Why do you wear a red nose on Red Nose Day?
Red Nose Day is an annual charity event in the UK. You would wear a red nose to show that you are participating in that particular event in the same way that you would wear any other badge, sticker or insignia to show that you were participating in, or had donated to, any other charity event.
Can you use a sentence with the word Comic Relief?
My two year old daughter often provides a comic relief for our family.
Where can you buy Red Nose Day t-shirts?
You can probably buy them from Sainsbury's supermarkets. Sainsbury sells merchandise on behalf of the charity.
Information about CAFOD the charity?
It stands for: Catholic Agency For Overseas Development. It is a charitable organization of the Roman Catholic Church, with the aim to alleviate poverty in developing nations. The funds are mostly donated by individuals in England and Wales, and by the UK government.
It started in 1985 by comedians who wanted to use comedy and laughter
The vertical difference in elevation between the highest and lowest points of a land surface within a specified horizontal distance or in a limited area. Also known as relative relief.
List all of the British charities?
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Should you know of a charity shop then please email us with the details, shops@britishcharities.com or tell them of the portal and we will make arrangements to have them listed.
Acorns Children's Hospice Trust
Action Cancer
Action for Peoples in Conflict
Age Concern
Age Concern Lancashire
Age Concern Milton Keynes
Age Concern Northern Ireland
Age Concern Suffolk
Age Concern York
Alzheimer's Society
Animals in Distress
Ardgowan Hospice
Arthritis Research Campaign
Arthur Rank Hospice
ASBAH
Aston-Mansfield
Barnardo's
Barnsley (St Peter's) Hospice
Beacon Centre for the Blind
Bethany Christian Trust
Birmingham Settlement
Blythswood Trading
Brainwave
Break
British Heart Foundation
British Red Cross
Butterwick Hospice Retail
Cancer Research UK
Cancer Research Wales
Capability Scotland
Central & Cecil Housing Trust
Chest, Heart & Stroke Scotland
Childline Scotland
Children's Hospice Association Scotland
Children's Hospice South West
Claire House Shops Ltd.
CLIC
Compton Hospice
Cosgrove Care
Cotswold Care Hospice Shops
Devon Air Ambulance Trust
DebRA
Demelza House Trading Ltd.
Derian House Children's Hospice
Dogs Trust
Dorothy Kerin Trust (Burrswood)
Douglas Macmillan Hospice Shops
East Anglia Children's Hospices
Eden Valley Hospice
Ellenor Hospice
Enable Ireland
Essex Air Ambulance
Exeter Leukaemia Fund
FARA Foundation
Farleigh Hospice
Force Cancer Charity
give2give
Greenwich & Bexley Cottage Hospice
Guild Care
Hamelin House
Harpenden Mencap
Harris Hospiscare
Haven House Foundation
Headway - The Brain Injury Association
Helen House and Douglas House
Help The Aged
Home Farm Trust
Homeaid Caithness
Home-start Teesside
Hope House Children's Hospice
Hospice in the Weald
Hospice of St Francis
Hospiscare
Iain Rennie Hospice At Home
Katharine House Hospice, Banbury
Katharine House Hospice, Stafford
Kent Association for the Blind
Lindsey Lodge Hospice
Leonard Cheshire
Mare and Foal Sanctuary
Marie Curie Cancer Care
Martin House Children's Hospice
Martlets Hospice
Mary Stevens Hospice
Menphys
Mercy in Action
Minds Matter
Myton Hamlet Hospice
Naomi House Children's Hospice
National Association of Victim Support
National Animal Welfare Trust
National Kidney Research Fund
NCH
North Devon Hospice
Notting Hill Housing Trust
Nottinghamshire Hospice
Oxfam
Oxfam Northern Ireland
Pasque Hospice
Paul Bevan Cancer Foundation
Paul Sartori Foundation
PDSA
Peace Hospice Shops Ltd
Pilgrims Hospices in East Kent
Prospect Hospice
Queen Elizabeth's Foundation For Disabled People
Queenscourt Hospice
Relate Croydon
Richard House Children's Hospice
Roy Castle Retail Ltd.
RSPCA
Salvation Army Trading Company Ltd
Save the Children Fund
Scope
Sense
Sense Scotland
Shooting Star
Severn Hospice
Shakespeare Hospice
Shaw Trust Retail
Shelter Shops
Shooting Star
Simon Community Northern Ireland
Sobell House Hospice Charity
Spitalfields Crypt Trust
Springhill Hospice
St Andrew's Hospice
St Ann's Hospice
St Barnabas Hospice Shops
St Benedict's Hospice
St Catherine's Hospice
St Catherine's Hospice (Scarborough)
St Clare's Hospice
St David's Foundation
St Elizabeth Hospice
St Elizabeth's Centre
St Gemma's Hospice
St Giles Hospice
St Helena Hospice
St John's Hospice - the Hospice in the Heart of London
St John's Hospice and Cancer Care Shops
St John's Hospice In Wirral
St Joseph's Hospice Association
St Leonard's Hospice
St Luke's (Cheshire) Hospice
St Luke's Hospice
St Luke's Hospice, Basildon
St Luke's Hospice, Plymouth
St Luke's Kenton Grange Hospice (Harrow & Brent)
St Mary's Hospice
St Michael's Hospice
St Michael's Hospice, Hampshire
St Nicholas' Hospice
St Oswalds Hospice
St Peter & St James Hospice Shops
St Raphael's Hospice
St Richards Hospice
St Rocco's Hospice
St Teresa's Hospice
St Vincent de Paul Society, London
Sue Ryder Care
Tapping House Hospice
Teeside Hospice
Tenovus, The Cancer Charity
The Action Group
The Blue Cross
The Children's Society
The Children's Trust
The Extracare Charitable Trust
The Haven, Wolverhampton
The Martlets Hospice
The Mary Ann Evans Hospice
The Norman Laud Association
The Padley Group
The Princess Alice Hospice
The Shakespeare Hospice
The South Bucks Hospice
The Wayne Howard Trust
Thorne House Services For Autism
Traid
Treetops Hospice
Trinity Hospice
Wakefield Hospice
Wales Air Ambulance
Walsall Hospice Appeal
Watford & District Mencap
Watford New Hope Trust
West Cumbria Hospice at Home
Weston Hospicecare Mart
Wigan And Leigh Hospice
Willen Hospice
Woking Hospice
Woodlands Hospice Charitable Trust
Woodland Respite Care Centre
Yeldall Homeless Projects
YMCA England
Red Nose Day is on Friday the 18th of March 2011, you can still fund raise now, buy merchandise, see clips on the website
Comic Relief was set up in 1985.
It was started by comedians who wanted to use comedy and laughter to let people know about poverty in the UK and Africa.
It was launched in 1985, from a refugee camp in Sudan. The launch was broadcast live on Christmas Day on BBC 1.
Since then, more than £650 million has been raised for some of the poorest and most vulnerable people across the UK and Africa.
Red Nose Day is the main way in which Comic Relief raises money. The first Red Nose Day (RND) was held on the 5 February 1988 and since then they have been on the second or third Friday in March. RND 2011 was on 18 March.
Red Nose Day is often treated as a semi-holiday[citation needed]; for example, many schools have non-uniform days. The day culminates in a live telethon event on BBC One, starting in the evening and going through into the early hours of the morning, but other money-raising events take place. As the name suggests, the day involves the wearing of plastic/foam red noses which are available, in exchange for a donation, from Sainsbury's and Oxfam shops.
On televisionThe television programming begins in the afternoon, with CBBC having various related reports, money-raising events and celebrity gunging. This is all in-between the regular programmes, but after the six o'clock news, the normal BBC One schedule is suspended at 7pm in favour of a live show, with a break at 10pm for the regular news programme. Whilst the BBC News at Ten is aired on BBC One, Comic Relief continues on BBC Two, and then resumes on BBC One at 10:35pm, with each hour overseen by a different celebrity team. These celebrities do the work for free, as do the crew, with studio space and production facilities donated by the BBC.Regular themes throughout the shows include parodies of recent popular shows, films and events, and specially-filmed versions of comedy shows. Smith and Jones, and a parody sketch starring Rowan Atkinson are both regularly featured - the first being Blackadder: The Cavalier Years (1988).
1997 eventThe 1997 "Red Nose Day" event, held on 14 March, raised over £27m for charitable causes.[5] The Spice Girls song "Who Do You Think You Are" became the official Comic Relief single of this event and sold 672,577 copies.[6]
1999 eventThe 1999 "Red Nose Day" was held on 12 March and raised over £35m.[7] A parody of the Doctor Who series, Doctor Who and the Curse of Fatal Death, starring Rowan Atkinson as the Doctor, was featured during the show, as was Wetty Hainthropp Investigates, a Victoria Wood parody of Hetty Wainthropp Investigates. On Radio 1 Simon Mayo held the record of 37 hours of consecutive broadcasting before broken by Chris Moyles on the same station for 52 hours, breaking the world record for the longest show in radio history.
2001 eventThe 2001 "Red Nose Day" was held on 16 March. The total raised was £61,000,140.[citation needed] As well as donations on the night of the TV show, money is raised from countrywide sponsored events and from merchandising, particularly of the red noses themselves. 5.8 million red noses were sold,[citation needed] approximately one tenth of the UK population. The final of Celebrity Big Brother 2001 aired as well.
2003 eventThe 2003 "Red Nose Day" was held on 14 March. The fund raising activities included Lenny Henry providing the voice of the speaking clock between 10 March and 23 March with the cost of the call going to Comic Relief. On the night of the live show itself, £35m was raised, an on-the-night record.[citation needed] A total of £61,477,539 was raised that year, setting a new record.[citation needed]
Jack Dee stood outside at the top of a pole for the duration of the show, parodying the acts of David Blaine. Celebrity Driving School led up to the event, with the test results announced during the telethon: they all failed.
The hosts of "Red Nose Day" 2003 were:
Shows included
As usual a variety of specially-filmed versions of television shows were made. Popular BBC talent show Fame Academyreturned as Comic Relief does Fame Academy. Other shows included:
Harry Potter and the Secret Chamberpot of Azerbaijan, a parody of Harry Potter, starring Dawn French as Harry Potter, Jennifer Saunders as Ron Weasley and Miranda Richardson as Hermione Granger.
2005 eventThe 2005 Red Nose Day was held on 11 March, and was hosted by a collection of television stars:
The 2005 event was also noteworthy for supporting the Make Poverty History campaign - many of the videos recorded for the MPH campaign (including videos by Bono and Nelson Mandela) were shown throughout the evening. Over £63m was raised as of November 2005.[citation needed]
Shows included
As usual a variety of specially-filmed versions of television shows were made. Popular BBC talent show Comic Relief does Fame Academy was attended by celebrities singing cover versions of songs. Viewers voted for their favourite, with the proceeds going to the cause and the celebrity. Other shows included:
2005's telethon, more than any other, severely overran[citation needed] and many pre-filmed segments were cut short, including Harry Hill's TV Burp, Smith and Jones, and Lenny Henry as Condoleezza Rice. The uncut versions have never been screened.
McFly released the official single, a double A-side of "All About You/You've Got a Friend" which reached Number 1 in the UK singles chart, and also Number 1 in the Irish singles chart. The cover is predominantly red and features the members of McFly dressed in red, wearing red noses, in honour of Red Nose Day.
Donation progress
Times approximate and amounts rounded to the nearest million where not stated exactly:[citation needed]
Raised by March 2006: £65 m.[citation needed]
2007 eventMain article: Red Nose Day 20072007's Red Nose Day was held on 16 March. Its tagline is "The Big One" which is also representative of the novelty nose. Walkers, Kleenex and Andrex also promoted the charity, as well as Sainsbury's.
Some of the sketches shown were: The Vicar of Dibley.[8] Also intended to be shown was A Question of Comedy, a comedy quiz utilising the format (and set) of A Question of Sport, and hosted by Jack Dee, with team captains Frank Skinner, Dara Ó Briain,[9] and Mr. Bean and guests including Jade Goody. However, in light of the Celebrity Big Brother racism controversy involving Goody, the pre-recorded segment was scrapped by BBC producers.[10][11]
In the lead up to Red Nose Day many different fund raising events occurred:
Donation progress
Times approximate:[citation needed]
The 2009 event took place on Friday 13 March 2009. Fundraisers had three different nose designs to choose from: "this one", "that one" and "the other one" - all with different facial expressions. The Saturdays provided the official single, a cover of 'Just Can't Get Enough'.
A variety of events and promotions took place in the run up to the big day. Comic Relief's Chief Executive announced that the UK's landmarks were going red before the big day. Claudia Winkleman and Steve Jones presented a new Comic Relief show called Let's Dance for Comic Relief. A special limited edition Mr. Men book, Mr. Funny's Red Nose Day,[13] went on sale with £2 from the sale of each book going to Comic Relief. Between 3 February and 23 March 2009, Kimberley Walsh, Cheryl Cole, Gary Barlow, Chris Moyles, and Fearne Cotton raised money by lending their voices to the BT Speaking Clock. Dialling 123 was one of the ways BT hopes to raise more than £300,000, as the company donated 10p for each call received from a BT landline.[14] The Red Nose Climb saw nine celebrities successfully scale the peak of Kilimanjaro at 19,330 feet (5,890 m) to reach the summit of Africa's highest mountain to raise money for Comic Relief.[15] On 27 February 2009, Gary Barlow, Ronan Keating, Chris Moyles, Ben Shephard, Cheryl Cole, Kimberley Walsh, Denise Van Outen, Fearne Cotton, and Alesha Dixon set off to Tanzania to tackle Mount Kilimanjaro with project manager and guide Jeremy Gane of Charity Challenge. The Climb has already raised in excess of £3.3 million with over £1.8 million coming from the audience of Radio 1 (a record for the station). All nine celebrities reached the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro on Saturday 7 March 2009. Cheryl Cole, Fearne Cotton, Denise Van Outen and Ben Shephard reached the summit first at sunrise.
The following took place during the live broadcast on the night:
This was the first Comic Relief show to feature no input from Rowan Atkinson and no comedic material from Lenny Henry.
Donation progress
Times approximate:[citation needed]
By 2 April 2009 - £65,699,850[citation needed]
What is red nose day all about?
Red Nose Day is all about creating many events and doing things to raise money for homeless, poor, sick children in Africa and all around the world
red nose day is about donating money to the people who dont have any money or food or shelter so that they can live a better life and so can we; it is also a celebration where you can wear something red for a donation.
Red Nose Day was created by Comic Relief, a British charity organization that was founded in 1985. Comic Relief has raised over £600 million.
What are some things to do for red nose day?
Well you can where a red nose
which you can by in sainsburys
and ask your head teacher
if you can have a disco
for red nose day.
Comic Relief is a British charity organisation that was founded in the United Kingdom in 1985 by the comedy scriptwriter Richard Curtis in response to famine in Ethiopia. Since the Charity has started in the 1980s, Comic Relief has raised over £600 million!!
Red Nose Day is one day a year that Comic Relief put on many different events, as well as the Public doing their own sponsorship events across the country. The main part of that plastic red noses are sold throughout the Sainsbury's supermarket chain for two weeks or so before the actual day.
One of the best parts of this great charity is that 50% of the funds raised go to Africa, and 50% stay in the UK. This is very beneficial for our homeless children that are sadly living on the streets in our cities.
More information on Comic Relief can be found in the "Related Links" section below
Its the UKs charity based on comedy and fun things to do. The red nose was adopted as it is one of the key virtues of a clown
The day s set up for everyone to do fun or funny things that will gain charitable donations. These are used for supporting children across the world
because people in Africa lost there homes and they need money so that all goes too them.
What are Red nose day aims and objectives?
The aim is to raise money for a charity called Comic Relief which helps the less fortunate people in Africa.
How much money does oxfam make?
Hey, well i really dnt noe how to answer this im trying to get the answer myself so how can i ? :)