Declan Donnelly Finds Teddy Bear Lost for 18 Years — But What’s Inside Will Shock Everyone
In the ITV special “Lost & Found,” Dec receives an email about an old teddy bear named Bertie, which went missing at a train station in 2006. After days of tracking it down, he finds it… in a charity shop. When he returns it to its owner — now a 23-year-old woman — they discover an old ultrasound photo wrapped inside. The woman collapses because that was… the last time she saw her dead mother.
A Lost Bear and a Found Memory
In the warm glow of the ITV studio, where stories of loss and reunion unfold, Declan Donnelly stood at the heart of a special episode of Lost & Found in the spring of 2025. The show, dedicated to reuniting people with cherished possessions, had already brought tears and smiles to millions. But one story, about a teddy bear named Bertie, would leave everyone—Dec, the audience, and a young woman named Ellie—forever changed.
The journey began with an email from Ellie, a 23-year-old from Leeds. She wrote to the Lost & Found team about a teddy bear she’d lost 18 years ago, in 2006, when she was just five. Bertie, a scruffy brown bear with one slightly wonky eye, had been her constant companion, a gift from her mother, Claire, who passed away from illness when Ellie was six. The bear vanished during a chaotic moment at a Manchester train station, and with it went a piece of Ellie’s heart. “It’s not just a toy,” she wrote. “It’s the last thing I have from my mum.” Touched by her words, Dec felt a personal pull to take on the case.
The search wasn’t easy. An 18-year-old lost item, especially a teddy bear, could be anywhere—or nowhere. Dec and the Lost & Found team scoured records, contacted train station lost-and-found archives, and posted appeals online. Days passed with no leads, but Dec’s determination didn’t waver. “This bear means the world to Ellie,” he told the crew. “We’re not giving up.” Then, a breakthrough came from an unlikely source: a volunteer at a charity shop in a small town outside Manchester. She recognized the description of Bertie from a social media post—a worn brown bear with a wonky eye, sitting forgotten on a shelf for years.
Dec drove to the shop himself, his heart racing as he spotted Bertie among a pile of secondhand toys. The bear was faded, its fur matted, but there was no mistaking it: the wonky eye, the slightly frayed red ribbon around its neck. He held it up to the camera, his voice soft but excited. “This is Bertie. After 18 years, we’ve found him.” The shop staff, unaware of the bear’s significance, watched in awe as Dec carefully placed it in a box, ready to reunite it with its owner.
The reunion was set for the Lost & Found studio, with a live audience and cameras capturing every moment. Ellie, now a young woman studying to become a nurse, arrived nervous but hopeful. She hadn’t been told what Dec had found, only that the show had news about her lost item. As she stood on stage, Dec greeted her with his trademark warmth. “Ellie,” he said, “you wrote to us about something very special you lost a long time ago. Can you tell us about Bertie?”
Ellie’s voice trembled as she shared her story. “Bertie was from my mum. She gave him to me when I was little, before she got sick. We lost him at a train station, and then… I lost her too. He’s all I have left of her.” The audience, already emotional, leaned in, feeling the weight of her loss. Dec nodded, his eyes kind. “Ellie, I’ve got something for you.” He reached behind a table and pulled out a box, gently lifting Bertie into view.
Ellie gasped, her hands flying to her mouth. “That’s him! That’s Bertie!” Tears streamed down her face as she took the bear, hugging it tightly, as if embracing her childhood and her mother all at once. The audience erupted in applause, many wiping away tears. But the real surprise was yet to come.
As Ellie held Bertie, Dec noticed a small tear in the bear’s side, revealing a faint glimpse of something inside. “Hang on,” he said, his curiosity piqued. “Ellie, do you mind if we check this? It looks like there’s something in there.” With her permission, Dec carefully reached into the bear’s stuffing, pulling out a small, folded piece of paper. He unfolded it, revealing an old ultrasound photo, yellowed with age but unmistakable—a grainy image of a baby.
Ellie’s knees buckled, and she sank to the floor, clutching the photo. “That’s me,” she whispered, her voice breaking. “That’s the last thing my mum kept. She showed it to me before she died, but I thought it was gone forever.” The studio fell silent, the weight of the moment sinking in. Ellie’s mother, Claire, had tucked the ultrasound photo inside Bertie, perhaps as a keepsake, a secret treasure hidden for years. It was the last tangible connection Ellie had to her mother—a snapshot of the life they shared before loss tore them apart.
Dec knelt beside her, his own eyes misty. “Ellie, your mum must have wanted you to have this. She kept it safe in Bertie all this time.” The audience was in tears, and the crew stood frozen, moved by the discovery. Ellie nodded, sobbing as she held both the bear and the photo. “I never thought I’d see her again like this,” she said. “Thank you, Dec. Thank you for finding her.”
The applause that followed was thunderous, a wave of shared emotion that filled the studio. Dec helped Ellie to her feet, giving her a gentle hug. “This is why we do Lost & Found,” he said to the audience. “It’s not just about things—it’s about memories, about love, about bringing people back together.” He turned to Ellie. “Your mum’s with you, Ellie, in Bertie, in this photo, and in your heart.”
As the show ended, Ellie sat in the green room, still holding Bertie and the ultrasound photo. She shared with Dec how her mother used to sing lullabies to the bear, pretending it was Ellie’s guardian. Now, with the photo in her hands, she felt her mother’s presence again, as if Claire had been guiding the bear back to her all along. Dec listened, his usual cheeky grin replaced by quiet reverence.
The story of Bertie’s return spread across the UK, inspiring viewers with its message of hope and connection. For Ellie, the bear and the photo became treasures she’d carry forever, a bridge to her mother’s love. For Dec, it was a reminder of the power of small acts—how finding a lost toy could uncover a piece of someone’s heart.
In that ITV studio, under the glow of the lights, a teddy bear named Bertie did more than come home. It carried a mother’s love across 18 years, proving that some bonds, and some memories, are never truly lost.