Tony Britten

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Tony Britten

Tony Britten

@CapriolFilms

Music, Arts and Drama - Independent film production. 'Through Lotte's Lens' available on DVD now - https://t.co/S2aVQc7sed Tweets from director Tony Britten

Norfolk Katılım Eylül 2012
295 Takip Edilen471 Takipçiler
Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
I had the honour to work with him once, at the National Theatre, writing and performing music for a children’s story he wrote. He was utterly charming, gentle and genuinely thrilled with the performances of Julia Mackenzie, Imelda Staunton et al. A unique and iconic star.
Steven Isserlis@StevenIsserlis

Beloved, wonderful Eric Morecambe b otd 100 years ago! So grateful for the joy he gave us. "I have a memory like an elephant. In fact, elephants often consult me." "I always take my wife morning tea in my pajamas, but is she grateful? No, she says she'd rather have it in a cup."

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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
Wouldn’t it be a bitter irony if Burnham loses Makerfield to Reform and Labour also hands them the Manchester Mayorship? Yes, with any luck Farage will be forced to resign soon - assuming Parliament finds the balls to properly confront him, but the damage will have been done.
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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
& people still read his rotten paper! Still, at least he’s consistent. His grandfather was even more right wing - openly supported Hitler and British Fascists and called for Jewish immigration to cease. But I think he paid UK taxes, which is more than the present Viscount does!
BladeoftheSun@BladeoftheS

This is Lord Rothermere the owner of the Daily Mail. He lives in a massive mansion in the English countryside, but he pays no tax here because he identifies as French. While the Daily Mail is registered in Bermuda and pays no tax anywhere. That is his ‘Patriotism’.

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صوت الحق
صوت الحق@AlqadmAlthar·
سفير إسرائيل لدى الدنمارك يحتج على انتشار هذا الفيديو دعونا نجعل هذا ينتشر في جميع أنحاء العالم
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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
Couldn’t agree more. I tweeted about this last night and my tweet seems to have disappeared. Which is worrying. Who do these newby nobody backbenchers think they are?
David Williams@dr72w_david

What a spineless, snivelling disgrace of a man you are @Jonathan_Hinder. Starmer was elected as PM for a five year term, and you knifed him in the front on Newsnight this evening. These events will bring about a Racist Reform UK government and you helped bring it about #Labour

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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
And you are? Listen, @ToniaAntoniazzi here’s a bit of advice from a Labour supporter who is tired of seeing its backbenchers fight like rats in sacks. Do the bloody job we pay you to do and stop destroying the bloke who got you that job. Could you do the PM’s job? No? Thought not
Tonia Antoniazzi@ToniaAntoniazzi

Sir Keir Starmer is a man of great integrity who has led the Labour Party through difficult times. There will be those that disagree with me but I think it is genuinely time for him to step aside as PM in an orderly manner. I will make a further statement tomorrow.

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Clare Hepworth OBE
Clare Hepworth OBE@Hepworthclare·
The media are loving it. The Henry Zeffmans,Chris Masons, Kuenssbergs, Pestons,Ridges,Rigbys - are in their element. All of them feeding off the angst of a group of disconsolate MPs. By weakening the PM - Govt is weakened - when Govt is weakened the country is weakened,
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Alan Lester
Alan Lester@aljhlester·
I’ve never before been as worried about the BBC’s news reporting. The last government’s efforts to capture it are bearing fruit. It’s intent on discrediting any Labour government, be it Starmer’s or a successor’s. The refusal to investigate Farage’s £5m is otherwise inexplicable.
Peter Jukes@peterjukes

There’s something rotten in the state of the BBC’s political reporting. And unless it’s fixed soon, they will bring the catastrophe of Trump to the UK.

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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
Thoughts for @Keir_Starmer fire your Home Secretary, make it clear that all rebel MPs will stay on the back benches. Then screw Farage-if necessary employ covert means to expose his grift and force his resignation. & employ top digital marketers, if necessary by offering peerages
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Cal Cowen
Cal Cowen@calculus52·
Hey @BBCNews , got a story for you! About 11 reform new councillors have stepped down or been expelled already! It will cost a lot to elect new ones. How about running that as a story, just for a smidgen of impartiality?
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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
@Jonathan_Hinder on Newsnight is making my blood boil. He got his job because of Keir Starmer. His stupid disloyalty will NOT serve his constituents. He is now talking about the end of the Labour Party. I’m a lifelong supporter, but if this person is representative, then I’m out
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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
It’s official. The PLP has too many cretinous, self serving, useless members. And the UK is crammed with similarly unhinged voters. There’s no one who can realistically replace Sir Keir Starmer. And the UK press, particularly the right wing zealots at the BBC is equally culpable
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Samuel West 💙💛
Samuel West 💙💛@exitthelemming·
Pennington once described doing the full eight over a weekend in Hull, emerging around 11pm on the Sunday evening and going for a curry. My kind of acting. RIP to a great servant of the theatre
Samuel West 💙💛 tweet media
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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
Sad to hear that Michael Pennington has died. He was a fine actor- I was privileged to engage him to give his Chekhov show many years back for the Holt Festival and remember very clearly the warmth and detail in his evocation. One of the best one person shows I’ve ever seen. RIP
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Tony Britten
Tony Britten@CapriolFilms·
I don’t respect @labourlewis for his carping and undermining of his own party. And he fails to mention that Finland’s population is a tenth of ours. I’m also unconvinced about Andy Burnham’s abilities- he’s already tried and failed twice to be PM. But this is really worth reading
Clive Lewis MP@labourlewis

Westminster may finally be about to have the argument it has spent 40 years avoiding. If Andy Burnham returns to Parliament, the political class will know how to cover it. A leadership drama. Who is up, who is down, whether Keir Starmer can survive, whether Labour is once again turning inward. The familiar machinery of Westminster psychodrama will whirr into life. That framing misses the larger point. Burnham’s possible return matters not because of what it says about Labour’s leadership, but because of what it reveals about the British state: what it can still do, what it has forgotten how to do, and what kind of country it must become if it is serious about resilience. Britain is finally having a more serious conversation about national security. The Strategic Defence Review, the pivot back towards Europe, the recognition that hybrid warfare turns citizens, infrastructure and civic institutions into part of the front line: all of it marks a real shift in how the state thinks about its own survival. But at the centre of that conversation lies a question that the defence establishment, and most of Westminster, still does not want to answer. What kind of society do you need to be before resilience is possible? Finland is now the model everyone cites. Comprehensive security. Whole-of-society defence. Civilian preparedness woven into military planning. British strategists admire the Finnish system and ask how it might be copied. But the admiration stops short of the uncomfortable question: why does it work there? The answer is not geography or history or some mysterious quality of Finnish national character. It is structural. Nearly 80% of Finns say they would defend their country if attacked. In Britain, the figure is closer to 33%. That gap is not an accident. It exists because Finland has spent decades building a society in which people have a genuine stake in what they are being asked to defend. Energy is affordable. Housing is available. Public services function. Institutions command trust. The Nordic welfare state is not a sentimental add-on to Finnish security policy. It is the foundation of it. You cannot ask people to defend a country that does not work for them. Britain has spent 40 years building the opposite. The privatisation of essentials – energy, water, transport, housing – transferred wealth upwards from households to shareholders while making the basics of everyday life more expensive. The state, stripped of the tools to control costs at source, has been reduced to compensating after the fact. Out of every pound the Government spends on housing, 88p goes to subsidising private rents. Just 12p goes to building homes. When energy prices spiked in 2022, the Government spent £40bn in a single winter cushioning the blow, not because it had a resilient energy system but because it lacked one. Debt interest now consumes more than £100bn a year. Britain has the highest debt servicing costs in the G7: the compounding price of financing failure rather than eliminating it at source. This is what bond market dependency actually looks like. It is not an abstract fiscal condition. It is the consequence of a state that has been stripped of the supply-side tools that would let it cure the problems it now pays, indefinitely, to manage. And here is the paradox the Treasury refuses to confront. The countries that borrow most cheaply are often those that have retained the public investment model Britain abandoned. The spread between UK and Dutch borrowing costs has widened sharply not because markets fear public investment, but because they have lost confidence in a model that borrows to subsidise private failure while never addressing its causes. This is the connection Britain’s defence debate is missing. The familiar framing, that social spending is what must be sacrificed to meet the NATO target, is not merely politically toxic. It is strategically illiterate. Cutting the foundations of social cohesion to fund the hardware of national defence is self-defeating. You end up with planes and no pilots, submarines and no crew, an army that cannot recruit because the society it is meant to protect has stopped believing in itself. I think Burnham understands this. That is why his programme is more interesting than the leadership gossip suggests. What he has been building in Greater Manchester – public control of transport, expanded social housing, investment in the productive foundations of the city economy – is not a nostalgic rerun of postwar nationalisation. It is a proof of concept for a different kind of state. The Bee Network is the most visible example, but the argument behind it travels. A state that can shape markets is not condemned to subsidise their failures. A state that produces affordable energy through public generation does not need to spend tens of billions cushioning every price shock. A state with a serious public housebuilding programme does not need housing benefit to rise endlessly in line with private rents. A state that builds institutions people can see, use and trust begins to restore the civic confidence on which resilience depends. The real constraint on Britain is not money. It is capacity: the workers, institutions, supply chains and public purpose needed to turn national will into national renewal. Britain’s tragedy is not that it has run out of money. It is that after 40 years of hollowing out the state, it has made itself less able to act. Burnham’s critics will reach for the familiar warning. Borrow more, spend more, spook the gilt markets, repeat the Truss disaster. But this misunderstands both the problem and the opportunity. Bond markets do not have ideological preferences. They have functional ones. They prefer clarity, credible revenue streams, productive investment, and a state with a plan. What they punish is not public ambition but incoherence. A properly designed productive state programme would not be a leap into fiscal fantasy. It would be an attempt to end the much costlier fantasy that Britain can keep borrowing to compensate for broken markets while refusing to repair them. The defence conversation and the economic conversation need to become the same conversation. Finland did not build national resilience by choosing between welfare and security. It built resilience by understanding that they are inseparable: that a country in which the basics work, where people trust one another and the institutions around them, is one that can face danger with something more than anxiety. That is the deeper argument Burnham represents. Westminster will be tempted to treat him as a leadership story. It should resist the temptation. The question is not whether Burnham can return to parliament. It is whether Britain can return to the idea that the state should make life work. Because a country that cannot command the confidence of its people cannot truly defend itself.

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