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Tom Cruise Thanks Frontline Workers At COVID-19 Vaccination Centre With Surprise Visit

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Tom Cruise Thanks Frontline Workers At COVID-19 Vaccination Centre With Surprise Visit

Tom Cruise has visited a COVID-19 vaccination centre to thank the frontline workers administering vaccines to vulnerable patients.

The 58-year-old actor reportedly stopped off at the centre in London last week, where he met with NHS staff who have been working tirelessly amid the ongoing pandemic.

A source told The Sun newspaper’s Bizarre column: “It’s well known that Tom has been properly hammered by COVID as he tried to complete work on his next blockbuster.

“He told his team he wanted to pay his personal tribute to frontline health staff who have helped get movies back on track. He visited NHS staff at the ExCel Centre in East London on Thursday.

“They were really shocked to see such a huge movie star. Tom wanted to keep it a secret and ensure it was a nice surprise for them.”

Cruise's special visit comes after he went viral in December after a video surfaced of him raging at crew members on the set of Mission: Impossible 7 – which has been filming in the UK – for not socially distancing on set, amid fears a COVID breakout could have shut down production.

He was seen yelling: “If I see you do it again, you’re f****** gone. And if anyone in this crew does it, that’s it.”

Cruise moved filming to the UK from the US after production was initially put on hold in March last year due to the global coronavirus pandemic.

He took part in a video call with Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden, who confirmed that filmmakers were exempt from quarantine rules for those arriving from certain countries and explained how it would allow the blockbuster to resume filming at Warner Bros Studios in Leavesden.

Dowden wrote on Twitter: "New exemption from quarantine rules for filmmakers means we can start making the best blockbusters again. Great to talk to Tom Cruise last weekend about getting the cameras rolling again on Mission: Impossible 7."

The politician added: "The world's biggest blockbusters and high-end TV shows are made in Britain. We want the industry to bounce back and exempting small numbers of essential cast and crew from quarantine is part of our continued commitment to getting cameras rolling safely again.” — BANG

Photo: TPG News/Click Photos

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