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Sean Bean lauds Jeremy Corbyn for standing up for working-class people | Sean Bean lauds Jeremy Corbyn for standing up for working-class people |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The actor Sean Bean has lent his backing to Jeremy Corbyn, saying the Labour leader talks sense. | The actor Sean Bean has lent his backing to Jeremy Corbyn, saying the Labour leader talks sense. |
The Game of Thrones and Sharpe star described himself as an old Labour supporter and lauded Corbyn as a leader who stands up for working-class people and whose voice needed to be heard in Britain. | The Game of Thrones and Sharpe star described himself as an old Labour supporter and lauded Corbyn as a leader who stands up for working-class people and whose voice needed to be heard in Britain. |
Bean was careful, however, to point out that that did not mean he supported a return to the widespread industrial conflict that marked much of UK politics in the 1980s. | Bean was careful, however, to point out that that did not mean he supported a return to the widespread industrial conflict that marked much of UK politics in the 1980s. |
Speaking to reporters, he described his upbringing in Sheffield, which he called a firmly socialist city. And he said modern British cultural output was ignoring working-class stories. | Speaking to reporters, he described his upbringing in Sheffield, which he called a firmly socialist city. And he said modern British cultural output was ignoring working-class stories. |
He said American viewers have driven demand for a picture of Britain that was “rosy (and) upper-class”, adding that “real stories about working people aren’t getting told”. | He said American viewers have driven demand for a picture of Britain that was “rosy (and) upper-class”, adding that “real stories about working people aren’t getting told”. |
“This Is England was great – and you remember Gary Oldman doing The Firm? Magnificent. Jimmy McGovern – I love his writing, and I’m a big fan of him and Alan Clarke. That’s my personal choice, and that’s what I’m good at. But it’s a make-believe view of England that our friends across the pond seem to prefer.” | “This Is England was great – and you remember Gary Oldman doing The Firm? Magnificent. Jimmy McGovern – I love his writing, and I’m a big fan of him and Alan Clarke. That’s my personal choice, and that’s what I’m good at. But it’s a make-believe view of England that our friends across the pond seem to prefer.” |
He made the comments, which were reported by the Radio Times, at a press conference for his new series, the Frankenstein Chronicles. “There’s a lot about this story that resonates today. From the social issues to the cover-ups. It all sounds familiar and nothing’s changed,” he said. | He made the comments, which were reported by the Radio Times, at a press conference for his new series, the Frankenstein Chronicles. “There’s a lot about this story that resonates today. From the social issues to the cover-ups. It all sounds familiar and nothing’s changed,” he said. |
Bean says his character in Frankenstein Chronicles, Inspector John Marlott, is “an ordinary man who has been thrown into that elite world and who challenges these people”. | Bean says his character in Frankenstein Chronicles, Inspector John Marlott, is “an ordinary man who has been thrown into that elite world and who challenges these people”. |
And, in the real world, he says, Corbyn is “sticking up for the working-class man and it’s time we heard that voice again”. | And, in the real world, he says, Corbyn is “sticking up for the working-class man and it’s time we heard that voice again”. |
In the six-part ITV drama, Bean plays a Peeler – the forerunner to today’s police force – in 19th-century London. He discovers a body washed up from the Thames that he finds is, similar to Frankenstein’s monster, stitched together from human body parts. | In the six-part ITV drama, Bean plays a Peeler – the forerunner to today’s police force – in 19th-century London. He discovers a body washed up from the Thames that he finds is, similar to Frankenstein’s monster, stitched together from human body parts. |
Echoing Sky’s Penny Dreadful, it tinkers with gothic literary themes and storylines. The first episode is due to air on 11 November. |
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