- published: 15 Apr 2013
- views: 1251
Glenda May Jackson, CBE (born 9 May 1936) is a British actress and Labour Party politician. She first became a Member of Parliament (MP) in 1992, and represented Hampstead and Kilburn until 2015.
As a professional actress from the late 1950s, she spent four years as a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company from 1964, being particularly associated with the work of director Peter Brook. During her film career, she won two Academy Awards for Best Actress: for Women in Love (1970) and A Touch of Class (1973). Other award-winning performances include Alex in the film Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971) and the BBC television serial Elizabeth R (also 1971); for the latter she received an Emmy.
From 1992 to 2010, Jackson was the MP for Hampstead and Highgate, and early in the government of Tony Blair served as a Junior Transport minister from 1997 to 1999, later becoming critical of Blair. After constituency boundary changes for the 2010 general election, her majority of 42 votes was one of the closest results of the entire election. She announced in 2011 that she would stand down as an MP at the 2015 general election.
Actress turned politician, Glenda Jackson rips into the late Baroness Thatcher, criticising her policies,her achievements and even her womanhood....
Glenda Jackson is the Oscar winning actress who became a Labour politician: now after a quarter of a century away, she’s returned to the stage at the age of 80. Her performance in the title role of King Lear has had such rave reviews – there’s talk of her taking it to Broadway next year Subscribe to us and get more videos from Channel 4 News https://www.youtube.com/c/channel4news
Glenda Jackson Prophecy about the 2016 presidential election and President Obama staying in the White House. CONFUSED?? MUST READ THIS BELOW: https://z3news.com/w/presidential-politics-producing-prophetic-perplexities/ Video Link: https://youtu.be/DjG0f8VflE4
'I was much further out than you thought. And not waving but drowning.' Jackson gives a tour de force performance as tragic poet Stevie Smith. This film was released in the U.K. in 1978, but didn't get distribution in the U.S. until 1981. Jackson was ineligible for the Oscar because of the delayed release, so the New York Film Critics gave their best actress award to Glenda beating out Faye Dunaway for Mommie Dearest by two votes. If the film had been released in 1978 as it should have been, Dunaway would have won the New York Critics award which could have led to an Oscar Nom for Faye and created a completely different alternate reality for her. Interesting.
Glenda Jackson Prophecy Imminent Events that will effect the 2016 Presidential Election, Martial Law, America's Economy, growing food, spending time in God's presence, and not being caught off guard. CONFUSED?? MUST READ THIS: https://z3news.com/w/presidential-politics-producing-prophetic-perplexities/ Check out other videos. Here are some links: https://youtu.be/DjG0f8VflE4 https://youtu.be/lVQL4wPm59U
Glenda Jackson prophecy 2017 URGENT PRAYER ALERT
Published on May 13, 2016 Praise Jesus this is the full prophecy of Glenda Jackson from her work entitled "Knowing the Voice of God". This work appears on my porch as a gift the second week of January 2015 while I was fervently praying to the Lord to help me understand the truth about what is coming prior to the rapture. Praise His name thank you JESUS the HARVEST will be FULL of amazing power, protection and supernatural provision given to God's holy and righteous saints who fear and love HIM. - Johnny Baptist (Tribulation-Now Radio)
"I'm burning your baby!' Glenda Jackson is a revelation as the cruel and merciless manipulator , Hedda, but she does it with such malicious glee that you can't help but root for her and then be devastated for her when the trap she sets for others becomes her own prison. One of the hardest films to find for some reason - it was nominated for Best Actress , so you'd think it would be more available.
The Ken Russell movie from the late 1960s.
Film by Pamela Robertson-Pearce & Anselm Spoerri. Narrated by Glenda Jackson "Nobody gives you freedom, you have to take it." IMAGO Meret Oppenheim is an award-winning film about the major Swiss artist Meret Oppenheim, whose fame rests on the surrealist masterpiece, the Furlined Teacup. This feature-length documentary creates a moving portrait of this inspiring woman through a poetic presentation of the themes that dominated her life and art. Beautifully narrated by Glenda Jackson, a two-time Academy Award-winner, the film explores her creative crisis & transformation, Paris of the Surrealists, Jungian psychology, Nature, feminism, the playful and the androgyne. A film about a woman, who was able to transform herself after a long crisis. A meditative film about her, without her, th...
filme de Z2 PRODUÇÕES | cerimonial GLENDA SOLIMAN | bufft e decoração PERSONALIS DECORAÇÃO E EVENTOS | fotos ALINE PALAORO | cabelo e maquiagem EDER SILVA HAIR STUDIO | vestido ATELIE MARIA DAS DORES DUARTE | traje noivo CENTER NOIVAS | dj EVERTON FRITZEN | bolo CLAUDIA PIERRI BOLOS ARTISTICOS
From IMDB (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0102066/) "A domineering,reclusive, and ostentatiously pious widow in a small Spanish town keeps such close watch on her daughters that they are unable to have normal social lives. However, the eldest is allowed to become engaged to an unprincipled young man, primarily for the financial advantages it will bring the mother, Bernarda. Jealousy and envy ensues among the other daughters." Also see Wikipedia for details of the original Spanish play on which this English teleplay is faithfully based: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_House_Of_Bernarda_Alba Director: Stuart Burge Writer: Federico García Lorca (play) Stars: Glenda Jackson, Joan Plowright, Patricia Hayes
Selection of leading ladies from a century of motion pictures (from the 1910s to the 2010s.) Titles, in era-appropriate typeface, include decade(s) during which each cinema queen reigned. Music: 'She's A Lady' by Tom Jones. Edited in Final Cut Pro 7. Several notable takeaways, i.e., starting with Ann-Margret, several of the ladies break the fourth wall, ushering in the new wave––and Catherine Deneuve has had the most longevity as a leading lady. [This is only a selection from the many who've graced our movie screens in the span of 100 years.] 0:01 Louise Brooks 0:03 Lillian Gish 0:07 Mary Pickford 0:10 Clara Bow 0:13 Greta Garbo 0:16 Marlene Dietrich 0:19 Joan Crawford 0:21 Barbara Stanwyck 0:23 Myrna Loy 0:25 Jean Harlow 0:27 Carole Lombard 0:30 Bette Davis 0:32 Claudette Colbert 0:34 ...
WHITEHEAD'S EARLY 60s Dir. by Peter Whitehead, 1965-1967. 104min., UK FRIDAY JUNE 8TH – 7:45PM SATURDAY JUNE 30TH – 10PM Three short films highlighting Peter Whitehead's experimental and documentary work in the early 1960s. JEANETTE COCHRANE Dir. by Peter Whitehead, 1967 6 min., UK An experimental Whitehead short not seen since the year of production. Featuring music by Pink Floyd. WHOLLY COMMUNION Dir. by Peter Whitehead, 1965 33 min., UK This is the only footage of the 1965 Poetry Olympics held at the Albert Hall which turned out to be the catalyst for bringing the hippie counter-culture into being in the UK. Some 5,000 or so freaks, beatniks, hippies and social outcasts of all persuasions turned up en masse, looked at each other, and realized that they were not alone. From this grew...
Shot and Edited by Theo Dora Johnson and Monica Watkins Produced by Cecelia Watkins Hair/Make-Up Kathleen Pammit Styling by Nim & Monica Watkins Special thanks to Redcat Jazz Cafe, Tonya Watkins, Angela McGee, Robert Hatter, Glenda Jackson, Zach Benjamin , Lillie Nguyen, and Jackie Griffin evelynrubio.com ©2014 Evelyn Rubio
This is a behind the scenes film made by ATV of the 1969 movie Women in Love, directed by Ken Russell and starring Alan Bates, Oliver Reed, Glenda Jackson and Jennie Linden. Women In Love, produced and adapted by Larry Kramer from D.H Lawrence’s classic novel of the same name was nominated for four Oscars for Kramer’s screenplay adaptation, Ken Russell’s direction and Billy Williams’ cinematography with Glenda Jackson winning Best Actress in a Leading Role for her portrayal of Gudron. This black and white ATV report of the film on location in Derby, which was broadcast on 18th November 1968, begins with a high angle shot of the cast and crew at Derby Arboretum where around 100 background artists are gathered to film a war memorial scene. This scene appears approximately 25 minutes int...
Shot and Edited by Theo Dora Johnson and Monica Watkins Produced by Cecelia Watkins Hair/Make-Up Kathleen Pammit Styling by Nim & Monica Watkins Special thanks to Redcat Jazz Cafe, Tonya Watkins, Angela McGee, Robert Hatter, Glenda Jackson, Zach Benjamin , Lillie Nguyen, and Jackie Griffin evelynrubio.com ©2014 Evelyn Rubio
Glenda Jackson is the Oscar winning actress who became a Labour politician: now after a quarter of a century away, she’s returned to the stage at the age of 80. Her performance in the title role of King Lear has had such rave reviews – there’s talk of her taking it to Broadway next year Subscribe to us and get more videos from Channel 4 News https://www.youtube.com/c/channel4news
After the successes with the Barry Humphries and Mel Brooks interviews Mark Caldwell and myself wanted to get some UK actors on video. As will happen, many things came about at the same time in 1976. The closure of the first studio (seen in the tour video), a total move of location and creation of a new larger studio and the securing of Glenda Jackson for an interview. The interview agreement happened right at the time when we had no studio at all. We tried to get access to the ILEA studio where we interviewed people like Terry-Thomas and Dirk Bogarde, but this was fully booked. So, I suggested to Mark that we ask one of our major equipment suppliers for help. They had a 'showcase' studio in central London that was sitting there and was available. We made a trade-off for not paying for ...
A Q&A; with Glenda Jackson at Deptford cinema after the screening of 'Sunday Bloody Sunday'.
Graham Norton is joined by Glenda Jackson and Jackie Stallone. Part 1 Produced by So TV. I do not own or claim anything. Aired: 12/03/1999
British Legends of Stage and Screen Available on DVD from OEG here: http://www.odeonent.co.uk In the 1950s Britain emerged from the gloom of its post-war austerity and enjoyed an explosion of new, acting talent that was unique to this period of social upheaval. Gaining their experience through an established network of repertory theatres, RADA and the new National Theatre established by Sir Laurence Olivier at the Old Vic, many of those who would go on to become acting legends experienced their first exposure on stage and screen as part of the British Free Cinema movement. Now available in its entirety on DVD, this critically acclaimed television series features intimate, Face to Face interviews with the generation who redefined the experience of theatre, cinema and television for the ...
Double Oscar Winning Snub by Glenda Jackson (Now a British Member of Parliament). She won best actress at the Oscars in 1971 and 1974 and didn't turn up to collect it at either event.
Published on May 13, 2016 Praise Jesus this is the full prophecy of Glenda Jackson from her work entitled "Knowing the Voice of God". This work appears on my porch as a gift the second week of January 2015 while I was fervently praying to the Lord to help me understand the truth about what is coming prior to the rapture. Praise His name thank you JESUS the HARVEST will be FULL of amazing power, protection and supernatural provision given to God's holy and righteous saints who fear and love HIM. - Johnny Baptist (Tribulation-Now Radio)
Order "Signs and Wonders" & "Knowing the Voice of God" - http://bit.ly/ZDaOI0 This week on Sid Roth's It's Supernatural, Jesus told young Glenda Jackson she’d be a prophet like Samuel in her latter days. She went on to minister like her great aunt Maria Woodworth-Etter for 33 years. Then the Lord began to speak. SUBSCRIBE - http://bit.ly/10jKQtv DONATE - http://bit.ly/13T2aYr Facebook - http://facebook.com/its.sup... Join Our Mentoring Club! - http://bit.ly/1vhN1Gy FREE Newsletter! - http://bit.ly/1wM6IvM
Oscar-winning actress Glenda Jackson backs our campaign to save Deptford Cinema. Interview by Celestina Olulode from BBC London. Credit to Mark Bear for recording.