Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house


Watch
Sapphire (DVD,1959) At the beginning of the film a young woman is found murdered on Hampstead Heath. She is a music student and has a boyfriend who is training to be an architect. But it is not as simple as that; the woman, Sapphire, is of mixed race and in the search for her murder we go on a journey through the lives and experiences of black people in London in the 50s. Few films, even nowadays, show how racist some people can be, but in this film we hear and see the bigoted attitude to black people from the police investigating the murder, to the landladies of the places where she lived, and the family she was going to join. Interestingly the worst racism comes from the middle classes, because Sapphire hid her ethnicity, so when she did come out as mixed race, they were the most vicious. The film shows the reasons why she would choose to play “white” as the police go searching her killer in Notting Hill. We see the wretched housing conditions of the black community and the racist attacks they face on the street. Johnny Dankworth wrote and performed the music in the film and it gives it a really cool edge. Highly recommended. See clip

Find out about..the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership(TTIP) a trade agreement that locks this country into a nightmare of control by big business. At this meeting BBC film-maker and investigative journalist David Malone will outline in fascinating detail why these little discussed agreements could be so hugely important to the corporate take-over of everything. At the Friends Meeting House, 6 Mount Street, M2 5NS, at 7 pm, on Thursday 12 June. Organised by the Manchester Green Party. Further info see

Protest… at the cuts to the legal aid service…Save justice!… Save legal aid! Magna Carta Day protest in Manchester 16 June at 1pm. Meet outside the Magistrate’s Court (off Deansgate, behind John Rylands Library)
Activists from Access To Advice and Justice Alliance North will be outside the Magistrate’s Court with leaflets and Justice Alliance petitions. Further info see

Go to a meetingNo Fracking! No Nuclear! Demand a Cleaner
Greener Future
.Thursday 19th June at 7.30pm, St Michael’s Church, Liverpool Road, Eccles. speakers: Dr Ian Fairlie, Kate Hudson (CND) and a member of the anti fracking campaign group (Part of the Barton Moss anti-fracking organising/meeting hub). The meeting has been organised by GM&D CND, Northern Gas Gala, SERA and Glossop Peace Group.

Listen to…Victorian ballad singer Jennifer Reid at Clayton Hall in Clayton Hall Park on Saturday 21 June. On this open day they celebrate all things Victorian. Located in one of the poor areas of Manchester, the Hall has been taken over by volunteers who have refurbished the hall and park and regularly invite in local people and children to share their memories .Further info see

Visit…Gallery Oldham..and their exhibition of Modern Sculpture. Included in the exhibition are works by Elisabeth Frink, Jacob Epstein and Arthur Dooley as well as newer work in ceramic, leaf and knitted fabric. GO is one of the most interesting galleries in the northwest: it is easy to get to on the tram, has a lovely cafe and wonderful views across the Pennines. In these dark days of public sector cuts it needs our support. Further info see

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Building a Socialist Library (7) Occupational Hazards

Occupational Hazards, Occupying Hospitals; some inspirations and issues from our history
produced by past tense 2013

past tense are a group of anarchists who present history from below: this is just one of their thought provoking and important publications. It is a reminder of past struggles when 20 hospitals were threatened with closure between 1976 and 1994 and documents the response of staff and the local communities, which included work-ins or occupations. This pamphlet tells us what happened but also highlights the dilemmas of taking over a hospital.

occupational hazards

Recording the history of any struggle is difficult. My own experience reminds me of how important it is to collect leaflets, take photos and document what happens but the day-to-day reality of keeping a struggle going means that very often the priority is on the now and not the future and the lessons to be learnt. That is why this is an important book, as the authors (with no contract or financial backing) have produced, not just a history of important struggles, but also a history of how people did things. It poses the question : how useful is this history for those of us involved in present day struggles and campaigns?

One of the big differences today is the level of union activity in health service campaigns. In this book some of the actions were initiated by grassroots trade union militancy which is no longer the case today. In fact many active trade unionists fear victimisation either by the hospital management or by their own trade union bureaucracy. The case of Karen Reissman has had an effect in frightening off many other activists (although not all) in whistleblowing the actions of management in hospitals. Some hospitals, such as Tameside, where there have been public outcry about the way in which patients have been treated have no Unison branch machinery in the hospital and it has led to nurses appearing in disguise on local media reports to report the mismanagement of the hospital hierarchy.
karen reissmann

Occupational Hazards produces two in-depth accounts of the South London Women’s Hospital Occupation 1984-5 and the campaign against ward closures at the University College Hospital in 1992-4. These are fascinating accounts of the campaigns with wonderful pictures showing the broad nature of the people involved as well as their leaflets and photos and the media response.

The South London Women’s Hospital campaign involved occupying the hospital for 9 months! It was a campaign that was feminist and took an anti-cuts class struggle perspective; involved consensus decision-making; and used a variety of tactics from barricading the hospital to picketing and demonstrations.

The book is not just about London based campaigns . There is a short article about an occupation and work- in at Thornton View Hospital in Bradford Yorkshire in 1985 which lasted nearly 2 years! it was a long stay geriatric hospital and, after a year long campaign of letters, petitions and demonstrations which had failed, the workers started an occupation which was made official by the trade unions in the first week. The management were evicted and the occupation committee of nurses, domestics, porters, GPs and patients’ relatives ran the hospital. Eventually, as the number of patients declined, the management raided the hospital at midnight and ended the occupation.

In 2014 we are facing major cuts to the NHS and an unprecedented privatisation of the service. The response to this is positive as many groups and organisations are being set up to fight it. But the same questions remain; how do you fight cuts where the traditional methods of petitioning, lobbying end up with a nil response? Do we rely on another Labour government in 2015 to bring back what is gone; or should we learn the lessons of a more radical era as shown in this book?

Stockport NHS Watch

Stockport NHS Watch

Occupational Hazards ends with a reprint of a pamphlet by London Health Emergency in 1984 which is a guide for hospital workers on how and why to occupy hospitals to prevent their closure. This book is an important addition to the debate about how we campaign against privatisation in the NHS. It also compliments NHS/SOS, edited by Jacky Davis and Ray Tallis, which was published last year. NHS/SOS reflects the position of its authors ,who are part of the medical establishment, and take a different viewpoint in terms of fighting the cuts. They do provide essential information about how the Labour Government in 2009 started the privatisation process and what this means in an organisation that is highly complex and hierarchical. Their answer is to get involved in the many campaigns that have been set up over the last few years and the book provides a whole chapter giving readers vital information about groups to join.

Occupational Hazards is a really important book in that it shows how people can build campaigns to defend services, patients and workers in the NHS. It is inspiring (and sometimes depressing) but it suggests that in the end it may be that only by direct action that we are going to stop the unravelling of our Welfare State.

Greater Manchester KONP

Greater Manchester KONP


Buy it at
Further info about Greater Manchester KONP see

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

WatchJimmy’s Hall (Cornerhouse) Set in Ireland in 1932 the theme of the film is the end of the dream of a republican Ireland. Based on the real story of communist and republican Jimmy Gralton who fought against the British in the War of Independance and then fled Ireland in 1922 after persecution by the new reactionary Irish Free State government. He represents the Ireland of Patrick Pearse and James Connolly , a country run by socialists,  not by the Catholic church. When Jimmy returns in 1932 a new government, led by Eamon  DeValera, is supposed to bring in a new modern Ireland, but the reality is that the state is still dominated by the  church and the forces of the right. Watching it reminds me of Spain in 1936 and the way in which all ideas of personal freedom, free thought and action were crushed by Franco. Jimmy’s defeat reflect the defeat of a generation of Irish socialists and about how they had to live with it and carry into the future the dream of a united and free Ireland. For Jimmy it meant exile to America; for many other socialists it meant coming to Britain and building up the trade union and labour movement in this country and hoping one day that they could return to a socialist, united Ireland. Highly recommended.

Go seeA Land Fit for Heroes; War and the Working Class 1914-1918 at the Peoples History Museum 28 May 2014  – 1 Feb 2015. The establishment in this country are drowning us in reactionery images and programmes about the First World War. They will not tell us about the divisive nature of the war and in particular the movement against militarism and for peace. This exhibition provides a more complex picture than you are going to get through the media. They say; The museum’s current changing exhibition looks at why people supported the war (and those that didn’t), the role that women played in the war effort, how home life was radically changed, the influence the war had on politics and the labour movement and life after the war.

Go to a book launch The Book of Gaza with Atef Abu Saif and Abdallah Tayeh on Friday, June 6th, 2014, 7:00 pm. It is an anthology by ten Palestinian writers, each writer writing about a different part of the Gaza Strip. Atef is joined by one of the writers, Abdallah Tayeh. Further info see International Anthony Burgess Foundation where there are an interesting mix of cultural events, and, like this event, many are free.

Read...Mariner, Renegade and Castaway; Chris Braithwaite by Christian Hogsbjerg. Chris Braithwaite was born in 1885 in Barbados. He became a leading organiser of colonial seamen in inter-war Britain. As a black trade unionist and political activist his life has been marginalised in accounts of this period. Like Mancunian black activist Len Johnson he played an important role in his own community, representing black seamen and other minorities who faced racism,not just from shipowners and fellow seamen but also from their trade union. How he continued to stay active in politics given the forces against him makes this such a wonderful book. Otherwise its well worth buying and only £4!! Further info see

Find out about Venuzuela…not the World Cup but a documentary, Listen to Venezuela,  which  examines the effects of the revolution and of radical social change on a country. Made by Mike Wayne and Deirdre O’Neill. Further info see Free at the wonderful Moston Miners.

Posted in anti-cuts, art exhibition, book review, Catholicism, Communism, drama, education, feminism, films, human rights, interesting blog, Ireland, Irish second generation, Ken Loach, labour history, Manchester, Middle East, Palestine, trade unions, women, young people | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch..Flame on the Streets, a film made in 1961 and based on a play written by Ted Willis( ex-Communist Party) called Hot Summer Night. Set in London, and influenced by the Notting Hill Riots of 1958, the film takes on racism and sexual politics. John Mills plays Jacko Palmer, a local trade unionist, who, in a very realistic scene of a union meeting, challenges the racism of members who want to stop a black member getting promotion. At home things are not so straight forward as his wife, played by Brenda De Banzie, has had enough of playing second fiddle to the union. There is a brilliant scene where she finally stops playing the Stepford Wife and in no uncertain terms tells Jacko she will no longer be the his doormat. And if that is not enough his daughter wants to marry a black man. Horrified Jacko tries to persuade her not to because of the racism she will experience but Kathie (Sylvia Syms) stands by her man and represents the changes which are beginning to happen in British society at that time. It is a film really worth tracking down on DVD or watching this clip on Youtube. Highly recommended.

Join….Trafford Keep our NHS Public…Trafford was the birthplace of the NHS in 1948 and last year was the battleground of the campaign to save Trafford A&E. Unfortunately the battle was lost and patients now have to travel to the already overcrowded A&Es at Wythenshawe and Salford. Local campaigners are still continuing the fight to save local NHS services which are under threat of privatisation. Join their founding meeting on Wednesday 11 June 7.30pm at the Robin Hood pub in Stretford near the Arndale Centre.See

Go to…the Unofficial Histories Conference at Huddersfield University on 7/8 June. Do you think the people that make history should be more important than the academics who get paid to write it up? UH try to address that by inviting a mixture of individuals and groups to talk about their projects. I like the idea of having events that reflect the local area so we have a radical history walk in the town and the screening of a film called Sound System Culture which includes interviews with people involved in the local reggae scene. There is much more to see at

See Summer, Quarantine theatre’s new play, a collaboration with Contact Theatre. It is the first part of a quartet looking at the cycle of life. They say: an exciting collision of live choreography, developed with choreographer Caroline Dubois, and Quarantine’s signature style of excavating intimate and fragile humanity. Catch it on Thursday 5 June – Saturday 14 June and further details at

Experience...Bollywood Girls of Blackburn…homegrown musical produced by 3MT’s John and Gina and written by Nakib Narat. They say: A hugely entertaining Comedy Musical with nineteen original songs that will have you dancing home with delight. Further details see

Posted in anti-cuts, Communism, drama, education, feminism, films, human rights, labour history, Manchester, music, NHS, Socialist Feminism, trade unions, Uncategorized, women | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch.. Blood In The Mobile screened this week by the Manchester Film Co-operative. The film was made by Frank Poulsen, Winner of Berlin’s Cinema for Peace Award for Justice in 2011. The north west has had a Congolese community for many years and at their demos they have raised the issue of the connection between mobile phones and the civil war in their country.
Director Frank Poulsen travels to Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to see the illegal mining industry with his own eyes. He gets access to Congo’s largest tin-mine, which is being controlled by different armed groups, and where children work for days in narrow mine tunnels to dig out the minerals that end up in our phones.
Most of the minerals used to produce cell phones are coming from the mines in DR Congo. The Western World is buying these “conflict minerals” and thereby financing a civil war that, according to human rights organisations, has been the bloodiest conflict since World War II. During the last 15 years the conflict has cost the lives of more than 5 million people and 300,000 women have been raped. The war will continue as long as armed groups can finance their warfare by selling minerals. Blood in Mobile is a film about our personal responsibility and corporate social responsibility for the conflict in the Congo.

Go and seeWrong’un, a one woman play about the campaign for the vote. I saw it last year at the Lowry and it is excellent. Set in 1918 at the point when Parliament is about to pass legislation to give some women the vote. Ella Harris plays Annie Wilde, a Lancashire mill-girl who becomes a suffragette. We learn about her life and her adventures from schoolroom to prison cell. See this clip on youtube at
Further details see

ReadEllen Wilkinson From Red Suffragist to Government Minister by Paula Bartley. Watch Paula give a talk about Ellen but skip the cringing introduction by a Labour MP showing how far they have departed from the ideals of Ellen and her generation see. Read my review of the book at Highly recommended.


Join in
….a discussion with writer John Fay on how television presents history on 24 May at 2.30pm at Three Minute Theatre. John Fay is the creator and chief scriptwriter of the Channel Four series The Mill. Based on real events at Styal Mill in the 1830s, the first series aired in 2013 and showed the struggle for better working conditions and the Ten Hour Day. The second series, set in the 1840s at the time of the Chartists, will air this autumn. In addition to the Mill John’s work on television over the last 20 years has included Blue Murder, Brookside, Coronation Street, Clocking Off, Primeval and Torchwood. Further details at

Go to..a new play Angel Meadow. Angel Meadow,located off Rochdale Road, was a large predominantly Irish community from the mid-19th Century onwards. The renamed and rebranded Library Theatre Company as Home have brought in Irish theatre company ANU to create this new production set in Ancoats. It starts on 10 June and they say;
Immerse yourself in an adrenaline-fuelled encounter, exhuming an area of Manchester that no longer exists. Angel Meadow, once a steaming, sordid hell on earth at the centre of the industrial world; populated by red eyed scuttling gangs, girl rippers and the displaced Irish. Here lost strangers sought solace, sex and the divine. You and I will be the strangers.
– See more at

Listen to…local author Johanna Winard as she discusses her new book Ruby’s War on 24 May at the Harris Museum in Preston. Contact 0300 1236703 for more details. Read my review at

Posted in anti-cuts, book review, Communism, drama, education, feminism, films, human rights, Ireland, labour history, Manchester, political women, Salford, trade unions, TV drama, Uncategorized, women, young people | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

WatchTracks (AMC)..based on the book by self taught explorer Robyn Davidson who in 1977 set off across the Australian desert with a dog and four camels. It was a walk of 1,700 miles. Robyn was, and is, particularly interested in nomadic people, and in the film we see her wonderful relationship with Aborigine people who instinctively understand her connection with the earth and animals. She is helped by them and one elder in particular, Mr.Eddie, to find water sources on the journey across the Ngaanyatjarra lands. What makes the film fascinating is the story of Robyn and her need to escape people and reconnect with the land. It is also one of the few films where women explorers feature as a main character and not an adjunct to men. Strangely the film has been picked up by a mainstream cinema chain and because of the wonderful scenes of the desert it is great seeing it on a big screen.

See…more films at the Last Cage Down mini-film festival at the WCML this week. My favourite is The Last Strike on Tuesday 13 May, 7pm. During the 1984-5 strike one of the strongest local campaigns was at the Bold Colliery in St. Helens, not just the miners and their families but many people, particularly from Manchester, supported the campaign. Many people were arrested during the strike including the local Labour MEP Les Huckfield. Those were the days!! A French film crew made this film and Dave Douglas, who will be speaking at the film, said it was one of the best made about the strike. The film focusses on the solidarity of the strike and the role of the women. Further details at

Find out about.
..how television presents history. John Fay is the creator and chief scriptwriter of the Channel Four series The Mill. Based on real events at Styal Mill in the 1830s, the first series aired in 2013 and showed the struggle for better working conditions, trade unionism and the Ten Hour Day. The second series, set in the 1840s at the time of the Chartists, will air this autumn. In addition to The Mill, John’s work on television over the last 20 years has included Blue Murder, Brookside, Coronation Street, Clocking Off, Primeval and Torchwood.

Join him in a discussion A Writer Looks at History Saturday 24 May, 2.30pm. Free.Three Minute Theatre, Afflecks Arcade, 35-39 Oldham Street Manchester M1 1JG
This meeting has been organised by the Mary Quaile Club which organises regular discussions in Greater Manchester on history and politics from a left perspective.
More information see
Read my interview with John at

Read...Undercover The True Story of Britain’s Secret Police by Rob Evans and Paul Lewis. We live in a democratic society – or do we? Anyone who has been active in any form of politics knows that the police monitor political activity and it is at it most obvious at demonstrations. But this book shows that the surveillance has gone much deeper in the creation of special police units that seek to infiltrate organisations with police going undercover for years, creating false identities and even having children with women activists. It is a fascinating if very uncomfortable read. Buy it at

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch.. Ilo Ilo,(Cornerhouse) a film set in 1997 in Singapore. The Lim family employ a Filipino maid, Teresa, to look after their son, and whilst the family (and society generally) are obsessed with money she provides their son with much needed love and attention. The film is set in a period when the financial crisis has hit the country and this is reflected in the growing fears of unemployment and poverty. At one point a neighbour commits suicide while the father loses his job but feels unable to be honest with his wife and son. It is the maid who observes the real life going on, inside and outside the family, and whilst she is sympathetic to their concerns none of them show any interest in the fact she has had to leave her country and earn money to send home to look after her young son. Highly recommended.

Read….Mrs Woolf and the Servants, written by Alison Light…a fascinating and sometimes hilarious account of why it is not so good to have servants. This is much more than the story of one woman’s domestic battles, it is the hidden history of domestic service in this country. Many poor girls and young women were sent to work as servants from an early age, 11 years old, many women were forced into servantdom because they had no other choices, although a few did better themselves through the process and gained an education and skills. Alison’s book is well written and an insight into the way in which society has changed, particularly for working class women. Buy it from

Celebrate May Day…on the march A BETTER FUTURE FOR OUR COMMUNITIEs..organised by the local trade unions to oppose the austerity agenda. It starts in Salford, where else, which has been at the heart of opposition to cuts in public services and opposition to fracking. Further details see

Join the campaign… to get rid of BNP Nick Griffin at the Euro elections. A meeting organised by NUJ Manchester and Salford at 7pm, Tuesday May 6th, Friends’ Meeting House, 6 Mount Street, Manchester M2 5NS. Speakers from the NUJ, Nick Griffin Must Go campaign, Unite Against Fascism. Along with other trade unions, the NUJ is committed to opposing the fascist BNP which currently has an elected North West Member of the European Parliament. Further info see

Go seeThe Bubbler by Cathy Crabb…one of the best plays written as a response to the riots of 2011 Neil Bell is mesmerising as embittered Cash Generator boss Peter, with his opinionated battle of wills with easy-going everyman bartender, Paul, fought out over the morals and motives of absent regular, Tony Rabonni – a kind and creative soul who, much to Peter’s disgust, appears to be an all-round great guy. One of the best plays I have seen for a longtime and its great it is getting out to all these venues around the North West. Unmissable.
Further details see

RememberConscientious Objectors from the First World War; A Different Kind of Hero. CND have organised an event with the No Glory Campaign, local historians who seek to challenge the dominant myths of the First World War. Join them to celebrate their stories and their significance to our region. Bring poems and songs on May 15th 5pm – 6pm on Fennell Street, between the Cathedral and the river – a potential site for the new Peace Gardens. Take part in the preparations at Nexus Café on Dale Street, behind and underneath Methodist Central Hall, on May 14th 5.15pm – 6.30 pm. Craft skills and stories of COs needed. Please text them if you want to be part of this activity on 07796078310

Posted in anti-cuts, book review, drama, feminism, films, human rights, labour history, Manchester, May Day, novels, peace campaigns, political women, Salford, trade unions, Uncategorized, women, young people | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Building a Socialist Library (6) Hunger March by Dot Allan

IMG_3273

Is it 2014 or we are going back to the 1930s? Instead of mean testing we have the bedroom tax, two weeks ago Labour joined the ConDem government in voting for a cap on benefits which really means a cut, and this week unemployed people are going to be forced into working for nothing.

Dot Allan’s(1892-1964) book, Hunger March was written in the 1930s, set in Scotland, more than likely in her home town of Glasgow. Scotland had one of the most vibrant unemployment movements, led by Harry McShane, the veteran communist. He led the National Unemployment Workers’ Movement in a march from Glasgow to Edinburgh in 1933. When the marchers reached Edinburgh they camped out for 3 days and it became known as the Scottish Hunger March.

Dot obviously observed this march and chose it as her subject for this novel. The events all take place in one day as the hunger marchers descend on the city.

Dramatically the book opens with;
“It was one of those days when you felt God had forgotten the city.”

There are lots of religious references but don’t let this put you off a well written and compassionate novel. What makes it insightful is the way in which Dot uses her characters to reflect on the political situation.

From Arthur Joyce the wealthy industrialist who decides to close his business to Mrs Humphrey, his cleaner, who is concerned about her unemployed son who goes on the march. Even Nimrod (maybe McShane) the march leader, is included in the drama, saying to Jimmy, the journalist; “The whole system offends me. It stinks because of the corruption it is founded on.

In the Palatial cafe one of the waitresses, Fanny, who knew what it was to try and live on the dole, felt sympathy for the marchers:
She was visited by a wild desire to throw open the window, to call out to those below to hold out their hands and catch….She would have liked to strip the tables for their benefit, to snatch the mutton pies, the fried fish from under the noses of the smug eaters.

Central to the novel is the story of Joe, an unemployed young man who lives with his mother. She can get work as a cleaner at the houses and offices of the rich. It rings so true for 2014 as we have more than 440,000 young people, many of them young men, who are experiencing long-term unemployment.

On the march Joe looks up at the offices of Joyce and Son where his mother works. “Would she still be there, he wondered, bent double on her knees, scouring and scrubbing? “I’ll lay, he said to himself with a queer little flick of pride, “she works harder than any of them. And she doesn’t ride in her motor car to her work either!”.

Another young man, Jimmy, a reporter, is cynical about the march and decides to take part to find out what is going on. As the march is attacked by the police he falls to the ground.

“An underdog literally for the first time in his life he saw things from the under-dog’s point of view. He saw despair like a current whorled river, enveloping the people until, buffeted and exhausted, their sense of perspective ran mad.”

Hunger March is an important book for today because in it Dot shows how we are all affected by the position of the most vulnerable people in society. In the 30s there was a vibrant unemployment movement led by the Communist Party but sadly today, with similar high levels of unemployment and poverty, we have yet to see any organisation appear that truly represents the position of the poor in society and has in its leadership the likes of Harry McShane and women such as Maude Brown and Lily Webb.

Makeshift and Hunger March: Two Novels by Dot Allan were reprinted in 2010 buy them at

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch...We are the Best (Cornerhouse) punk music, in this country is associated with high levels of youth unemployment, a hatred of the establishment and the creation of an alternative culture so what can a film set in 1982 in socialist Sweden have to say about the genre? It is more about a gentle rebellion by three teenage girls rather than any challenge to the state or status quo. One of the young women, Bobo, is neglected by her divorced parents and it is through her friendship with Klara and Hedwig that she finds a sense of belonging and a new life through being part of a punk band. Strangely it is more the fact that they cut their hair short that seems to cause an outcry with their families and school. Not what I expected of progressive Sweden in the 80s! Nothing outrageous happens in the film, it is a sweet story of friendship between young women and the music is very much a backdrop to this.

Join in. Workers’ Memorial Day Tuesday 28 April. A day to “remember the dead; fight for the living” when trade unionists meet up with support groups to remember all those people who have been killed at work and campaign to stop it happening again. In Manchester there is a rally at 11.30 at Albert Square. Speakers: Trade Unionists, Teresa Griffin MEP candidate, Families Against Corporate Killers, GM Asbestos Victims Support Group, young workers. A minutes silence, laying of wreaths. and a short play: Demented deregulatory daleks defeated by collective action! Shout out for safety: Then a walk to People’s History Museum for Meeting at 12.45 ‘Standing up for Health and Safety H&S in UK and EU’ Speakers include regional TUC secretary Lynn Collins and Teresa Griffin. There is also an Exhibition at the People’s History Museum “2young2die@work”. Further info see

Look at…an exhibition by Italian artist Paola Bazz at the Cornerhouse. I love the way she recycles magazines to create 3D collages which are attractive and complex depending from where you view them. She says; “I am now looking to explore further the dimension and the power of printed paper, along with issues like the conflict of opposites and of “chaos”. Love it! Further info about Paola see

Remember……Tony Benn on 1st May 2014..at a May Day Peace Picnic in Heaton Park at the Peace tree near the Nursery from 530-730pm. Greater Manchester CND have organised it and they say; “Please join us and, in true Tony Benn style, bring a folding chair, veggie butty box and flask of tea – pipes optional. We will be sharing our memories of Tony so please bring yours with you and, if you’d like, share them with everyone. There will also be readings from his life, poetry and a song or two.”

Take action against….UKIP and the BNP..Hope not Hate have a day of action in Tameside and Oldham on Sunday 4 May starting at 11am. They are distributing a newspaper challenging the myths about immigration and race and showing the real, more positive attitude that does exist between communities. Further details….see

Go to a playBrassed Off..was one of my favourite films and the Bolton Octagon are putting on a production next month based on the original story and the 1996 film. I remember going to the film at the Manchester Odeon and at the end the audience, which included ex-miners and their families, stood up and clapped. It is a fantastic story, reminding us of how important music is, particularly during difficult times in our lives but the main character Danny (played by the wonderful Pete Postlethwaite ) puts it into context; “The truth is, I thought it mattered – I thought that music mattered. But does it? Bollocks! Not compared to how people matter.” 
Danny, Brassed Off Further details see

Listen to… some rich folk music of eastern Europe on She’Koyokh‘s new CD “Wild Goats & Unmarried Women”. A truly international band with members from UK, USA, Greece, Serbia and Turkey they play an exciting mixture of klezmer and jazz music. Watch them at

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Stop,Look,Listen…my weekly selection of favourite films, books and events to get you out of the house

Watch...Shelagh Delaney’s Salford in this film made in 1960 by Ken Russell. She was only 22 and is incredibly confident and articulate. The film shows her love of Salford and its people and a glimpse of what life was like in the northwest at that time. This year she is going to be honoured by Salford Council (!!) and in November there are going to be a series of events to celebrate her life. There is also a new biography of her called Sweetly Sings Delaney: A Study of Shelagh Delaney’s Work 1958-68 by John Harding.
see

Go see….a free screening of the Song of the Shirt, at the Tate in Liverpool on 29 April, based on a poem by Thomas Hood this film was made in the 70s by radical filmmakers. Made in black and white it is about the seamstresses who worked in the clothing industry in the east end of London in the 1840s. It comments on women, sexuality, politics, music, early photography and fashion. See
One of the filmmakers, Sue Clayton, will be there and is also showing her latest gallery interpretation of the film’s themes and putting it into a contemporary setting. Have a look at

Join in …a discussion about what kind of press we want at the Friends Meeting House on 29 April from 730pm. Speakers include local seeker of truth, Stephen Kingston, of the Salford Star and Granville Williams of the Campaign for Press Freedom. Granville will be speaking about his new book; Settling Scores; the Media, the Police and the Miners’ Strike. He is founder member of the Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign. Further details see

Lobby Bolton’s CCG board meeting on Friday 2 May at 12. The campaign has got lots of support from the public but they need people to show the CCG that they are not prepared to allow them to decimate the service. Further info see

Go to a show….which links Karl Marx and vampires!! Burjesta Theatre have a new show called the Reign of the Vampires. They say; “In the 19th century Karl Marx used the vampire as a metaphor for the capitalist class he saw around him. We’ve taken his idea and applied it to the 21st century, thrown in a bit of ‘Blade’, a sprinkling of Jason Bourne and a great soundtrack of music to get your feet tapping and your hips swaying”. Further details see

See…some new plays at Studio Salford. From April to June there is an interesting mix of plays including comedies and dramas. On 5&6 May there is the opportunity to see some new plays including the fascinating When the Rich Wage War, It’s The Poor Who Die…can’t wait! Further info see

Listen to...feminist historian Jill Liddington discussing her new book, Vanishing for the Vote…at the Pankhurst Centre on 20 May. The book is readable, contains new information about the suffragette movement in 1911, and for me is an inspiration in my own politics. Highly recommended. Further info see

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