She is currently treated with the drug Brineura, allowing her to attend school and live "a better quality of life".
Bookmakers predict that the UK will fall just outside the top 10 in the contest, with Sweden and Austria among the favourites to win.However, Remember Monday told BBC News that they're "hungry to get a good result".
"We feel like there's a little bit of a stigma around Eurovision, and we'd really love to be a part of changing it," said singer Holly-Anne Hull.The group, completed by Charlotte Steele and Lauren Byrne, started singing together in school, and went on to have starring roles in West End shows like Les Misérables, Phantom Of The Opera and Six: The Musical.As long-standing Eurovision fans, they've thrown themselves into a whirlwind European press tour, performing in about a dozen countries, and even singing on a Swiss mountaintop.
For their journey to Húsavík, Steele even confronted her fear of flying by travelling in both a propellor plane and a helicopter.The trip fulfilled "a long-time dream of ours", the band said.
, they get to visit the charming Elf Houses that form part of the country's magical folklore, and sing with a choir of Icelandic schoolgirls who previously performed at the 2021 Oscars, when Húsavík (My Hometown) was nominated for best original song.
"We're very honoured that they welcomed us into their beautiful town and let us sing that song," said the band, "and we're grateful that it's on film so we can relive those memories forever".The late Tina Turner came to Portman Road in 1990 as part of her Foreign Affair tour that included 121 shows.
Notably her Portman Road show was the first ever concert to be held at the stadium.Songs performed to the thousands included What's Love Got to Do With It, Proud Mary, Show Some Respect and many more.
Stewart has performed not once, not twice, but three times at Portman Road.He first took to the stage in 1991 with fans queuing for hours to ensure they got a good spot once inside the stadium.