He revealed earlier this year that he has battled to lose three stone in a bid to combat the effects of diabetes.
And Lenny Henry certainly looked slim and dapper while out and about in London on Tuesday.
The 55-year-old actor wore a smart brown tweed suit, which was teamed with a white shirt and a snazzy, brightly coloured tie.
The tie, which was in-keeping with the comedian's sense of fun, featured brown on one side and purple and green stripes on the other.
The TV presenter and funnyman also wore thick-rimmed glasses, while he wore his salt and pepper beard trimmed into a neat goatee.
In January, the star revealed that he had set about losing weight after he was diagnosed with diabetes.
The comic told the The Daily Mirror he was driven to change his diet and take up yoga to improve his health after doctors diagnosed him with diabetes.
Henry now eats sugar-free food and has started to take regular classes in Ashtanga yoga to battle the disease, which can be fatal and causes serious health complications.
The well-known face of the Premier Inn adverts, said the disease cost his mother Winnifred both her legs after medics were forced to amputate her limbs before she died in 1998.
And Lenny Henry certainly looked slim and dapper while out and about in London on Tuesday.
The 55-year-old actor wore a smart brown tweed suit, which was teamed with a white shirt and a snazzy, brightly coloured tie.
Slim: Lenny Henry who has recently lost three-stone in weight, looked trim as he strolled in London
The tie, which was in-keeping with the comedian's sense of fun, featured brown on one side and purple and green stripes on the other.
The TV presenter and funnyman also wore thick-rimmed glasses, while he wore his salt and pepper beard trimmed into a neat goatee.
In January, the star revealed that he had set about losing weight after he was diagnosed with diabetes.
A leaner Lenny: The TV comic looked drastically heavier when he appeared on Loose Women in 2010
Smart: The comedian cut a very dapper figure in his contemporary tie and brown tweed suit
The comic told the The Daily Mirror he was driven to change his diet and take up yoga to improve his health after doctors diagnosed him with diabetes.
Henry now eats sugar-free food and has started to take regular classes in Ashtanga yoga to battle the disease, which can be fatal and causes serious health complications.
The well-known face of the Premier Inn adverts, said the disease cost his mother Winnifred both her legs after medics were forced to amputate her limbs before she died in 1998.
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