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Alan Titchmarsh struggled to hold back the tears after watching a heartbreaking scene from The Repair Shop. During Sunday's edition of Love Your Weekend, the presenter sat down with Steve and Suzie Fletcher, experts on BBC's The Repair Shop. Before chatting to the siblings, viewers were given a glimpse into the raw emotion that often comes with filming. The clip, taken from an episode broadcast in 2020, showed Suzie breaking down after repairing a rocking horse for a woman whose husband died of cancer.
"I too lost my husband to cancer," a tearful Suzie told viewers. After the footage was shown, a choked up Alan said: "Well, yours wasn't the only...," before sniffing. Steve confessed: "That brings a lump to my throat just watching that again now." Alan, 76, said the scene shows exactly what The Repair Shop does, declaring: "It touches us at home, it touches you and it's that rare thing that brings everybody together - showing skill, coupled with emotion, coupled with caring for folk."
The gardener realised that it must be "really tough" for Suzie, who joined the BBC programme during series two in 2018.
The expert, who specialises in leather and saddle making, admitted: "It took me a very long time to be able to watch that particular scene and they did handle it incredibly well.
"I'm really proud of the fact we were able to get through it and didn't expect that to happen at all. That was as real as it gets."
Highlighting the emotion of being in the barn, Steve explained that everyone in the room is often in tears.
He recalled: "There was one of the sound guys who was holding up a boom mic and he was streaming with tears, but he couldn't put the mic down because we were in the middle of filming."
Alan noted that it's not only people's personal stories that make the programme so emotional, but the kindness from the experts.
The siblings both agreed before Suzie said: "I think it's such a true representation of real life and you can't make that up. It is real, it's life, it's people's stories that they are coming in and sharing.
"When you see a moment like that that triggers that response from somebody like me who had gone through something similar, it's about as real as it gets."