Private Lives
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | December 12, 1931 |
---|---|
Directors | Sidney Franklin |
Adapted from | Private Lives |
Producers | Irving Thalberg |
Screenplay | Noël Coward |
Hanns Kräly | |
Richard Schayer | |
Claudine West | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2326100 |
About Private Lives
A once married couple return to a French hotel with their respective new spouses only to rediscover their old love.
Judge taken to hospital after family court assault
... They decide cases involving families most Private Lives, ruling on where children should live and what degree of contact parents should have...
Blackpink star Jisoo announces break up with actor Ahn Bo-hyun
... K-pop stars rarely reveal much about their Private Lives, and their announcement shocked fans...
Blackpink: Jisoo's new relationship rocks K-pop world
...By Fan WangBBC News Blackpink s Jisoo has become one of the highest-profile K-pop stars to go public with her relationship, in a highly pressurised industry with notoriously fickle fans and record companies that monitor every aspect of their stars Private Lives...
Prince Harry: I couldn't trust anybody due to phone hacking
... Prince Harry said journalists were " desperate for anything royal" and " any element of our Private Lives is interesting to the public"...
David Tennant to play Macbeth to mark Donmar's 30th birthday
... " Tennant has previously played the role in an audio adaptation of the play, The actor is also set to appear in Doctor Who later this year, reprising his former role as the Doctor for three special episodes, Macbeth will mark the conclusion of the 30th birthday season of the Donmar, a prestigious theatre in London s Covent Garden, which is is currently staging Noël Coward s Private Lives...
Covid: Staff propped up care homes without extra pay, says report
... Staff here gave up their Private Lives to keep residents safe as the pandemic took hold...
Russia: Putin's Kremlin targets LGBT in new crackdown
... He dismisses accusations that the law is discriminatory, saying people s Private Lives will be respected...
Benjamin Mendy acquitted but 'will never escape the accusations'
... What people may suspect some footballers get up to in their Private Lives has, in Mendy s case at least, been revealed over the course of a four-month trial...
Covid: Staff propped up care homes without extra pay, says report
By Judith Burns; Alison Holt and James MelleyBBC News Social Affairs
Many care home staff worked extra hours without extra pay to prop up The System during the pandemic, a study suggests.
Public money helped stabilise UK care homes during the First Wave of Covid-19 but it was withdrawn too soon and not focused on staff, says, led by Warwick Business School .
While many homes struggled financially, some larger companies were able to pay more to shareholders, the study found.
Ministers are discussing reforms to adult social care across the UK.
The researchers studied the accounts of More Than 4,000 UK care home companies, from just before the pandemic and during The First year of the health crisis.
They found nearly Two Thirds (60%) of care homes were already financially fragile as the pandemic took hold.
The Report , co-written with University College London and the Centre for Health and The Public Interest Think Tank , accuses the government of failing to plan for " highly predictable" damage to the sector's financial viability during a pandemic.
An extra £2. 1bn of public money pumped into the sector at The Peak of the pandemic helped many care homes avoid financial collapse, but not all of it reached The Front lines and most of the payments ended in 2022, say the authors.
The impact on staff varied:
In The First year of the pandemic, 122 larger, for-profit, care home companies were able to pay shareholders 11% more in dividends than the previous year, the research found.
Living at workThe majority of care home companies are small, like The One operating St Brelade's in Herne Bay , Kent.
Staff here gave up their Private Lives to keep residents safe as the pandemic took hold.
" I lived here for three weeks, " says Nicola Helman. " Then I was in every single day after that, for another four weeks".
Nicola also went to great lengths, when off-duty, to avoid picking up Covid, stressing she " didn't communicate with anybody, didn't pass anybody or anything like that".
St Brelade's owner, Larry Berkowitz, worked hard to support staff and residents.
He says the government subsidy helped ease financial pressures during The First year of the pandemic, but things became far tougher once it was withdrawn.
" Inflation really kicked in. Everything had become much more expensive. . so now you had less revenue, less subsidy and high expenses. "
Locally, at least three care homes have closed since 2020, he adds.
The Report concludes: " The decision by government to end financial support for care home companies after The Peak of the pandemic had passed has likely contributed to the current financial and operational difficulties experienced by the sector. "
It states the financial plight of many staff and the immense pressure they were under " means it is not surprising the care home sector has struggled to both recruit and retain staff once lockdown restrictions were removed and the wider economy re-opened".
The Department of Health and Social care responded that it is supporting social care in England with up to £7. 5bn over two years, and its were published last week.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com