When celebrities front campaigns against domestic abuse, the spotlight stays on the famous names and the one-off film, not on the chronic underfunding that leaves survivors without refuge beds or helpline capacity. Red Nose Day’s new domestic abuse film, starring Suranne Jones, Adjoa Andoh and Helen George, is the latest example: a high-profile moment that risks obscuring the funding and policy gaps that leave abuse survivors without real support.
Celebrity-Led Campaigns Obscure the Funding and Policy Gaps Survivors Face
The Oldham Times reported in March 2026 that Suranne Jones is taking part in a Red Nose Day domestic abuse film that will air during the live show on BBC One and BBC iPlayer on 20 March 2026, and for the first time on the BBC’s official YouTube channel. The film uses anonymised stories from female survivors supported by Refuge, the UK’s largest domestic abuse organisation. Comic Relief’s director of funding has said that one in three women will experience gender-based violence in their lifetime and that a £10 donation could help answer a call to a domestic abuse helpline. The framing is familiar: star power plus survivor stories, with the ask to give on the night.
Cause marketing of this kind has long drawn criticism. NPR reported in 2019 that Red Nose Day was being criticised for “white saviour” narratives and for charity films that send a distorted image of those being helped. Nonprofit Quarterly has documented a drumbeat of Comic Relief criticism: celebrity involvement often benefits the celebrities more than the causes, and research suggests people remember the stars more than the nonprofits they support. Only about half of each dollar spent on Red Nose Day noses goes to charity; the rest benefits manufacturers. The campaign lets corporations burnish their image while the structural underfunding of domestic abuse services continues.
Meanwhile the numbers for domestic abuse support in the UK are stark. Comic Relief itself has backed the National Domestic Violence Helpline (run with Women’s Aid and Refuge) since 2003, and Refuge has said that demand is at an all-time high. Women’s Aid has put the funding gap for domestic abuse services in England at over £300 million a year, with a £62 million shortfall for refuge services and a £212 million shortfall for community-based services. The organisation says the government spends around £195 million on local domestic abuse support against a minimum need of about £502 million. Refuge has criticised the government’s violence against women and girls strategy for being “full of ambition” but lacking “critical investment,” and Women’s Aid has warned that 15% of services have had to close or reduce their work because of limited funds. At the same time, Red Nose Day’s on-the-night appeal totals have fallen in recent years, so even the charity side of the equation is under pressure.
What This Actually Means
The Red Nose Day film does put domestic abuse in the spotlight and may well encourage some viewers to give. But the real story is that survivor support depends on a patchwork of charity and shrinking public funding, while celebrity-led campaigns can give the impression that “raising awareness” and one-off donations are enough. They are not. Until policy and spending close the gap that Women’s Aid and Refuge are pointing to, films like this will remain a reminder of how cause marketing can hide who is really left behind.
Who Is Suranne Jones?
Suranne Jones is an English actress and producer who rose to prominence on ITV’s Coronation Street and has since starred in numerous drama series. She has taken part in several Comic Relief and Red Nose Day projects, including a Traitors-inspired sketch. For the 2026 campaign she appears in the domestic abuse awareness film alongside Adjoa Andoh and Helen George, lending her profile to stories from Refuge-supported survivors. In past Red Nose Day appearances she has emphasised that raising money for “really important causes” is the main aim, even when the format is light-hearted.
What Is Red Nose Day?
Red Nose Day is Comic Relief’s flagship fundraising campaign, held in the UK every two years. Viewers are asked to buy red noses and donate during a televised appeal on the BBC. Money raised goes to Comic Relief’s grant-making across poverty and related issues, including domestic abuse. The event has run since 1988 and has raised hundreds of millions of pounds, though on-the-night totals have fallen in recent years. Critics argue that the format centres celebrities and corporate tie-ins and can obscure the need for sustained government funding and policy change. The National Domestic Violence Helpline, which Comic Relief helped launch, is run in partnership by Refuge and Women’s Aid and answers thousands of calls each year. Demand for that helpline and for refuge places has repeatedly been reported at record levels.
Sources
The Oldham Times, NPR, Nonprofit Quarterly, Comic Relief, Women’s Aid, Refuge