5 Speakers, 15 Minutes Each - January 2026

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Date and time
Location
The Tabernacle, 35 Powis Square, off Portobello Road, London W11 2AY
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5x15 returns to The Tabernacle in January with a line-up of inspiring speakers and award-winning storytellers to kick off the new season.

Julia Bradbury
on the secrets of personalised medicine

Julia Bradbury is a well-loved television presenter, author, nature advocate, charity campaigner and Sunday Times bestselling author of Walk Yourself Happy. She is best known for turning her lifelong passion for walking into prime-time TV. Following her breast cancer diagnosis and her recovery from a mastectomy in 2021, she made an award-winning documentary about her experience. Having discovered that between 30%-40% of cancers are preventable, Julia is now determined to speak up for a more personalised approach to health care, as detailed in her latest book Hack Yourself Healthy.


Andrew Lownie
on the rise and fall of the House of York

Andrew Lownie is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and President of the Biographers Club. As a journalist, he has written for The Times, Telegraph, Wall Street Journal, Spectator, and the Guardian. His books include the top ten Sunday Times bestsellers The Mountbattens: Their Lives and Loves (2019) and Traitor King: The Scandalous Exile of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor (2021). His latest book, Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, is the first joint biography of the now former Duke and Duchess of York, revealing how the lives of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson are still deeply intertwined.


Gary Younge
on creative freedom as an act of resistance

Gary Younge is an award-winning author, broadcaster and a Professor of Sociology at the University of Manchester. Formerly editor-at-large at The Guardian, he has written seven books, most recently Pigeonholed: Creative Freedom as an Act of Resistance (Faber, 2025). Winner of the 2023 Orwell Prize for Journalism and the 2025 Robert. B. Silvers Prize for Journalism, he has written for the New York Review of Books, Granta, GQ and New Statesman, among others. His fifth book, Another Day in the Death of America, won the J. Anthony Lukas Prize from Columbia School of Journalism and Nieman Foundation.