Agrega una trama en tu idiomaWhen the former Lord Chancellor finds himself in need of money, he writes an explosive autobiography full of scandal and threatens to sell it to the tabloid press.When the former Lord Chancellor finds himself in need of money, he writes an explosive autobiography full of scandal and threatens to sell it to the tabloid press.When the former Lord Chancellor finds himself in need of money, he writes an explosive autobiography full of scandal and threatens to sell it to the tabloid press.
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- TriviaEmily Mortimer's debut.
- Citas
Bill Webster: Do you remember, during the Thatcher-Heath contest, when we were in bed, back at your place, with a magnum of champagne, going at it hammer and tongs, when who should ring but dear old Brian Redhead to do your radio interview. You did very well, considering.
Shirley: Probably the only in-flagrante radio interview in the history of politics.
Bill Webster: Actually no. *I* did one during the Callaghan vote of confidence. I came like the clappers just as I was saying the words "Margaret Thatcher". Wrecked my sex-life for years.
- ConexionesFeatured in Points of View: Episode #29.19 (1996)
- Bandas sonorasAnimal Nitrate
Written by Bernard Butler and Brett Anderson
Performed by Suede
Nude Records
Viewers are served with a very full plate. There's family angst, British political intrigue, MI5 agents, pagan rites, cannabis smuggling, the gutter press, and the disappearing English fishing industry -- and it's all served on the colorful backdrop of a delightful southwestern coastal town.
The cast is impressive. Viewers are treated with an opportunity to see one of Pat Hayes' last performances. James Fleet (Vicar of Dibley) plays a smooth-talking Tory Prime Minister who eerily resembles Tony Blair -- Fleet's NHS TV ad is particularly well done. Richard Wilson (One Foot in the Grave) is excellent as the cranky family patriarch and disaffected ex-Lord Chancellor who has the ability to topple a large part of the English Establishment. Prunella Scales (Fawlty Towers) plays the Government's Minister of Fisheries who is sent to make Wison's character, Bill Webster, see some sense. Angus Deayton plays a delightful cameo as the head of MI5, swinging golf balls at Japanese tourists on the Thames. Martin Clunes (Men Behaving Badly) briefly appears as the Minister of Defense. and there's a surprise appearance by old Labour stalwart Dennis Healey.
OK, so you'll never see a British PM wrestling with Sun journalists in a duckpond over a briefcase containing 500,000 UKP -- the price of the PM's Singapore secrets and Cabinet Members' indiscretions -- but that does not detract from a well written, well acted, typically English comedy, which won a comedic award for Hat Trick Productions. Just one criticism though. Richard Wilson's hairpiece is awful!
- Tom-104
- 9 ago 1999
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