Great Escape photograph

Great Escape

Use attributes for filter !
First episode dateMarch 30, 2019
Final episode dateJune 22, 2019
GenresHumour
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2281814
Send edit request

About Great Escape


David McCallum obituary: TV favourite from NCIS and The Man From U. N. C. L. E.

David McCallum obituary: TV favourite from NCIS and The Man From U. N. C. L. E.
Sep 26,2023 4:11 am

... He cut his teeth in 1950s British cinema and also found wider fame in the The Great Escape, Colditz and Sapphire & Steel...

David McCallum: NCIS and The Man from U. N. C. L. E actor dies aged 90

David McCallum: NCIS and The Man from U. N. C. L. E actor dies aged 90
Sep 25,2023 8:01 pm

... McCallum found roles in films including The Great Escape, The Greatest Story Ever Told, and A Night to Remember...

The ongoing legacy of 'Red Ken' Livingstone

The ongoing legacy of 'Red Ken' Livingstone
Sep 20,2023 10:21 am

... His voice - described as " nasal and boring" by Britpop band Blur s producer Stephen Street - was even included on Ernold Same, one of the tracks on the band s Parklife follow-up album The Great Escape...

Britpop: What prompted the end of the genre that gave us Blur and Pulp?

Britpop: What prompted the end of the genre that gave us Blur and Pulp?
Jul 15,2023 7:50 pm

... Oasis won with their blockbuster second album, What s The Story (Morning Glory), but the competition was just as worthy - Pulp s Different Class, Blur s The Great Escape, Paul Weller s Stanley Road and Radiohead s The Bends (Radiohead always sat slightly apart from Britpop, partly because they spent so much time touring in the US, their eyes on a much bigger prize than the British charts)...

Tortoise does a runner - a mile across busy town

Tortoise does a runner - a mile across busy town
Jun 21,2023 12:21 am

... During his two-day Great Escape last week, Tommy reached the other side of Selkirk...

How Jords became the first UK rap act on Motown records

How Jords became the first UK rap act on Motown records
May 26,2023 8:10 pm

... Motown approached the musician with an offer at last year s Great Escape festival, and he accepted in a heartbeat...

Great Escape prisoner Vyvyan Howard, dies aged 102

Great Escape prisoner Vyvyan Howard, dies aged 102
Sep 20,2022 12:00 pm

...A World War 2 pilot, who was a prisoner of war at the camp made famous by the film The Great Escape, has died aged 102...

Robot vacuum cleaner escapes from Cambridge Travelodge

Robot vacuum cleaner escapes from Cambridge Travelodge
Jan 22,2022 1:20 pm

... Staff at the hotel posted the story of the robot vacuum s Great Escape on social media, asking for it to be returned, if found...

The ongoing legacy of 'Red Ken' Livingstone

Apr 19,2020 12:44 am

By Bethan BellBBC News

Strong terms are used to describe " Red Ken" Livingstone. Figurehead. Thorn in the side. In The Words of a High Court judge, maker of " unnecessarily offensive" and " indefensible" remarks.

Trailblazer, newt-lover, antisemite - a description he always rejected. The Sun newspaper once described him as " The Most odious man in Britain".

Ken Livingstone always divides opinion.

Now , with The Announcement of his Alzheimer's disease, the 78-year-old's political career has definitively ended.

Bbc News takes a look at some of the more memorable points of his public (and private) life.

He became The First directly elected mayor of London, although his appointment wasn't without complication. A Labour Party politician, he was not picked by Tony Blair to be its selected candidate. Mr Livingstone declared he would stand as an Independent. He was kicked out of The Party and beat Labour's Frank Dobson .

The then-prime minister invited him back into the Labour fold In Time for a second stint as mayor.

Personal life

Kenneth Robert Livingstone was born at the tail-end of World War Two in South London , to an acrobatic dancer and a ship's master in the Merchant Navy .

He left school at 17 and started work as a Laboratory Technician . By his early 20s he was an active Labour Party member.

He had a child at the Age Of 57 with his long-term partner and later wife Emma Beal .

At The Time This Was thought to be his first child but in 2008 it emerged he already had three other children with another Two Women .

The Livingstones went on to have a Second Child in 2004.

His interests include reptiles and newts - Writing in The Guardian in 2010, he described skipping school and going to Streatham Common , hoping to catch some tadpoles. Instead, he found a Smooth Newt , which went home with him.

" My newt plunged into his new domain and slowly pranced backwards and forwards across the bottom. Mesmerised, I sat and stared at the exquisite detail of the colours and patterns in its tail, crest and the bright-orange spotted belly as it swam up to take another gulp of air. "

His political ascent had been Swift - within two years of joining the Labour Party in 1969, Mr Livingstone was elected as a councillor in his native Lambeth in South London in 1971 before joining the Greater London Council (GLC) in 1973, aged 27.

He took up a housing role in which he immediately kicked up a fuss about cuts to the GLC's house-building budget, and was sacked.

In 1981, Labour took control of The Council , and he was elected GLC Leader .

He always claimed his detractors contributed to making him a public figure.

" If [Margaret] Thatcher had just ignored us, " he suggested, " no-one would have ever heard of us. "

Darren Rodwell - Leader of Barking & Dagenham council - describes Mr Livingstone as a " leading light" in his own youth as he grew up in London.

" He was so Pivotal - as a young lad I'd Go On strikes and protests - he stood up against Margaret Thatcher for London.

" The GLC was disbanded because he wouldn't bow down. That's leadership.

" It's sad to hear about [his diagnosis], it's an awful illness. "

What is Alzheimer's disease?

Alzheimer's is a condition that affects The Brain and is The Most Common Cause of dementia.

Dementia can make it difficult to remember things. People might forget who Family Members are. They might Get Lost or they may forget what everyday objects are called.

It can make people behave in a way that they've never done before. They may become very upset, sad or Angry - and find it difficult to deal with these feelings.

Prof Tony Travers , local government expert at the London School of Economics, describes Mr Livingstone as " a powerful figure in London politics since the 1970s" both as part of the GLC and as The First mayor.

" He was ahead of his Time - a supporter of political change ahead of what would be seen as The Norm . "

Mr Livingstone's flagship mayoral policy was the introduction of the congestion charge in Central London , later extended to west London.

Prof Travers said: " He was into minority rights, The Environment , At The Time it was seen as extreme left-wingery - Now it's mainstream politics in many ways.

" To introduce the congestion charge in his first term as mayor in 2003 was a majorly brave thing to do.

" The National government had looked at road-pricing and backed off. So he faced a lot of Opposition - Now people see the congestion charge as not a political thing. "

Mr Livingstone revelled in being a bete noire to The Right , supporting everyone from striking miners to Sinn Fein 's leaders at The Height of The Ira 's bombing campaign.

He goaded Mrs Thatcher across the Thames in Parliament during the turbulent 1980s by displaying the unemployment figures on City Hall .

During his second term as mayor, Mr Livingstone won widespread praise for The Way he stood up for London after the July 2005 suicide bombings and he helped win the 2012 Olympic Games for the capital.

He also became embroiled in a series of disputes with sections of the capital's Jewish community, leading to allegations of antisemitism.

In 2006, a High Court judge said Mr Livingstone had made " unnecessarily offensive" and " indefensible" remarks likening a Jewish reporter to a Nazi concentration camp guard.

He was, however, cleared of bringing The Office of mayor into disrepute, a ruling he hailed as a " victory for democracy and common sense".

A decade later, he found himself at the centre of a new storm when he came to the defence of MP Naz Shah who had been suspended over offensive Social Media posts.

Mr Livingstone insisted that, while her remarks were " over the top" she was not antisemitic, and that he had never encountered antisemitism in 40 Years in the Labour Party .

His Time In office ended in 2008 when he was defeated by another maverick and colourful opponent, Boris Johnson .

Mr Livingstone's legacy spreads further than London.

His Voice - described as " nasal and boring" by Britpop band Blur's producer Stephen Street - was even included on Ernold Same, one of the tracks on The Band 's Parklife follow-up album The Great Escape .

The Politician is credited in the sleeve notes as " The Right -On" Ken Livingstone .

Just another way of describing a divisive man of strong opinions who, when it came to what he believed was right for London, has always refused to toe The Line .

Follow BBC London on, and. Send your story ideas to

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯