'Harold Wilson' is featured as a movie character in the following productions:
Bert & Dickie (2012)
Actors:
Geoffrey Palmer (actor),
Clive Russell (actor),
John Bird (actor),
James Frain (actor),
Rob Lane (composer),
Ron Cook (actor),
Clive Merrison (actor),
Douglas Hodge (actor),
Pia Di Ciaula (editor),
Matt Smith (actor),
Joel Holmes (miscellaneous crew),
Thomas Arnold (actor),
Adrian Lukis (actor),
Anastasia Hille (actress),
David Blair (director),
Plot: In 1948 a London beset by rationing and austerity measures has six weeks to go before the first Olympic Games after the war. With athletes having to supply their own kit the Labour government is desperately hoping the games will attract foreign tourists and their money. Working class Bert Bushnell is anxious for selection in the single sculls event and is upset when former Olympian medallist and innovative organizer Jack Beresford pairs him with journalist Dickie Burnell, whose privileged background he despises. Their initial poor performance sees them at odds but, after Bert has convinced Dickie that their boat needs alterations, their prowess and mutual respect increases. On the eve of the games a nervous Dickie is given confidence by Bert's father and applies a little of his own cunning to ensure a path to the finals. Ultimately Bert also seeks Dickie's father's reassurance, both elders having a secret of their own, and the pair go on to beat the favoured Danish duo and win Olympic gold.
Keywords: 1940s, based-on-true-story, class-differences, gold-medal, london-england, olympics, rationing, rowing, sculling, teamwork
Genres:
Drama,
Made in Dagenham (2010)
Actors:
Miranda Richardson (actress),
Geraldine James (actress),
Richard Schiff (actor),
Lee Nicholas Harris (actor),
John Sessions (actor),
Rosamund Pike (actress),
Lee Nicholas Harris (actor),
Rupert Graves (actor),
Bob Hoskins (actor),
Phil Cornwell (actor),
Kenneth Cranham (actor),
Roger Lloyd-Pack (actor),
Danny Huston (actor),
Stephen Woolley (producer),
Christine Langan (producer),
Plot: In 1968, the Ford auto factory in Dagenham was one of the largest single private employers in the United Kingdom. In addition to the thousands of male employees, there are also 187 underpaid women machinists who primarily assemble the car seat upholstery in poor working conditions. Dissatisfied, the women, represented by the shop steward and Rita O'Grady, work with union rep Albert Passingham for a better deal. However, Rita learns that there is a larger issue in this dispute considering that women are paid an appalling fraction of the men's wages for the same work across the board on the sole basis of their sex. Refusing to tolerate this inequality any longer, O'Grady leads a strike by her fellow machinists for equal pay for equal work. What follows would test the patience of all involved in a grinding labour and political struggle that ultimately would advance the cause of women's rights around the world.
Keywords: 1960s, 31-year-old, ambulance, apartment-building, apology, archive-footage, assembly-line, auto-industry, automobile-factory, banner
Genres:
Biography,
Comedy,
Drama,
History,
Taglines: 1968. It's a man's world. But not for long... Dagenham, England, 1968. An ordinary woman fights for equal pay and achieves something extraordinary.
Quotes:
Barbara Castle: I am what is known as a fiery redhead. Now, I hate to make this a matter of appearance and go all womanly on you, but there you have it. And me standing up like this is in fact just that redheaded fieriness leaping to the fore. Credence? I will give credence to their cause. My god! Their cause already has credence. It is equal pay. Equal pay is common justice, and if you two weren't such a pair of egotistical, chauvinistic, bigoted dunderheads, you would realise that. Oh, my office is run by incompetents and I am sick of being patronised, spoken down to, and generally treated as if I was the May Queen. Set up the meeting!
Rita O'Grady: All right, um, everybody out!
Rita O'Grady: Look, I know you're not mentioning it because you're being polite and everything, but when we met in the corridor, well I was really upset, and I never usually use that type of language.::Lisa Hopkins: Don't you?::Rita O'Grady: No.::Lisa Hopkins: Well I called Mr Clarke a complete cock.
Lisa Hopkins: I'm Lisa Burnett, I'm 31 years old and I have a first class honours degree from one of the finest universities in the world, and my husband treats me like I'm a fool.
News Reporter 1: What if Mrs. Castle says "no deal"?::News Reporter 2: How will you cope then?::Rita O'Grady: Cope? How will we cope? We're women. Now, don't ask such stupid questions.
Eddie O'Grady: Christ, I like a drink, but I ain't out on the beer every night or screwin' other women, or... 'Ere, I've never once raised me hand to you. Ever. Or the kids.::Rita O'Grady: Christ.::Eddie O'Grady: What? Why are you looking like that?::Rita O'Grady: Right. You're a saint now, is that what you're tellin' me, Eddie? You're a bleedin' saint? 'Cause you give us an even break?::Eddie O'Grady: What are you saying?::Rita O'Grady: That is as it should be. Jesus, Eddie! What do you think this strike's all been about, eh? Oh yeah. Actually you're right. You don't go on the drink, do ya? You don't gamble, you join in with the kids, you don't knock us about. Oh, lucky me. For Christ's sake, Eddie, that's as it should be! You try and understand that. Rights, not privileges. It's that easy. It really bloody is.
Albert Passingham: This dispute's got nothing to do with what skill level you are. Ford decided to give you less money because they can. They're allowed to pay women a lower wage than men. All over the country women are getting less because they're women. You'll always come second. You'll always be fighting over the scraps from the top table, until you...::Rita O'Grady: Until we get equal pay, yeah.::Albert Passingham: Yeah.::Rita O'Grady: What I don't get is why it's so important to you.::Albert Passingham: I got brought up by my mum. Me and me brothers. She worked all her life. And she paid my aunt Lil to take care of us during the day. And it was hard, especially as she was getting less than half than what the blokes at the factory was getting, for doing the same work. And there was never any question that it could be any different. Not for her. Someone has got stop these exploiting bastards getting away with what they've been doing for years. And you can, you can, Rita, believe me.
Rita O'Grady: All those in favour of not only maintaining but increasing our current industrial action by going to an immediate all-out stoppage until we get the same rates of pay as the men! Well, why not? Cause that's what this is really about, innit? We're on the lowest rate of the entire bleeding factory despite the fact we got considerable skill. And there's only one possible reason for that. It's cause we're women. And in the workplace, women get paid less than men, no matter what skill they got! Which is why from now on, we got to demand a level playing field and rates of pay which reflect the job you do, not whether you got a dick or not! This strike is about one thing and one thing only! Fairness. Equal pay or nothing! All those in favour?::The Women: Yeah!::Rita O'Grady: Everybody out!
[Albert is being accused by his union of scuppering other negotiations with management by supporting the women's equal-pay strike]::Bartholomew: As a union we have to remember who comes first. The Communist Party. And Marx himself said "Men write their own history". That's "men", Albert.::Albert Passingham: But didn't he also say "Progress can be measured by the social position of the female sex"? Or was that a different Marx? That was Groucho, was it?::[Bartholomew is lost for words]::Albert Passingham: Equal pay across the board. You telling me that ain't worth fighting for? Of course it is, and you know it. I'll tell you something. This Rita has got a bigger set of balls than you three put together. And she ain't scared to lay 'em on the line, neither. And I for one am gonna help her. And if you are what you say you are, an organisation pledged to support its members, then you'll get off your lazy fat arses and you'll help her too. Good fucking evening.::[Albert walks out of the office]
[Rita gives an impromptu speech at the trade union conference]::Rita O'Grady: My best friend lost her husband recently. He was a gunner in the 50 Squadron in the RAF. Got shot down one time, on a raid to Essen. And even though he was badly injured, he managed to bail out. I asked him why he joined the RAF, and he said "Well, they've got the best women, haven't they?"::[audience laughs]::Rita O'Grady: And then he said "Well, you've got to do something, haven't you? You had to do something, that was a given. Cos it was a matter of principle. You had to stand up. You had to do what was right. Cos otherwise you wouldn't be able to look at yourself in the mirror." When did that change, eh? When did we, in this country, decide to stop fighting? I don't think we ever did. But you've got to back us up. You've got to stand up with us. *We* are the working classes - the men *and* the women. We're not separated by sex, but only by those who are willing to accept injustice and those like our friend George who are prepared to go into battle for what is right. And equal pay for women *is* right.
Filth: The Mary Whitehouse Story (2008)
Actors:
William Rushton (actor),
Alun Armstrong (actor),
Patrick Troughton (actor),
Julie Walters (actress),
Rebecca Eaton (producer),
William Rushton (actor),
Hugh Bonneville (actor),
Frazer Hines (actor),
Ron Cook (actor),
George Pastell (actor),
Barbara Kidd (costume designer),
Martin Trenaman (actor),
Nicholas Woodeson (actor),
Nicholas Le Prevost (actor),
Stephen O'Connell (editor),
Plot: In the early 1960s, Mrs. Mary Whitehouse, a middle-aged school teacher, begins a campaign against what she sees as filth and smut on BBC television and radio. She and a friend start knocking on doors, circulating petitions and organizing rallies. Her nemesis during this time is Sir Hugh Carleton Greene, Director General of the BBC. He thinks she is just an old busybody who has no artistic taste and doesn't represent the mainstream of British society. Throughout his tenure, which lasted several years, he refused to see her or respond to her correspondence. She continued to campaign at what she viewed as unacceptable programming until her death in 2001.
Keywords: 1960s, art-teacher, campaign, campaigning, censorship, character-name-in-title, christian, christian-fundamentalism, conservatism, husband-wife-relationship
Genres:
Biography,
Comedy,
Drama,
Quotes:
David Turner: I've just had a spot of bother in Birmingham - I was ganged-up on by a group of schoolgirls and that demented housewife.::Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: Ah yes, of course. Now what *is* her name? No, don't tell me. Well you know what they say, old chap? Writing well is the best revenge. [he turns to walk away] Though garrotting your enemy with cheesewire runs a close second.
[at breakfast, with his wife and two teenage sons]::Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: Pass the butter.::Elaine Carleton Green: What's the magic word?::Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: Pass the *fucking* butter.
Mary Whitehouse: Oral sex. Have you heard of it?::Ernest Whitehouse: I have.::Mary Whitehouse: Why would anybody want to... I suppose I should feel sorry for the poor souls. I mean if relations are really *so* unsatisfactory that they have to turn to that. It's sad, more than anything.
[Mary Whitehouse has just sent a supposedly obscene script to the Postmaster General who has ordered an episode of Swizzlewick which lampoons her to be pulled mid-way through its broadcast. Sir Hugh is fuming]::Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: Who? Who? I want the traitor flushed out. I want strict controls of all scripts issued to anyone and everyone - anywhere and everywhere. Contrive some memo to that effect.::Miss Tate: Yes, Sir Hugh.::Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: And! And! I am issuing a directive with immediate effect. No-one connected to the Corporation is to have anything whatsoever to do with that woman, either socially or professionally. Though Christ knows why anyone would want to!::Miss Tate: Yes, Sir Hugh. You *do* mean Mrs Whitehouse?::Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: I don't want to hear her name.
Sir Hugh Carleton Greene: The woman wants to censor us, Hill. If she had her way, all we'd show would be Andy bloody Pandy - and she'd stop him climbing into that basket with Looby Loo, let alone Teddy, lest some innocent child be corrupted by the whiff of puppet troilism. And bestiality, I suppose - or *would* it be bestiality with a teddy bear rather than a real bear?
[Mary Whitehouse is appearing on a discussion programme which is about to go on air]::Female Panellist: Mrs Whitehouse, can I just say before the programme starts, that I've followed your campaign right from the beginning.::Mary Whitehouse: Oh yes, dear.::Female Panellist: And I utterly disagree with everything single thing you're doing.::Male Panellist: Hear hear. Freedom of expression is one of the most precious values we have in our society. You seem to have taken it on yourself to speak for people who don't support you in any way whatsoever. You should be ashamed of yourself.::Mary Whitehouse: [sulking] Oh well, we're all here to put our different views.
[at a meeting of her supporters at her house, Mary Whitehouse proposes a name for the organisation]::Mary Whitehouse: We'll call it Clean Up National Television.::[she holds up a placard featuring the name, with the initial letters highlighted]::Ernest Whitehouse: [chuckling] Er, I think you might want to choose a different name, dear.
The Plot Against Harold Wilson (2006)
Actors:
John Hurt (actor),
James Bolam (actor),
Elizabeth McKechnie (actress),
David Bark-Jones (actor),
Paul Dwyer (producer),
Paul Dwyer (director),
Laura Craig Gray (producer),
Peter Hamilton Dyer (actor),
Plot: Dramatised documentary which explores the reasons behind the sudden resignation on 16 March 1976 of British prime minister Harold Wilson. It is based on secret discussions that he had at the time with two journalists in which he alleges that the British intelligence services had made his position as prime minister untenable and that Britain was on the brink of a military coup, with Lord Mountbatten, the Queen's cousin, lined up to head an interim government after Wilson had been deposed.
Keywords: character-name-in-title
Genres:
Documentary,
Drama,
The Lavender List (2006)
Actors:
Celia Imrie (actress),
Kenneth Cranham (actor),
Gina McKee (actress),
Patrick Ryecart (actor),
Neil Dudgeon (actor),
Emma Fryer (costume designer),
Allin Kempthorne (actor),
Eric Carte (actor),
Stan Fus (miscellaneous crew),
Colin Barr (director),
Vivianne Royal (miscellaneous crew),
Dominic Rowan (actor),
Vicky Johnson (miscellaneous crew),
Francis Wheen (writer),
Alison Willett (producer),
Genres:
Drama,
Aberfan: The Untold Story (2006)
Actors:
Sean Barrett (actor),
Greg Bennett (actor),
Jim Carter (actor),
James Fiddy (actor),
Roger Evans (actor),
David Blight (costume designer),
Grahame Fox (actor),
Alister Cameron (actor),
Samir Shah (producer),
Shane Attwooll (actor),
Jonathan Jones (producer),
Jonathan Jones (director),
Paula Prynn (miscellaneous crew),
Morgan James (actor),
Morgan James (actor),
Genres:
Documentary,
Longford (2006)
Actors:
Robert Pugh (actor),
Anton Rodgers (actor),
Samantha Morton (actress),
Andy Harries (producer),
John Mortimer (actor),
Rob Lane (composer),
Lindsay Duncan (actress),
David Frost (actor),
Andy Serkis (actor),
David Frost (actor),
Jim Broadbent (actor),
Peter Morgan (producer),
Peter Morgan (writer),
Marigo Kehoe (miscellaneous crew),
James Keast (costume designer),
Plot: Biopic of Lord Longford, known for many years for his work with prisoners and prisoners rights in general. The film focuses on Longford's work on behalf of Myra Hindley convicted, along with her boyfriend Ian Brady, of several child murders. Hindley is nothing short of notorious and even Longord's wife is shocked when he announces that he will visit her in prison. When Prime Minister Harold Wilson removes him as the Government Leader in the House of Lords soon after his visits to Hindley are made public, Longford continues to work for her release. A devout convert to Roman Catholicism, Longford sees hope for Hindley when he learns that she too once converted to Catholicism. In the end, his campaign to get her released on parole is for naught when she reveals that other murders took place. Longford stood by his convictions however and never regretted the good work he had done over a great many years.
Keywords: 10-downing-street, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, afterlife, apology, attorney, author, beads, bench
Genres:
Biography,
Crime,
Drama,
Taglines: The only thing more shocking than her crime was his crusade to free her.
Quotes:
[On his first visit to Myra Hindley in prison, Lord Longford is looking aimlessly around the visiting room trying to find her. He approaches a woman with bleached blonde hair, then discovers that this is not Hindley. Suddenly a woman with jet-black hair stands up]::Myra Hindley: I think it's me you're looking for.::Lord Longford: Myra Hindley?::Myra Hindley: I got rid of the peroxide before the trial. I was blue at the trial, for most of it. And then red for the sentencing. Apparently it counted against me - showed I had no remorse.::Lord Longford: I wasn't aware of a correlation between hair colour and contrition.
[Lord and Lady Longford are sitting up in bed looking at pornographic magazines, such as Mayfair and Slave, to decide whether they are offensive]::Lady Elizabeth Longford: Frank, it's harmless. Completely harmless.::Lord Longford: I disagree. These things are read by children at a vulnerable age. The boys on the bus can't have been more than twelve.::Lady Elizabeth Longford: And in our day it was just the same.::Lord Longford: Nothing *like* so graphic or as available. Look at it! Sexual arousal is Pavlovian - if boys grow up thinking that these kind of breasts or this kind of submission is normal, they'll expect it in later life.::Lady Elizabeth Longford: I'm afraid I'm with Marilyn Monroe on this. When asked what she thought about sex she thought for a moment and then said that she felt it was here to stay. And if it is, so is prostitution and so is pornography.
[after visiting Myra Hindley in prison]::Lady Elizabeth Longford: It seemed to me that for years I have been merrily attacking your father for supporting her, without having the slightest idea what I was talking about. And I must say my eyes have been opened, rather. Ironically, the thing that finally persuaded me to offer her my help was the very same thing that had so made me hate her in the first place: the fact that she is a woman. Did you know there have been half a dozen similar child murders? The reason none of us has heard about them is because the killers in each case were men. And men, being sadistic violent killers, isn't a story. Incidentally, in each case, the men have also been paroled. The reason that Myra Hindley is still in jail and has never been considered for parole, is because she is a woman. And for that reason she will always have my understanding... if not my sympathy.
Lord Longford: Hello Myra, is this the nightie you wanted, I couldn't remember what colour you asked for.::Myra Hindley: It's great thanks [quietly]::Lord Longford: Now the business.::Myra Hindley: Frank.::Lord Longford: I have a friend on the parole board::Myra Hindley: _Frank.::Lord Longford: ...who tells me your application will be considered next month, now if that goes well and all things being equal the national::Myra Hindley: _Frank enough. [Inhales cigarette slowly] The police have been to see me. Brady's talked to the press about the other bodies. I'm saying, that i'm going to give a full confessional to all five murders.::Lord Longford: What other bodies?::Myra Hindley: Pauline Reade. And the Bennet boy. He hasn't given them any details yet, but he says he knows where they're buried, and before he grabs the initiative i'm going to come clean and tell the prison "I know".::Lord Longford: but you know nothing about the bodies you've told me as much yourself.::Myra Hindley: [Stares blankly]::Lord Longford: What are you saying?::Myra Hindley: I'm saying, that i'm going to make a confessional to all five murders.::Lord Longford: Dear girl... I asked you specifically if there was anything that you hadn't told me. I've staked my name on this, my reputation.::Myra Hindley: I know. And i'd perfectly understand if you never wanted to see me again. It's what my new solicitor suggested anyway.::Lord Longford: Your new solicitor...?::Myra Hindley: He feels, and if i'm honest i'd agree with him, that the campaign you have conducted on my behalf has hurt me, more than helped me, and that we should make this our last meeting.I see...::Lord Longford: I see... if that's what he feels... that you feel. [Looks down]::Myra Hindley: [pause] Goodbye Frank. [Walks off]::Lord Longford: [Sits for a bit, and then apprehensively walks towards the door]
Myra Hindley: I'm trying Frank, to know the God that you know. But if you had been there, on the moors, in the moonlight, when we did the first one, you'd know, that evil can be a spiritual experience too.
Myra Hindley: It would be a nice place to be.::Lord Longford: Where?::Myra Hindley: Inside your head.::Lord Longford: Oh, I'm not sure about that.
[last lines]::Myra Hindley: You know, we only missed it by a few weeks.::Lord Longford: What?::Myra Hindley: The death sentence. They abolished it while we were on remand. Looking back, don't you think it would have been better for everyone if they'd just hung us?::Lord Longford: Certainly not! Only God has the right to take human life.::Myra Hindley: Would He not have wanted to give the families that comfort?::Lord Longford: [staring off into space] None of us knows the true purpose of our lives on earth... Besides, [gallant again] had you been hanged, I would never have had the privilege of getting to know you!::Myra Hindley: [gazes at him with sadness in her eyes] You really believe that, don't you? [he smiles at her shyly, and says nothing]::Myra Hindley: Must be a rather nice place to be.::Lord Longford: [he glances around them] Where?::Myra Hindley: Inside your head.::Lord Longford: [grins awkwardly and wags his head from side to side as if to dismiss the thought] Oh! I'm not so sure about that!::Myra Hindley: [taking another cigarette from her pack and pulling out her lighter] A fine pair we are, then. [long pan on the two chatting on their bench, so close they are almost touching. Credit sequence rolls]
Ian Brady: [at first seeing Lord Longford in prison] How good of you not to disappoint! Wonderful, isn't it, when people look *exactly* as you imagined? So this is my competition? This is what I'm up against? Myra's new boyfriend? She certainly picks them, doesn't she? I did a little research before our first meeting. I'd say there's great evidence of mental instability in your past and mine.
Lord Longford: [in first visit] What can I do for you, Mr. Brady?::Ian Brady: [looks sad and troubled] I'd like to find my way back to God, Lord Longford. Will ye help me?::Lord Longford: [eagerly] Most certainly, if that's what you want to -::Ian Brady: Don't ye fucking dare. If ye start that pious mumbo-jumbo with me, I will jump across that table and bite out your tongue.
Ian Brady: I want to tell ye about Myra, whom ye no doubt believe is sincere in her religious conversion. Let me tell ye, that woman cares no more about God than she does about the piles in my arse. What she cares about is... getting out! And she thinks you'll help her. But the minute your back is turned, she mocks ye! [pulls three letters from his lap] For your silly hair... and your clothes... and your "self-important autobiography that's only published 'cause his family owns a bloody publishing house!" [pauses for effect] What? She didn't tell ye she was still writing to me?::Lord Longford: No.::Ian Brady: Oh, dear. She probably didn't tell ye she was fucking that little prison officer either? A nun? They do it under the bed in the cell, apparently. Four times a day! She has a very high sex drive, our Myra. It's the sort of detail ye might want about your new girlfriend. She needs it all the time... like a man, in that way. Like a man in other ways, too. She's strong! That came in handy, as ye can imagine. When they were wriggling and trying to get away.
Paradise Postponed (1986)
Actors:
Neville Phillips (actor),
Pauline Hume (miscellaneous crew),
John Grillo (actor),
Jacqueline Hill (actress),
Ann Holloway (actress),
Nick Reding (actor),
John Forbes-Robertson (actor),
Susie Blake (actress),
Roger Webb (composer),
John Kane (actor),
Ruth Kettlewell (actress),
Joan Blackham (actress),
Tony Mathews (actor),
Graham McGrath (actor),
William Gaminara (actor),
Genres:
Drama,
The Spy with a Cold Nose (1966)
Actors:
June Whitfield (actress),
Joseph E. Levine (producer),
Eric Sykes (actor),
Bernard Archard (actor),
Eric Portman (actor),
Marianne Stone (actress),
Barry Cryer (actor),
Colin Blakely (actor),
Arnold Diamond (actor),
Denholm Elliott (actor),
Laurence Harvey (actor),
Julian Orchard (actor),
Lionel Jeffries (actor),
Alan Simpson (writer),
Ray Galton (writer),
Genres:
Comedy,
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49:33
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 1 - 14 March 2006
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 1 - 14 March 2006
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 1 - 14 March 2006
A fascinating insight to the years that Harold Wilson was Prime Minister. Opinions on his reign in power are so divided that I dare not express any of my own here! However this, and Part 2 are well worth the fifty minutes each take to watch. I do not own the copyright of this film.
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49:34
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 2 - 21 March 2006
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 2 - 21 March 2006
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 2 - 21 March 2006
The second part of the Wilson story - and the same note that I added to the first part applies equally here, so I will not give any opinion as to my feelings on his Prime Ministerial years. I do not own the copyright to this film.
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89:30
The Plot Against Harold Wilson, BBC 2006
The Plot Against Harold Wilson, BBC 2006
The Plot Against Harold Wilson, BBC 2006
Dramatised documentary which explores the reasons behind the sudden resignation on 16 March 1976 of British prime minister Harold Wilson. It is based on secr...
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52:39
HAROLD WILSON: British Prime Minister; 1964 - 70 and 1974 - 76.
HAROLD WILSON: British Prime Minister; 1964 - 70 and 1974 - 76.
HAROLD WILSON: British Prime Minister; 1964 - 70 and 1974 - 76.
BBC obituary documentary written and presented by Anthony Howard. Broadcast on the day of the death of Harold Wilson, May 24th 1995.
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89:01
Heath vs Wilson - The 10 Year Duel - BBC
Heath vs Wilson - The 10 Year Duel - BBC
Heath vs Wilson - The 10 Year Duel - BBC
Harold Wilson and Edward Heath are two very different men equally overlooked by history, but they were the political titans of the era in which Britain chang...
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11:03
BBC Election 1970 David Dimbleby Harold Wilson
BBC Election 1970 David Dimbleby Harold Wilson
BBC Election 1970 David Dimbleby Harold Wilson
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12:41
Harold Wilson 'Pound in your pocket' speech (19Nov1967)
Harold Wilson 'Pound in your pocket' speech (19Nov1967)
Harold Wilson 'Pound in your pocket' speech (19Nov1967)
The full version of the then Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson's infamous "Pound in your pocket" speech, which saw everyone become 14% poorer. Recorded fro...
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89:34
Harold Wilson plot, Treason & Conspiracy by MI5, 1968 Coup, 1976 Resignation
Harold Wilson plot, Treason & Conspiracy by MI5, 1968 Coup, 1976 Resignation
Harold Wilson plot, Treason & Conspiracy by MI5, 1968 Coup, 1976 Resignation
Yes Penrose and Courtieur were steered out into the long grass by the powers that be. In 1975 Britain's last honest Prime Minister, Harold Wilson was bugged,...
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6:10
Harold Wilson resigns
Harold Wilson resigns
Harold Wilson resigns
Harold Wilson resigns on the 16th March, after having served as Prime Minister 1964-70 and 1974-76.
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1:11
Labour - Harold Wilson - Thames Television
Labour - Harold Wilson - Thames Television
Labour - Harold Wilson - Thames Television
Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson Speaks to Llew Gardener about high banking profits is unacceptable during a time of national hardship.
Transmitted in 20/02/1974
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4:54
Harold Wilson At Pipe Exhibition (1970-1974)
Harold Wilson At Pipe Exhibition (1970-1974)
Harold Wilson At Pipe Exhibition (1970-1974)
Unissued / unused footage - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown. Prime Minister Harold Wilson at Pipe Exhibition. M/S of Harold Wilson lighting his ...
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1:43
Margaret Thatcher Vs Harold Wilson
Margaret Thatcher Vs Harold Wilson
Margaret Thatcher Vs Harold Wilson
a short clip fro 1975. margaret thatcher as leader of the opposition tackles prime minister harold wilson.
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3:18
Harold Wilson stops interview at the BBC
Harold Wilson stops interview at the BBC
Harold Wilson stops interview at the BBC
Audio recording of an interview of Harold Wilson by the BBC that appears to have been halted after Wilson complained about the line of questioning being aske...
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4:39
John D. Hale Band - Harold Wilson
John D. Hale Band - Harold Wilson
John D. Hale Band - Harold Wilson
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3:38
Harold Wilson Speaks On Clothing (1948)
Harold Wilson Speaks On Clothing (1948)
Harold Wilson Speaks On Clothing (1948)
Unissued / Unused material. Harold Wilson, President of the Board of Trade, speaks on clothing rationing. London. CU Harold Wilson on roof of Board of Trade ...
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2:08
Harold Wilson (1916-1995)
Harold Wilson (1916-1995)
Harold Wilson (1916-1995)
James Harold Wilson, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, KG, OBE, FRS, PC (11th March 1916 - 24th May 1995) was a British Labour politician; one of the most prominent ...
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0:59
UK General Election February 1974 - Harold Wilson Speech
UK General Election February 1974 - Harold Wilson Speech
UK General Election February 1974 - Harold Wilson Speech
Harold Wilson on the inconclusive results. Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heaths decision to call a snap election in February 1974 backfired. His plea to...
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2:40
The MI5 Plot: Dirty Tricks
The MI5 Plot: Dirty Tricks
The MI5 Plot: Dirty Tricks
Was British Prime Minister Harold Wilson the target of the Security Service's dirty tricks spying? ------------------ Video Endboard Links: - Operation Snow ...
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4:27
Harold Wilson to Margaret Thatcher
Harold Wilson to Margaret Thatcher
Harold Wilson to Margaret Thatcher
Labour in government (1964 to1970 - 'Swinging Sixties' ) with Harold Wilson as Prime Minister brought in the vote for 18 year olds, the legalisation of homos...
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0:08
Harold Wilson Harry Secombe
Harold Wilson Harry Secombe
Harold Wilson Harry Secombe
Harold Wilson Harry Secombe.
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1:52
Not The Nine O'Clock News - Harold Wilson : Final Term
Not The Nine O'Clock News - Harold Wilson : Final Term
Not The Nine O'Clock News - Harold Wilson : Final Term
Comedy sketch featuring the voice of Chris Emmett. From Series 1, Episode 1 (1979).
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2:18
SYND 18 2 75 HAROLD WILSON INTERVIEW ON TRADE AGREEMENT
SYND 18 2 75 HAROLD WILSON INTERVIEW ON TRADE AGREEMENT
SYND 18 2 75 HAROLD WILSON INTERVIEW ON TRADE AGREEMENT
Interview with British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson after signing a one thousand million pound trade agreement with USSR
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e30df2364ff73247564275bf12a38053
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
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0:14
Harold Wilson talking about devaluation of the pound in your pocket
Harold Wilson talking about devaluation of the pound in your pocket
Harold Wilson talking about devaluation of the pound in your pocket
Harold Wilson talking about devaluation of the pound in your pocket.
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 1 - 14 March 2006
A fascinating insight to the years that Harold Wilson was Prime Minister. Opinions on his reign in power are so divided that I dare not express any of my own here! However this, and Part 2 are well worth the fifty minutes each take to watch. I do not own the copyright of this film.
wn.com/Harold Wilson The Wilson Years Pt 1 14 March 2006
A fascinating insight to the years that Harold Wilson was Prime Minister. Opinions on his reign in power are so divided that I dare not express any of my own here! However this, and Part 2 are well worth the fifty minutes each take to watch. I do not own the copyright of this film.
- published: 02 Jul 2015
- views: 18
Harold Wilson - The Wilson Years - Pt 2 - 21 March 2006
The second part of the Wilson story - and the same note that I added to the first part applies equally here, so I will not give any opinion as to my feelings on his Prime Ministerial years. I do not own the copyright to this film.
wn.com/Harold Wilson The Wilson Years Pt 2 21 March 2006
The second part of the Wilson story - and the same note that I added to the first part applies equally here, so I will not give any opinion as to my feelings on his Prime Ministerial years. I do not own the copyright to this film.
- published: 02 Jul 2015
- views: 14
The Plot Against Harold Wilson, BBC 2006
Dramatised documentary which explores the reasons behind the sudden resignation on 16 March 1976 of British prime minister Harold Wilson. It is based on secr...
wn.com/The Plot Against Harold Wilson, BBC 2006
Dramatised documentary which explores the reasons behind the sudden resignation on 16 March 1976 of British prime minister Harold Wilson. It is based on secr...
HAROLD WILSON: British Prime Minister; 1964 - 70 and 1974 - 76.
BBC obituary documentary written and presented by Anthony Howard. Broadcast on the day of the death of Harold Wilson, May 24th 1995.
wn.com/Harold Wilson British Prime Minister 1964 70 And 1974 76.
BBC obituary documentary written and presented by Anthony Howard. Broadcast on the day of the death of Harold Wilson, May 24th 1995.
Heath vs Wilson - The 10 Year Duel - BBC
Harold Wilson and Edward Heath are two very different men equally overlooked by history, but they were the political titans of the era in which Britain chang...
wn.com/Heath Vs Wilson The 10 Year Duel BBC
Harold Wilson and Edward Heath are two very different men equally overlooked by history, but they were the political titans of the era in which Britain chang...
Harold Wilson 'Pound in your pocket' speech (19Nov1967)
The full version of the then Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson's infamous "Pound in your pocket" speech, which saw everyone become 14% poorer. Recorded fro...
wn.com/Harold Wilson 'Pound In Your Pocket' Speech (19Nov1967)
The full version of the then Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson's infamous "Pound in your pocket" speech, which saw everyone become 14% poorer. Recorded fro...
Harold Wilson plot, Treason & Conspiracy by MI5, 1968 Coup, 1976 Resignation
Yes Penrose and Courtieur were steered out into the long grass by the powers that be. In 1975 Britain's last honest Prime Minister, Harold Wilson was bugged,...
wn.com/Harold Wilson Plot, Treason Conspiracy By Mi5, 1968 Coup, 1976 Resignation
Yes Penrose and Courtieur were steered out into the long grass by the powers that be. In 1975 Britain's last honest Prime Minister, Harold Wilson was bugged,...
Harold Wilson resigns
Harold Wilson resigns on the 16th March, after having served as Prime Minister 1964-70 and 1974-76.
wn.com/Harold Wilson Resigns
Harold Wilson resigns on the 16th March, after having served as Prime Minister 1964-70 and 1974-76.
- published: 08 Jan 2010
- views: 24858
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author:
Lab356
Labour - Harold Wilson - Thames Television
Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson Speaks to Llew Gardener about high banking profits is unacceptable during a time of national hardship.
Transmitted in 20/02/1974
wn.com/Labour Harold Wilson Thames Television
Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson Speaks to Llew Gardener about high banking profits is unacceptable during a time of national hardship.
Transmitted in 20/02/1974
- published: 07 May 2015
- views: 0
Harold Wilson At Pipe Exhibition (1970-1974)
Unissued / unused footage - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown. Prime Minister Harold Wilson at Pipe Exhibition. M/S of Harold Wilson lighting his ...
wn.com/Harold Wilson At Pipe Exhibition (1970 1974)
Unissued / unused footage - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown. Prime Minister Harold Wilson at Pipe Exhibition. M/S of Harold Wilson lighting his ...
Margaret Thatcher Vs Harold Wilson
a short clip fro 1975. margaret thatcher as leader of the opposition tackles prime minister harold wilson.
wn.com/Margaret Thatcher Vs Harold Wilson
a short clip fro 1975. margaret thatcher as leader of the opposition tackles prime minister harold wilson.
Harold Wilson stops interview at the BBC
Audio recording of an interview of Harold Wilson by the BBC that appears to have been halted after Wilson complained about the line of questioning being aske...
wn.com/Harold Wilson Stops Interview At The BBC
Audio recording of an interview of Harold Wilson by the BBC that appears to have been halted after Wilson complained about the line of questioning being aske...
- published: 01 Oct 2012
- views: 1912
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author:
gm4jjj
Harold Wilson Speaks On Clothing (1948)
Unissued / Unused material. Harold Wilson, President of the Board of Trade, speaks on clothing rationing. London. CU Harold Wilson on roof of Board of Trade ...
wn.com/Harold Wilson Speaks On Clothing (1948)
Unissued / Unused material. Harold Wilson, President of the Board of Trade, speaks on clothing rationing. London. CU Harold Wilson on roof of Board of Trade ...
Harold Wilson (1916-1995)
James Harold Wilson, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, KG, OBE, FRS, PC (11th March 1916 - 24th May 1995) was a British Labour politician; one of the most prominent ...
wn.com/Harold Wilson (1916 1995)
James Harold Wilson, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, KG, OBE, FRS, PC (11th March 1916 - 24th May 1995) was a British Labour politician; one of the most prominent ...
UK General Election February 1974 - Harold Wilson Speech
Harold Wilson on the inconclusive results. Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heaths decision to call a snap election in February 1974 backfired. His plea to...
wn.com/UK General Election February 1974 Harold Wilson Speech
Harold Wilson on the inconclusive results. Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heaths decision to call a snap election in February 1974 backfired. His plea to...
The MI5 Plot: Dirty Tricks
Was British Prime Minister Harold Wilson the target of the Security Service's dirty tricks spying? ------------------ Video Endboard Links: - Operation Snow ...
wn.com/The Mi5 Plot Dirty Tricks
Was British Prime Minister Harold Wilson the target of the Security Service's dirty tricks spying? ------------------ Video Endboard Links: - Operation Snow ...
Harold Wilson to Margaret Thatcher
Labour in government (1964 to1970 - 'Swinging Sixties' ) with Harold Wilson as Prime Minister brought in the vote for 18 year olds, the legalisation of homos...
wn.com/Harold Wilson To Margaret Thatcher
Labour in government (1964 to1970 - 'Swinging Sixties' ) with Harold Wilson as Prime Minister brought in the vote for 18 year olds, the legalisation of homos...
SYND 18 2 75 HAROLD WILSON INTERVIEW ON TRADE AGREEMENT
Interview with British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson after signing a one thousand million pound trade agreement with USSR
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e30df2364ff73247564275bf12a38053
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Synd 18 2 75 Harold Wilson Interview On Trade Agreement
Interview with British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson after signing a one thousand million pound trade agreement with USSR
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/e30df2364ff73247564275bf12a38053
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 23 Jul 2015
- views: 0