bad, sometimes they were desperate,” she explained.<\/p>\n

READ MORE: <\/strong> Agatha Christie\u2019s 11-day disappearance \u2018solved\u2019 by Lucy Worsley<\/strong><\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

“When a woman says that she had killed somebody who’d beaten her – her husband – her children are hungry, that she was desperate or wherever she killed because she was desperate then that’s really interesting,” she opined.<\/p>\n

“It’s a way into investigating situations of other women in those conditions,\u201d she explained lest anyone think she had a predisposition to violence.<\/p>\n

Asked if that show might ever become a TV series, Lucy didn’t dismiss the idea mentioning another podcast that was recently commissioned for television.<\/p>\n

However for now her thoughts are firmly on dissecting the world of Sherlock and his creator Arthur Conan Doyle.<\/p>\n

The show was inspired by her crush on the world-famous fictional detective and she is keen to point out that her feelings are very much for Sherlock and not his creator<\/p>\n

Don’t miss… <\/strong>
I’m A Celebrity fans beg ‘do the right thing’ after Josie Gibson exit[INSIGHT] <\/strong>
TV star turns down I’m A Celeb as they didn’t want to live with Nigel Farage[LATEST] <\/strong>
Danielle Harold ‘refused to quit I\u2019m A Celeb despite nasty hidden health battle'[INSIGHT] <\/strong><\/p>\n

<\/p>\n