King jokes ‘I need more training’ after struggling with surgical robot

The King joked that he would need technology training after attempting to operate anew surgical robotat a cancer centre.

The Telegraph The King gets to grips with the controls of the surgical robot at Guy's Hospital

The monarch, who has been receiving treatment for cancer for more than two years, met staff and patients at the cancer centre at Guy’s Hospital in London on Monday.

Raymond Burgess, 69, from south London, described how hischemotherapyleft him with a bad taste in his mouth, prompting the King to sympathise: “It’s an awful sort of metallic taste. It doesn’t exactly help with eating.”

The King meets patients David Coleman and Raymond Burgess. Mr Burgess, with his wife alongside him, shared experiences of chemotherapy with His Majesty

During  his visit, the King was given a step-by-step presentation of the new fifth-generation Da Vinci Surgical System, which enables smaller and more precise incisions during bladder surgery.

The robot, which is used by the NHS, can significantly reduce patient operating and recovery times because of its precision.

The King took a seat to look through a headset while controlling the robotic hands on an operating table behind him.

A £5 note alongside an internal model of a bladder was used to show the powerful magnification of the equipment

On display was a small model of the internal bladder and a £5 note, the tiny text on which was used to illustrate the high magnifications possible.

Prof Ben Challacombe, a consultant urological surgeon, explained that the technology was so precise it would allow him to see things that the human eye could not.

Placing his fingers into the controls, the King struggled at first to get to grips with the mechanism, saying: “I think I need more practice. I’ll have to come back after some more training.”

Prof Challacombe replied: “We’ll have to get you back for a full immersive course.”

The King speaking to Prof Ben Challacombe, a consultant urological surgeon

The King asked many questions in the laboratory. Told that the doctors now use AI in their work with cancer, he asked: “What proportion of the time is it right? Because it’s not always right.”

In the Chemotherapy Village, the King met patients who could benefit from the technological advances.

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Mr Burgess told him: “All the staff have been fantastic, all so welcoming and lovely. It’s very comfortable here. Just can’t taste anything, apart from lemons and limes mostly.”

Another patient, who did not want to be named, explained that she had taken her laptop into the centre to carry on working while wearing a cold cap for her breast cancer treatment.

The monarch told her: “That’s extraordinary. Very brave. I wish you all the best.”

On leaving, the King greeted a crowd of more than 150 people, shaking hands with patients as he wished them luck with their treatment.

The King meets members of the medical team at the cancer centre

Prof Challacombe said after the visit: “He was very interested in what this could do in terms of improving outcomes for patients.

“So I told him about decreased pain and scars and decreased length of stay, and he actually used the phrase to me, ‘This seems much more minimally invasive than the surgery that I’ve previously heard of’, which was nice.

“I could see he was speaking from the point of view of having been through treatment himself.”

The King was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer in February 2024, after being treated in hospital for an enlarged prostate.

In December, he revealed the“good news”that the weekly treatment he had endured for almost two years was being scaled back.

A Buckingham Palace spokesman said at the time: “His Majesty has responded exceptionally well to treatment and his doctors advise that ongoing measures will now move into a precautionary phase.”

Since his diagnosis, the King has been “greatly encouraged” by the outpouring of public support he has received and has gone on to make cancer awareness a cornerstone of his public work.

When he returned to public duties for the first time since his diagnosis, he chose to visit the University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Centre, chatting with fellow patients, and sympathising with them about the side effects of treatment and the initial shock of diagnosis.

He has repeatedly called for more people to be tested early, extolling the benefits of early diagnosis.

King jokes ‘I need more training’ after struggling with surgical robot

The King joked that he would need technology training after attempting to operate anew surgical robotat a cancer centre. The mona...
Authorities to update public on search of home tied to man convicted of killing Kristin Smart

ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. (AP) — Authorities plan to update the public Friday on a grounds search at a home connected to the manconvictedof killing 19-year-old college student Kristin Smart in 1996. Her body was never found.

Associated Press Scientists take samples from the soil Thursday, May 7, 2026, from the neighboring yard of a home in Arroyo Grande, Calif., connected to the man convicted of killing Kristin Smart as part of a sheriff's investigation. (AP Photo/Haven Daley) CORRECTION: Corrects from authorities to scientists Scientists take samples from the soil Thursday, May 7, 2026, from the front yard of a home in Arroyo Grande, Calif., connected to the man convicted of killing Kristin Smart as part of a sheriff's investigation. (AP Photo/Haven Daley) CORRECTION: Corrects from authorities to scientists Scientists take samples from the soil Thursday, May 7, 2026, from the neighboring yard of a home in Arroyo Grande, Calif., connected to the man convicted of killing Kristin Smart as part of a sheriff's investigation. (AP Photo/Haven Daley) CORRECTION: Corrects from authorities to scientists FILE - This undated photo released by the FBI shows Kristin Smart, the California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo student who disappeared in 1996. (FBI via AP, File) This photo provided by San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office shows authorities conducting a search on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, at a home in Arroyo Grande, Calif., connected to the man convicted of killing Kristin Smart. (San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office via AP) FILE - Paul Flores listens during his murder trial in Monterey County Superior Court in Salinas, Calif., on July 18, 2022. (Daniel Dreifuss/Monterey County Weekly via AP, Pool, File)

CORRECTION California Kristin Smart's Killer

The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office in California has planned a news conference for 9 a.m.

The officeserved a search warrantWednesday on the home of Susan Flores, whose son Paul Flores was convicted in 2022 of killing Smart. Authorities have not answered questions about what prompted the search, but scientists specializing in human decomposition and soil took samples from the ground.

Tim Nelligan, an expert in soil vapor testing, confirmed by phone Thursday that he was on the premises, gathering samples from the yards of Flores and a neighbor. He said is team has, in general, “come up with a methodology to assess soil vapor" and its relation to “human cadaver decomposition,” but that he could not discuss the current investigation.

Smart went missing from California Polytechnic State University in May 1996 after returning from an off-campus party. Prosecutors alleged she was killed during an attempted rape and that the last person she was seen with was Paul Flores, a fellow student. She was declared legally dead in 2002.

The decades-old case has captivated the public, fueled in part by a podcaster who helped investigators by bringing forward additional witnesses. Chris Lambert of the“Your Own Backyard”podcast first reported the search of the home in the central coast town of Arroyo Grande, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northwest of Los Angeles.

Attempts to reach Susan Flores for comment Wednesday and Thursday were not successful. She has never faced criminal charges related to the case.

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Nelligan and other scientists poked instruments into the soil and pulled up long tubing. Soil vapor sampling, which is an evolving science, involves collecting underground gas samples to detect volatile organic compounds associated with human decomposition.

Lambert, the podcaster, said he did not know much about the search, but was optimistic investigators could locate Smart's body. He said past searches of Susan Flores' home have never been thorough.

“This property in particular has been overlooked for quite some time," he said Thursday in front of the house.

Paul Flores and his father, Ruben Flores, were arrested in 2021.

Prosecutors alleged Smart’s remains were buried on Ruben Flores’ property and later moved. He was acquitted of accessory charges. That property is different from the one currently being searched.

Paul Flores wassentencedin March 2023 to prison, where he has beenphysically attackedat least twice.In 2024, a judge ruled that he must pay just over $350,000 to Smart's family for costs they incurred after her death.

The family has said it would forgo restitution if Flores would tell them where the woman's body was. Flores’ attorney, Harold Mesick, said in 2024 that the defense did not know where her remains are. Flores maintains his innocence.

Authorities to update public on search of home tied to man convicted of killing Kristin Smart

ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. (AP) — Authorities plan to update the public Friday on a grounds search at a home connected to the manconvictedof...
Sally Field Reflects on Her Legacy at 79, and Reveals the One Type of Role She 'Never' Says Yes To (Exclusive)

Sally Field shares stories from over six decades in Hollywood

People

NEED TO KNOW

  • “I can't stand at a distance to see. [Acting] is what I do,” she tells PEOPLE

  • Her new film, Remarkably Bright Creatures, begins streaming on Netflix Friday

WhenSally Fieldbroke out asGidgetin 1965, America quickly embraced her carefree California teen surfer. But stronger currents churned beneath the surface.

At 18, “there was a part of me that was very much like Gidget. I knew how to make people laugh, but there was a darkness that was yet to be explored,” Field, 79, says in this week's issue of PEOPLE.

Field—who’s now starring in the Netflix movieRemarkably Bright Creatures—would relentlessly probe deeper places over the next six decades, cementing her place in Hollywood history with two Oscar wins, three Emmys and a Tony nomination. All of it was hard-won, and a sharp turn from her sunny start.

Sally Field in 'Gidget'Credit: Sheedy Long / TV Guide /Courtesy Everett Collection

Following three “incredibly difficult” years on the absurdist sitcomThe Flying Nun(“I had just turned 19. I didn’t want to be a nun!” she says of a role she was pressured to take afterGidget) Field effectively landed in Hollywood jail, unable to land any decent auditions.

"I had to say to myself that if I wasn't where I wanted to be, I had to get better," says Field, who was by then raising two small children, Peter, 56, and Eli, 53 with then-husband Steven Craig. She poured herself into working on her craft at the Actors Studio, and a turning point came with a small role 1976’sStay Hungry,followed by 1977’sSmokey and the Banditwith Burt Reynolds.

Then came her Oscar-winning breakthrough, 1979’s union dramaNorma Rae.

Sally Field in 'Norma Rae'Credit: Courtesy Everett Collection

It was on that set Field began to explore the impact of a traumatic childhood, during which, she would later reveal in her 2018 memoirIn Pieces, her stepfather had emotionally and sexually abused her.

"Being a little girl raised in the '50s and having a very complicated childhood with my stepfather and even my mother at times, I was filled with rage. Really filled with rage," she says. "And it was working with [acting coach] Lee Strasburg that allowed me to begin to tap into it, to not let it devour me."

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ShootingNorma Rae, “I asked [director] Marty Ritt, ‘How angry can I be here?’ He said, ‘How angry are you?’” Field recalls. “And I said, ‘Angry.’ And so that was the first time I was ever really able to learn how to tap into my own rage on film."

Sally Field (holding son Sam in a personal photo from the Steel Magnolias wrap party) with, from left, Olympia Dukakis, Shirley MacLaine, Dolly Parton and Julia RobertsCredit: Courtesy Sally Field

Deeply emotional work became Field's calling card across genres and decades including 1981’sAbsence of Maliceopposite Paul Newman, 1984’sPlaces in the Heart(for which she won a second Oscar), 1993’sMrs. Doubtfire, 1994’sForrest Gump,Emmy-winning roles on NBC'sERand ABC'sBrothers & Sisters(2006-2011) and 2012’sLincoln(which earned Field another Oscar nomination).

Memorable friendships were forged along the way. Shortly after the birth of her third son, Sam, 38 (from her second marriage to Alan Greisman), Field shot 1989'sSteel Magnoliasalongside Olympia Dukakis, Shirley MacLaine, Dolly Parton and Julia Roberts. "Sam was on the set all the time and my friends took care of him," she says of her costars. "We all just rolled him around, and Dolly [wiggling] her fingernails [at him]."

Sally Field and Daniel Day-Lewis in 'Lincoln'Credit: David James/TM and Copyright 20th Century Fox Film Corp via everett

Today the legendary actress and grandmother of five is as resilient as she is an open book. But there’s one type of role that’s still easy to turn down: “I never take to stories about women that are trying to find a man,” she says. “I didn’t like it then, and it doesn’t appeal to me now, because I think women are about so much more. Life is so much more complicated than that.”

And her legacy?  It’s not something she feels moved to weigh. “I can't stand at a distance to see. [Acting] is what I do,” she says simply. “I'm supposed to go into rehearsals for a play at the end of summer. I still have my head down, and I'm always hoping to get better.”

For more stories behind the scenes of Field's Oscar-winning career, pick up a copy of PEOPLE, on newsstands now.

Remarkably Bright Creaturesbegins streaming on Netflix Friday.

Read the original article onPeople

Sally Field Reflects on Her Legacy at 79, and Reveals the One Type of Role She 'Never' Says Yes To (Exclusive)

Sally Field shares stories from over six decades in Hollywood NEED TO KNOW “I can't stand at a distance to see....
Mario Lopez and Wife Courtney Share the Secret to Their ‘Fun’ 13-Year Marriage (Exclusive)

Mario and Courtney Lopez spoke exclusively to PEOPLE while attending an event in Malibu, Calif., on May 1

People Courtney and Mario Lopez in May 2026Credit: Image Press Agency/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • The couple, who got married in 2012, revealed the secret to keeping their 13-year marriage strong to this day

  • Since meeting during a Broadway production in 2008, the couple have welcomed three children

MarioandCourtney Lopezare revealing the secret to lasting love.

The longtime couple spoke exclusively to PEOPLE about how their relationship continues to withstand the tests of time while attending the Calamigos Ranch Resort & Spa Leading Hotels of the World Accreditation Celebration in Malibu, Calif., on Friday, May 1.

Mario expressed gratitude for their family unit as he revealed the secret to a lasting marriage is an understanding partner. TheSaved by the Bellstar, 52, sharesthree children—  Gia, 15, Dominic, 12, and Santino, 6 — with his wife, Courtney, 43.

“I’m just really lucky, married to an incredible woman who gets me, knows me, fortunately loves me, and we laugh a lot and have a lot of fun,” Mario told PEOPLE. “We’re blessed with three great kids, three great dogs, so I feel really good and lucky.”

Mario and Courtney Lopez with their three kids in February 2026Credit: Michael Tullberg/Getty

Courtney chimed in, “It just gets better and better, and I’m not trying to be corny, but it does. We just love each other. We have fun. We laugh.”

When asked about their date nights, the couple revealed they often go on multiday trips to maintain their bond.

“We try to carve out certain days,” Mario said. “This little event is a little getaway weekend within town, which is great, so we get to be back on Sunday. Those are important. We never stopped dating — that’s important.”

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Mario and Courtney Lopez in August 2025Credit: Tiffany Rose/Getty

He added that the getaways don’t have to involve flights abroad.

“It’s funny because we like to go to Vegas a lot,” Mario said. “We go for the fights, we’ll go for shows and stuff, do the wine trips. This is great. Catch up on sleep.”

After meeting during a production of the Broadway revival ofA Chorus Linein 2008, the couple welcomed their first child together, Gina, in 2010. Theytied the knotin 2012 in Punta Mita, Mexico.

Mario previously revealed to PEOPLE while attending an event in December, that they havethree unspoken rulesthat keep their relationship strong.

Courtney and Mario Lopez in 2008Credit: Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic

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"We try to go without no more than two weeks without seeing each other," he said, adding that not going "to bed angry" and making sure to "prioritize date nights" are also key.

Read the original article onPeople

Mario Lopez and Wife Courtney Share the Secret to Their ‘Fun’ 13-Year Marriage (Exclusive)

Mario and Courtney Lopez spoke exclusively to PEOPLE while attending an event in Malibu, Calif., on May 1 NEED TO KNOW ...

 

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