James Corden and Adele both offered to help victims of 2017 Grenfell tragedy
Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said that he had been contacted separately by the celebrities.

James Corden and Adele both reached out in the wake of the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire to offer help, an MP has said.
Shadow foreign secretary David Lammy said that he had been contacted separately by the celebrities, who had been concerned about the victims of the tragedy.
It comes after the pair reunited in Los Angeles for the final session of Carpool Karaoke on Cordenās final episode of The Late Late Show on Thursday.
The long-time friends have launched successful stateside careers, despite both hailing from the Greater London area.
Mr Lammy told the BBCās Newscast podcast that the Tottenham-based singer Adele had been āreally concernedā with the tragedy and that Corden had offered to buy Christmas presents for children in the affected community.
Speaking on the podcast, during which he and host Adam Fleming attempted to recreate a Carpool Karaoke session, Mr Lammy hailed Adele as a āproud hero of Tottenhamā.
āShe supports Spurs and grew up in Tottenham, and is sort of wonderful,ā he said.
Asked if he knew the singer personally, he replied: āI wish I could say I know her. I really wish that.
āBut, slightly strangely, after the awful Grenfell Tower fire two celebrities made contact with me.
āOne was Adele, who I think was living in Notting Hill at the time, and (she) was really concerned to do what she could, and the other was James Corden.
āI donāt know how he got my number, but sent me a WhatsApp and, bless him, wanted to send Christmas presents to the children.
āSo they were both sort of in my life in that period.ā
Corden closed out his final episode of The Late Late Show after over eight years on Thursday.
The show and hour-long primetime preview featured a slew of celebrity guests including Adele, Tom Cruise, Harry Styles and Will Ferrell.