Who Do You Think You Are? Series 22: coming soon
7-8 minute read
By Daisy Goddard | March 24, 2025

A brand new selection of celebs will delve into their family trees in 2025. Here's everything you need to know.
Family history fans will be delighted to hear that everyone's favourite genealogy show, Who Do You Think You Are?, will return to screens for a new series in 2025. Previous episodes have seen everyone from Dame Judi Dench to Danny Dyer discover the stories of their ancestors.
The celebrity line-up for 2025 includes:
- BAFTA-winning Spiderman actor Andrew Garfield
- Writer and comedian Diane Morgan
- Soap star and documentary maker Ross Kemp
- Award-winning actor and writer Aisling Bea
- Pop icon Will Young
- TV personality Fred Sirieix
- Musical theatre star Layton Williams
- Broadcaster and journalist Mishal Husain
Viewers can expect the new season to air at some point this spring.
Where can you watch the upcoming season of Who Do You Think You Are?
As ever, Who Do You Think You Are? will air on BBC One in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Regular viewers can expect it to appear at its usual timeslot - Thursdays at 9 pm - after which episodes will be uploaded to BBC iPlayer. To ensure you never miss an episode, you'll be able to watch Series 22 on demand on iPlayer.
Find your ancestor
Starting with just a name, trace the lives of your ancestors and illuminate their stories in vivid detail.
In Series 20 of Who Do You Think You Are?, Bear Grylls, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Lesley Manville and more unearthed fascinating details about their roots. Just a year before, Series 19 gave Sue Perkins, Matt Lucas and Richard Osman the chance to do the same.
The show celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2024 - making the series extra special.
Who was in series 21 of Who Do You Think You Are?
Here are the famous faces who appeared in Season 21 in 2024, and the moving stories that they uncovered.

Episode 1: Vicky McClure
In the first episode, the BAFTA-winning Line of Duty actress learnt about her great-grandfather Harry Millership's experience as a Japanese Prisoner of War.
Christopher William Adach from London, UK, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons.
Tracing his life back to childhood, Vicky discovers that Harry worked as a miner in Yorkshire from the age of 14. He worked in the pits for 18 years, before serving in the Second World War. Harry's regiment was sent to Singapore in 1941. Just a year later, Harry was taken as a prisoner of war, and transported from Singapore to a POW camp in Taiwan.
Vicky follows in Harry's footsteps, travelling to Taiwan and visiting the mine that he and his fellow POWs were forced to work in. In a tragic turn of events, Harry died in the camp, when he fell down a hole in the mine.
Vicky's emotional journey concludes with a visit to a war memorial that bears her great-grandfather's name. Vicky's family history took her on an unforgettable journey from Nottingham to Taiwan. If your ancestor was a prisoner of war during the Second World War, their name may just appear within our Prisoner of War records, 1715-1945.
Episode 2: Paddy McGuinness
In the second episode of series 21, comedian and TV presented Paddy McGuinness took a closer look at his Irish surname and discovered his grandfather's moving wartime contributions.
Simon P Blackburn at en.wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Paddy started the episode with many questions - who were his grandparents and great-grandparents, and does he have Irish ancestors? He begins by delving into the life of his maternal grandfather, James Leonard. Born in 1911 to parents Patrick and Annie Leonard, James was placed in a Cottage Home due to domestic abuse. James persevered despite this tough start to life - in 1939, he was working for an Airplane Works in Bolton. View James' 1939 Register record for yourself.
Paddy then turned his attention to his father's side, learning that his paternal grandfather was William McGuinness. This Bolton-born ancestor had a remarkable life - in 1899, he travelled to South Africa to fight in the Anglo-Boer War. His military records tale a story of true heroism, and Paddy was taken aback when he got the chance to hold his very own grandfather's war medal - linking him closely to a man that he never knew.
Paddy finally discovers his Irish roots, in the form of his great-grandmother Bridget, whose baptism record reveals that she was from Ballina in County Mayo. Paddy's Irish ancestors were weavers, who migrated to the north-west of England in the early 19th century to find work in the textile trade. They moved to Stockport, then found their way to Bolton, where Paddy McGuinness was born and raised.

Episode 3: Melanie Chisholm
The third episode of the season saw βSporty Spiceβ Melanie Chisholm trace her roots in Liverpool and Ireland.
Sven Mandel, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
Melanie first discovered the story of her paternal great-grandmother Mary Bilsborough, who is listed as a moneylender in the 1939 Register.

Melanie then turned her attention to Maryβs grandfather, Patrick Flaherty, who was born in Croom, County Limerick. A journey to Ireland revealed the hardship faced by Melanieβs tenant farmer ancestors. Hit hard by poverty and famine in the 1840s, Melanieβs relatives moved from the rural village of Croom to Limerick city, then from there to Liverpool in search of work β millions of Irish families made this difficult journey in the 19th century.
Melanie traced her maternal side, also from Liverpool, and uncovered the moving story of her 4x great-grandfather Thomas Keef, who was orphaned at age eight. Despite facing challenges including growing up in a workhouse, Thomas led a long and successful life - the 1851 Census finds him married with three children.

He worked as a baker, before becoming an insurance manager in Bristol.
Episode 4: Rose Ayling-Ellis
Actress, model, disability rights campaigner and Strictly star Rose Alying-Ellis discovered a story from within the Birmingham branches of her family tree.
Meena, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Rose began her journey at her mum's house in Kent, where she learnt of her 3x great-grandmother, who ran a pub in Birmingham. Without even a name, she headed to Birmingham to piece together the story of this feisty character. Rose and a local historian discover that her ancestor was Agnes Chilton. Agnes ran multiple pubs in her lifetime, including the Aston Tavern, which she managed singlehandedly after the death of her husband Alfred. We found Agnes at the Aston Tavern in 1911.
Turning to the paternal side of her family, Rose discovers that her great-grandfather Harold was one of 17 children. The family lived in Exeter's slums and scraped by on a porter's wage. Rose also learns that James Welland (Harold's father and Rose's 2x great-grandfather) had lost his hand in an accident, and had it replaced with a hook.
A little digging reveals that James lost his hand while working on the railroads. Though he attempted to claim compensation from his employer, James was denied it. Rose was moved by this story of struggle from within her family tree.
Episode 5: Dame Jessica Ennis-Hill
Olympic gold medalist Jessica Ennis-Hill travelled to Jamaica to learn the story of ancestor who went from enslavement to owning his own land.Β
Alasdair Middleton from Rothesay, Scotland, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Jess started her journey in the Peak District, where her maternal grandparents live. She delves into a family mystery, revealing how her 2x great-grandmother Emily Maud (known as Maud) left with a suitcase, never to be seen by her children again. Maudβs story proves to be a fascinating one β Jess uncovers that Maud took her husband to court for assault. By 1921, we find Maud in the South Yorkshire Asylum. Tracing her life forward, Jess was moved to discover that Maud later died in a psychiatric hospital in 1970, when Jessβ great-grandfather was 58, and her grandfather was 31. Β
Jess also made discoveries on her fatherβs side, who hail from Linstead, Jamaica. Jess traced six generations of her Jamaican ancestors. A will record revealed that her 4x great-grandfather, George Thomas White, who was born into slavery in 1795, left a large sum of money to his children.
Despite the trickiness of tracing records for enslaved people, Jess discovers that George was a cooper on a sugar plantation. After the abolition of slavery in 1840, he saved money to buy land for himself β purchasing 25 acres of the very land he had been enslaved on.

Episode 6: Olly Murs
In his episode, popstar Olly Murs followed the story of a circus performing ancestor overseas to Riga, Latvia.
CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons.
After visiting his dad in Witham, Essex, Olly Murs delved into the story of his late grandfather Eddie, who was born in Latvia. As a child, he was separated from his mother Veronika and travelled to Germany and England with his father Eduard Murs and stepmother Katrine.
Olly's family history took him overseas, to Riga, the capital of Latvia. He visited the circus where his great-grandfather Eduard worked and learned that Eduard and Katrine performed internationally as a double act. He discovered that his grandfather Eddie was born out of wedlock, to a trapeze artist named Veronika, who was heartbreakingly separated from her son during the Second World War. Eddie travelled with his father to a refugee camp in Germany, before being relocated to Harwich in Essex.
Although Olly's grandfather Eddie had always believed that his mother abandoned him, newspaper reports reveal how Veronika searched for Eddie after the war - even attempting to track him down via the International Red Cross. To close out this emotive episode, Olly visited Veronika's unmarked grave. In a story of migration and hope, Olly reflected on the immense struggles endured by his Latvian ancestors.

Next week: Gemma Collins
In her episode, TOWIE star and 'Essex royalty' Gemma Collins will meet a family member that she didn't even know existed...
GemmaCollagen, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
Where will your past take you?
Here at Findmypast, we don't believe in leaving the life-changing family history discoveries to the stars. All of us have surprising stories within our family trees - with a little digging, we can uncover things we never would've expected.
The Findmypast team took Laura Collins on an unforgettable journey, tracing the life of her great-grandfather Eli, who lost an arm during the First World War.
You can watch the full video and take a deep dive into Laura's story via the Findmypast blog.
Header image credits:
Christopher William Adach from London, UK, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons / Carfax2, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons / Harald Krichel, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
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