Brian and Maggie is a dramatisation of Margaret ... encounter, Thatcher and Walden never spoke again, yet her position as leader continued to be under fire. In November 1990, Michael Heseltine ...
A sale of items belonging to Margaret Thatcher reveals her sense of humour ... a helicopter hovers outside with the caption: "Little Michael is much like his father - lost!" ...
Brian and Maggie true story: Inside the real-life fallout between Margaret Thatcher and Brian Walden
Brian and Maggie is a recreation of Margaret ... the pair never spoke again and Thatcher continued to have her leadership challenged. In November 1990, Michael Heseltine called her out again ...
In one scene, Walter’s Thatcher tells Coogan’s Walden: “One day, someone will come for me,” to which he replies: “I reckon there’s no one you wouldn’t be able to see off, Margaret.” ...
John Swinney has attacked Margaret Thatcher as he sets out his vision for ending child poverty today. The First Minister said there is "nothing without society" in a swipe at the former Tory Prime ...
Harriet Walter is Margaret Thatcher in upcoming Channel 4 two-parter Brian and Maggie. Trailer can be viewed above of the buzzy series from James Graham and Stephen Frears. Starring the Succession ...
Steve Coogan has sparked fears that a new Margaret Thatcher drama will be a woke whitewash after he admitted editing out a scene that was sympathetic to Britain’s first female prime minister.
Coogan dives into a surprising "political love story" between former Labour MP Brian Walden and Margaret Thatcher, played by Dame Harriet Walter. The drama, penned by Sherwood creator James Graham ...
In a defiant response to her critics, the Chancellor said she was happy for her ‘steely’ methods to be compared to those of former Tory prime minister Margaret Thatcher, who was known as the ...
Channel 4's latest drama takes inspiration from the infamous interview between Brian Walden and Margaret Thatcher. Brian and Maggie follows the story surrounding Thatcher's last-ever TV interview ...
By Rachel Cooke Champagne! Monetarism! It’s 1989, and at a party to celebrate Margaret Thatcher’s long decade in power, the action is on two levels. While the prime minister stands at the top of a ...
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