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Colin Firth accepts role with speech charity

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Press Trust of India London
"The King's Speech" star Colin Firth has become the vice president of a speech therapy charity in the UK.

The 52-year-old actor, who won an Academy Award for playing stuttering British monarch King George VI in the 2010 drama "The King's Speech", is putting the experience to good use by supporting the Action for Stammering Children organisation, reported Contactmusic.

British politician Ed Balls announced Firth's appointment at an event in London, saying, "He has agreed to become a vice president of Action for Stammering Children, to help us with the next phase of work and keep raising the profile of the charity and change the perception of stammering."
 

Funnyman Michael Palin had helped to launch the Centre for Stammering Children in his name in 1993, five years after starring as a stuttering gangster in "A Fish Called Wanda".

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First Published: Mar 08 2013 | 6:40 AM IST

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