This Morning's Gyles Brandreth became emotional on the ITV show as he spoke about his late father - who served in World War II. This Morning presenters Emma Willis and Craig Doyle opened up about remembering VJ Day with Gyles Brandreth and Rachel Johnson.
After the show marked the 80th anniversary of Victory over Japan Day with a two minute silence, Gyles, 77, spoke about how moving it was to see the King and Queen lead it. "To see there veterans who were actually alive, taking part in what was for many people called the forgotten war. The people in Burma thought they were the forgotten army," he said.
Gyles added: "Whenever we talk about the war, I think about my own parents. My father was in the army for 6 years during the Second World War in intelligence but he rarely talked about."
READ MORE: ITV axes Noel Edmonds' big TV comeback after just one series
READ MORE: BBC viewers cringe at Kemi Badenoch's 'fields of wheat' moment
As the programme showed a picture of his father on the screen, Gyles broke down, saying: "There he is, bless him. Oh that's rather touching."
Struggling to speak, he added: "They're good people, really good people. Interestingly, they very rarely talked about it. They just got on with it."
Craig said: "It's very poignant. So many people will be feeling like you right now Giles - sad and very proud."
Gyles' father Charles was a lawyer - however, he was sent to Germany after the start of the Second World War as part of the Allied Controlled Commission. Gyles was subsequently born in a hospital in Wuppertal, West Germany in 1948 before returning to England with his family.
Charles died in 1982 at the age of 72.
Earlier this year, Gyles opened up about his friend King Charles after the royal dropped out of an event to focus on his health back in March. The King was admitted to hospital after suffering side effects from his cancer treatment at the time.
Speaking on This Morning, Gyles said: "This is a man of 76 who is actually a workaholic. I saw him on Tuesday evening at a reception hosted by Queen's Camilla. He came along to support her, he didn't have to be there - he was a surprise guest."
* Join The Mirror’s WhatsApp Communityor follow us on Google News, Flipboard, Apple News, TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and Threads- or visit The Mirror homepage.
You may also like
World's first humanoid robot games: China plays host; from football fumbles to racing mishaps, what is inside
Protesters hold up roosters, chickens to oppose meat ban by Thane civic body
Ryan Reynolds backs risky £25m transfer strategy as Wrexham make bold Premier League push
Patriotic fervour marks Independence Day celebrations across Telangana
Saliya Saman Banned From All Forms Of Cricket For Five Years Under Anti-Corruption Code