- 4 months ago
Outrageous Season 1 Episode 6- Point of No Return - FULL
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00:00My father had many excellent qualities. He had a distinguished war record. He did his
00:18duty in the House of Lords. He was a fair and considerate landowner. But sadly, he was
00:24not skilled in the more modern art of money management. Which was why he was
00:33currently obliged to let out the entire Mitford estate to the McKinnons and move
00:38the family temporarily back into our small London flat.
00:54In fact, he had completely exhausted all his options. Except one.
01:03I move to the bank. Little did the rest of us know that the entire family fortune was
01:09hanging in the balance.
01:21Meanwhile, back at my house, I was contemplating the state of my marriage.
01:28Look, Nance, about last night, it's absolutely not what you think. I mean Mary and me, it's
01:42not a fling, you know, a sordid, casual affair. No. We love each other. There's no point in
01:55fudging these things after all. It's best to be totally honest.
02:00So, what? You, you, you, you want a divorce?
02:05Oh god, no. No, it doesn't change how I feel about us. You're my wife. There's certainly no need for
02:12all our names to be dragged through the divorce courts. These things happen. It's just life, isn't it?
02:26At this point, of course, I was the only one of my sisters who was happily married.
02:31And much to my mother's despair, all my unmarried sisters were besotted with highly unsuitable men.
02:38Diana with Moseley, who was relentlessly campaigning for the fascist cause.
02:45Bobo with Hitler, who favoured her as an increasingly close companion.
02:49Decker with her valiant communist, Esmond, whom she still hadn't actually met as he was out fighting
02:58in the Spanish Civil War. And, of course, Debo with Derek.
03:04Goodbye. See you later.
03:05Debo, you have to be back before six.
03:07Yes, yes, I know.
03:07The only one poor Muv could rely on was dear, sensible Pam.
03:20Don't worry, Muv. I'll make sure she behaves herself.
03:22Oh, thank you, darling. Thank you, Pam.
03:29She's definitely got a bigger head.
03:30What are you talking about, Stubby?
03:32She's got a big email, Stubby.
03:44Gosh, is that the time? I've got to go.
03:46Where are you going?
03:47I'm meeting Potty for tea. At the V&A.
03:50I told you. Remember?
03:53No.
04:02Well, of course, I'd like to get out there myself and join my brother in the fight.
04:28It's not that simple. There's a lot of hoops to jump through. A lot.
04:33Such as?
04:35Well, first you need a Spanish visa, and you can't get one here, so you have to go to Paris.
04:40And then you can only get one if you know the right people.
04:43That would take at least two weeks to come through, so you need somewhere to stay in Paris.
04:47Unless, of course, you're prepared to sleep on the streets like Esmond did.
04:51I have some money saved up.
04:52Well, on top of that, you're going to need kit, boots, a coat, a pack.
04:58I mean, could you run from here with a pack on your back across a muddy field as far as,
05:05say, clarages under machine gun fire?
05:09Well, I mean...
05:10See, this is it. People don't think it through.
05:13They think it'll be an adventure, a good story to tell at parties.
05:17But look, the chaps that actually get there, like my brother, they're not normal chaps.
05:24He's got no sense of his own safety. It's just everything for the communist cause.
05:28Do you know what your chances are of ever coming back from Spain?
05:33It's less than 50% and dropping...
05:35Look, I absolutely do know the risks, and I'm not going for adventure.
05:41I'm going because I want to fight fascism, because it's growing fast all over Europe.
05:47And I want to do something about it, something practical, something real,
05:51not just sit in cafes talking about it.
05:54Because all it takes for evil to triumph is for good men and women to do nothing.
06:01And that's why I want to go.
06:04So, let's start at the beginning, shall we?
06:08I need to get a visa in Paris. Do you know anyone that could help me do that?
06:14My sweet, sweet boy
06:25My sugar can
06:30My sweet, sweet baby
06:36So, is your husband still misbehaving?
06:39Mm. He's totally unrepentant.
06:42Doesn't seem to think he's done anything wrong at all.
06:45Ah, I can just imagine it.
06:47So, what now?
06:49Well, three options. Divorce, negotiate, or just put up and shut up.
06:58Isn't life wonderful?
07:00Right. A question. Do you still love him?
07:05What's the definition of a love, anyway?
07:07God, we don't have time for that.
07:09Look, the important thing is not to let his behaviour dictate your happiness, darling.
07:17Because now you finally see him as he really is, which means he can't hurt you anymore, can he?
07:27When did you get to be so wise?
07:29Oh, well, other people's problems are so much easier to solve than one's own.
07:33I'm heartbroken twice a week.
07:37Now, sorry, much more important than all this. What are you doing tomorrow?
07:42Oh, I have a stupid work deadline. I'm writing an in-depth piece on the pleasures of a point-to-point.
07:50I mean, I've been putting it off all week. Why?
07:53I just thought you might want to join me on the protest march against Mosley.
07:56Oh, no, is it tomorrow?
07:58Oh, damn. Damn, damn. I'm so sorry.
08:02It's all right.
08:02No, no, it's not. It's utterly hopeless of me.
08:05Can't be helped. Girl must earn her crust.
08:08Shame, though. A whole bunch of us going from here. You'll be missed.
08:11I can feel it, you know. This is your breakthrough moment.
08:32You've done so well in the North and the Midlands.
08:34But today, you are finally going to win over the people of London.
08:40Where's your speech?
08:41It's in here. Leaders don't need little scraps of paper.
08:46Excellent. Now, I'll be in Berlin by seven and at the hotel by eight.
08:52You will call me then and tell me all about it, won't you?
08:55I'm going to see you in person tomorrow night.
08:57Yes. You will call me tonight anyway.
09:02All right.
09:15I love you.
09:27See you in Berlin.
09:36This is the BBC.
09:57At the British Union of Fascists rally in London today,
10:00around 5,000 Blackshears gathered to march through the streets of the East End.
10:04But their way was blocked by an estimated 100,000 protesters.
10:08Jews, communists and anti-fascist protesters joined together in Cable Street,
10:13where they created barricades across the road chanting,
10:16They shall not pass.
10:18But as the police tried to clear the way for the Blackshirts march,
10:21they were met with strong resistance from the protesters and violence quickly erupted.
10:26Mounted officers charged their horses into the crowd
10:28and the demonstrators fought back with whatever makeshift weapons they could find.
10:32Sir Oswald Mosley, leader of the fascists, was finally ordered by police to abandon his parade,
10:38in order to prevent further breaches of the peace and possible loss of life.
10:42In response to those who declared this a humiliating failure for the Blackshirts,
10:47Mosley said he would never give up the fight.
10:50Up to 100 people have been taken to Whitechapel Hospital with serious injuries,
10:55with scores more receiving first aid at the scene,
10:58in what has been described as the bloodiest political fight London has ever witnessed.
11:03It is already being called the Battle of Cable Street.
11:07I need some help please!
11:09Can I get some help please?
11:13I'm so sorry.
11:14I'm so sorry.
11:27Excuse me, I'm sorry.
11:28I'm so sorry.
11:30Nancy?
11:31Josh?
11:34Oh God!
11:36What have they done to get all the animals?
11:38It was the police!
11:39What?
11:40Yeah, they're protecting the fascists!
11:41Oh God!
11:42They, they think this arm is broken and uh, maybe some ribs...
11:45Stand aside!
11:47I'll, I'll wait here for you.
11:49Or I'll find you!
11:50Okay!
11:51Oh!
11:51Oh!
12:11Gosh!
12:13Oh Nadi, this is gorgeous.
12:16Perfect!
12:18Really beautiful.
12:19Tune me up.
12:25Does seem unfair that you've had two lovely wedding days though.
12:29Two dresses, two cakes, two husbands.
12:34They shan't have any.
12:35Don't say that.
12:36Of course you will.
12:37You're still young.
12:38I won't.
12:39Because he will never marry.
12:41He told me.
12:42Not even that shop girl.
12:45And they say that years ago he was in love with a young niece of his.
12:49But she shot herself.
12:51He was heartbroken.
12:54Now he says he's married to Germany.
12:58And that no woman can take precedence over his country.
13:01Isn't it wonderful?
13:03Very noble.
13:03I never thought I could ever be this happy.
13:07Did you?
13:07When we were growing up?
13:09No, I didn't.
13:12And today is truly the happiest day of my life.
13:15Thank you so much for helping me arrange at all, Bobo.
13:19Of course, I do wish the others could be here, but...
13:24There he is!
13:26The Fuhrer!
13:30Well then.
13:32It's time.
13:32Time.
14:16Well, what a revolting display.
14:39What?
14:40You and your sister.
14:41Hanging on his every word.
14:43Grinning and giggling at every banal comment that he made.
14:48What on earth are you talking about?
14:49We didn't...
14:49He doesn't give a damn about you!
14:52Either of you!
14:53He just wants to see how high he can make you jump.
14:56God, he makes you look foolish.
14:58And cheap, frankly.
15:00Are you trying to ruin this day for me?
15:04And who is he, anyway?
15:06He's just an ignorant little jumped-up corporal from nowhere.
15:11He's got no manners.
15:14No courtesy.
15:15No respect.
15:18Is this because he left early?
15:20That means nothing.
15:21Obviously, he's busy running a country.
15:23If he thinks because of Cable Street that I'm finished, then he's got another thing coming.
15:28One defeat, it's nothing.
15:30One defeat.
15:31He's had scores of them!
15:34And yet you treat him like he's a god.
15:40That's disgusting.
15:41Look, I am not playing games here.
15:49Hitler is an important ally to us, and he deserves respect for everything he has achieved.
15:58But today, I married a man who has more real intellect and vision than Hitler.
16:08Hitler, all Mussolini put together.
16:13And you have no idea how much I've given up to be with you.
16:18So don't you dare doubt my faith in you.
16:38Of course, I had absolutely no idea about Diana's secret wedding to Moseley.
16:49Still preoccupied with my husband's affair, and my best friend in hospital after Cable Street,
16:54I failed to notice all the dramas unfolding in my family.
17:01Including the dilemma facing my poor father.
17:04The bank had made it clear to him that the only way of saving his beloved family estate was to borrow money.
17:14But to a man of his generation and upbringing, this would have been the deepest disgrace.
17:24So when he received an invitation to tea in his own house, he was obliged to accept.
17:31He was obliged to accept.
17:53Ah, McKenna.
17:55Lord Reedsdale, come in.
18:01It's Derek.
18:07Has he come to collect you again in that awful contraption of his?
18:14He's with Pam.
18:15You know, I think it's about time he introduced himself properly to me now.
18:19Well, he's coming up.
18:21Love!
18:29Pamela.
18:30I'd like you to meet Derek Jackson.
18:33Lady Readsdale.
18:34A very great pleasure to meet you at last.
18:36Yes, pleasure to meet you too.
18:42What's... what's going on?
18:44There's something we'd like to tell you all.
18:49Derek?
18:51Pamela has, today, agreed to be my wife.
18:54And we're going to be married in the next few weeks.
18:56Married?
18:57Uh...
18:58Married?
18:59Oh, Christ!
19:00Stubbs!
19:01Stubbs!
19:02Ring the bell!
19:03Stubbs!
19:04Oh my gosh!
19:05Stubbs!
19:06You'll be alright, Stubbs.
19:07Wake up!
19:08Stubbs!
19:09Hey!
19:10Come on now!
19:11Stubbs, you're here.
19:12Don't worry, Stubbs.
19:15I just find it extraordinary that he announced it as a fait accompli.
19:18I mean, he didn't even have the politesse of asking to speak to you.
19:23Doesn't exactly endear us to him, does it?
19:25We know nothing about him other than he's been married already.
19:29Oh, and the divorce has just come through this month, which means, of course, there's no chance of having a church wedding.
19:36And I think of two weddings in a year, and one so secret that we weren't even invited to it, and now this rushed affair out of the blue.
19:46And both with men who seem rather full of themselves.
19:53David, are you listening to me?
19:55Hmm?
19:56Yes, weddings and so forth.
19:59Darling, what is it?
20:02I, um...
20:07I went down to Swinbrook today.
20:10Oh, really? He didn't say. Why?
20:13And MacKinnon said he had, uh...
20:16He had a proposal for me.
20:18And?
20:21He's, um...
20:23He's offered a big lump of money.
20:26For the... for the house and land.
20:29He wants to buy it, the estate.
20:30Yeah.
20:31The whole kit and caboodle.
20:33Well, I hope you told him on no account would we sell.
20:37Hmm.
20:38David, that land has been in your family for centuries.
20:43Hmm. Yeah.
20:45He offered, uh...
20:4730,000 pounds.
20:50Cash.
20:52Hmm?
20:53Gosh.
20:55Yes, that's...
20:57Rather my thought.
21:00Wh-wh-what did you say?
21:05I told him I would discuss it with my wife.
21:10Is it news from Paris about the visa?
21:11No, no. It's nothing like that. Um...
21:12It's Esmond.
21:13He's back.
21:14He's been invalided out of Spain.
21:15Dysentery.
21:16Oh, God!
21:17Yeah.
21:18Yeah.
21:19Yeah.
21:20Yeah.
21:21It's nice.
21:22Oh, God.
21:23Yeah.
21:24Yeah.
21:25Is it news from Paris about the visa?
21:35No, no, it's nothing like that.
21:38It's Esmond.
21:39He's back.
21:41He's been invalided out of Spain.
21:43Dysentery.
21:44Oh, God.
21:45Back here?
21:46He's in a military hospital somewhere up north.
21:49Is he going to be all right?
21:51Yes, it looks like it.
21:52The thing is, he won't come back to the parents' house.
21:55He's too bloody proud for that.
21:57So he's going to stay with our cousin in Havering while he's recuperating.
22:00Havering?
22:01Is that cousin Dorothy?
22:03Yes.
22:04Is she your cousin too?
22:05I think she may be my mother's.
22:08Excuse me.
22:09Could you tell him I'd love to meet him when he feels better?
22:12Yes, of course.
22:13What can I get for you, love?
22:14Can I get the haddock in milk, please?
22:17Yes.
22:18And a tea.
22:18Okay.
22:25Tom.
22:26Tom.
22:27Tom.
22:28Hello.
22:29Excuse me.
22:30I'm from Berlin already.
22:49Did it all go off well?
22:52Yes.
22:53Yes, thank you.
22:55Good.
22:56I did wish you could have been there, though.
22:58Oh, that's all right.
22:59Quite understand.
23:00But I missed you all terribly.
23:03Marvin Favre, the girls, even...
23:06Nancy?
23:07Hmm.
23:08Nothing quite like a wedding, to remind one how important family is.
23:12Hmm.
23:12I mean, I know Moseley's not to everyone's taste.
23:18But it made me realise I don't want to lose any of you lot on account of him.
23:24Especially not Nancy, after everything we've been through.
23:29Good.
23:30I'm very pleased to hear it.
23:32I should be delighted if you two could bury the hatchet.
23:37Now, would you like me to sound her out?
23:40Tom, I'd be so grateful.
23:41Leave it with me.
23:43I'll pick my moment.
23:45So, how's married life the second time around?
23:49Well, as we can't tell anyone or even live together, it's much the same as single life.
23:54But I do have this...
23:56to remind me.
23:59And what's that on your hand?
24:02Yes, he gave me that as an engagement ring.
24:04And I thought, well, why not?
24:06Let people wander to their hearts content who I might be engaged to.
24:10Who cares?
24:11But, in fact, nobody's noticed it at all.
24:15But, I think I do have a choice.
24:21No, it's not for me.
24:23Yeah.
24:24Oh, no.
24:25I'm so...
24:26The King and Mrs. Simpson.
24:56Oh, no, no, no, no, no. This is dreadful.
25:00What? What is it?
25:03Yes, I told you, it's been all over the foreign press.
25:06She's been divorced two times, which means if she marries him,
25:09she'll have three living husbands.
25:11I just don't know what he's thinking.
25:13I think he should be allowed to marry whoever he likes.
25:16As long as he loves her, who cares?
25:18Who cares? I care.
25:20The con...
25:22The country cares, darling.
25:25The royal family are precisely there to set an example.
25:28The whole point is that they put their duty to this country
25:31before anything else.
25:33When I think of those hundreds and thousands of poor men
25:36who gave their lives for this country in the war,
25:39your uncle's a kid.
25:42One small sacrifice.
25:44Mav?
25:46Yes, darling, I'm sorry.
25:48It's cousin Dorothy in Havering.
25:50Dorothy?
25:51It's an invitation to a weekend house party.
25:54I haven't seen her for years.
25:55That's incredibly kind and thoughtful of her.
25:57I mean, you're not going to refuse like you usually do, are you?
26:01It'll be good for you to go out and meet new people.
26:03What?
26:04No.
26:05No, I think...
26:06I think I'll go, actually.
26:08Really, darling?
26:09Well done.
26:10You see, she's a terribly hard-looking type of woman.
26:16The poor Queen Mother must be at her wit's end.
26:20Which way do you think he'll jump?
26:25Duty or love?
26:26Head or heart?
26:29He'll just keep her as his mistress, won't he?
26:31Following a time-honored tradition of British monarchs.
26:34Head, I reckon.
26:35No, no, no.
26:36He's looking for a way out of the whole royal shebang.
26:39He'll definitely marry her.
26:41Heart.
26:42Well, of course you'd vote for marriage, woman.
26:45You'll set for your own event?
26:47It's not going to be an event.
26:49It's just in, out, sign the papers, jump on a plane.
26:53Surely you'll buy a dress, though.
26:54No.
26:55Really?
26:56Why not?
26:57Because I hate those stupid dresses.
26:59Oh, charming.
27:00I mean, I didn't mean yours.
27:02Obviously, it was lovely.
27:04But no dress.
27:06I remember you saying he was the rudest man you'd ever met.
27:09Oh, he absolutely is.
27:12But he's also the most...
27:14Exhilarating.
27:16To exhilaration.
27:18And, er, now to our real purpose.
27:30Yes.
27:31Will you go first, or shall I?
27:33What?
27:34I'll start.
27:35You do back up.
27:36What?
27:37Well, it's, er, it's you and Diana.
27:43She misses you.
27:45She really does.
27:47Time to forgive and forget, aunts.
27:50Can't you just put politics aside?
27:54Remember how close you two used to be?
28:01For the sake of the family.
28:03For the poor old parents.
28:04At long last, I am able to say a few words of my own.
28:20You all know the reasons which have impelled me to renounce the throne.
28:29But I want you to understand that, in making up my mind, I did not forget the country or the empire, which, as Prince of Wales and lately as King, I have the
28:49I have, for 25 years, tried to serve.
28:54But I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge my duties as King without the help and support of the woman I love.
29:12And I want you to know...
29:16Off to bed, you two. Come along.
29:17Mum, I wanted to leave.
29:18At once, please.
29:19I want to speak to your father.
29:21Come on, Stubbs.
29:25Good night.
29:26Good night.
29:27Sell it.
29:40Hmm?
29:41The house.
29:42There's no point hanging on to it and getting deeper into debt.
29:46The world is changing.
29:49And we have to adapt, sink or swim.
29:52You sure?
29:53Yeah.
29:54I mean...
29:55It's only bricks and mortar, isn't it?
30:09Hmm?
30:10What matters is us.
30:14The family.
30:16There.
30:17Oh, it's so good to have the walking wounded back in circulation.
30:37Here's to you.
30:38And it's good to be back.
30:40Hmm.
30:41Though I got off lightly in comparison to some.
30:44At least you won.
30:46You made them turn back.
30:47No, no.
30:48We won the battle.
30:49The war's far from over.
30:51Look at Germany.
30:52You know, I've spent so much of my life, Nance, trying to fit in, trying to keep quiet.
31:00But we can't do that now.
31:02We have to stand up, fight back.
31:05Madness.
31:06Isn't it?
31:07That anyone should have to fight for the right to sit quietly in a bar, discussing life with
31:15their best friend, without fear of persecution.
31:18That's madness.
31:20And yet reality.
31:22Anyway, how is it?
31:25What?
31:26Life.
31:27Modern marriage.
31:29Oh.
31:30That.
31:31Well, what happened to you helped me put things into perspective, actually.
31:37Really?
31:38How?
31:39Because the truth is that while my husband is out all night carousing with his spoon-faced
31:45girlfriend, I can go to bed early with a book and everyone is happy.
31:49Dessert or soup?
31:50Oh, soup.
31:51Soup.
31:52Poor love.
31:53Or I can see my friends, or I can do anything I like without ever again consulting him.
31:58And there's no...
31:59There's no true hardship there.
32:01It...
32:02In fact, it...
32:04It feels...
32:05Rather like...
32:07Freedom?
32:08Yes.
32:09Always a late developer.
32:10Perhaps I'd finally grown up.
32:11And meanwhile, at cousin Dorothy's house in Hathering, Dekker was about to take her
32:15first steps into the grown-up world.
32:30POP
32:44POP
32:47POP
32:49Hello. I'm Esmond.
33:04I'm... I'm Decker.
33:08Yes, I know who you are. My brother told me all about you.
33:13Actually, it was me who asked cousin Dorothy to invite you here this weekend.
33:18Are you fully recovered from your illness?
33:22Yes. Thank you. Much better. Much.
33:27Are you planning to go back to Spain? To the front?
33:30Yes. In about a fortnight.
33:36Well, I was wondering if you could possibly take me with you.
33:45Yes. Absolutely.
33:48I've got £50 saved up ready to go.
33:51You're a serious comrade then.
33:54Even better.
33:57When we finally came to bid farewell to Swinbrook, my parents put on brave faces.
34:16But they knew they had failed in their duty to pass the land onto future generations.
34:28Well, you miss it, Bard?
34:37Nope. Keen to move on.
34:43Nostalgia is the opium of the masses.
34:59I thought that was religion.
35:02Same kind of thing.
35:04I've got something to show you, Bowd.
35:10But you absolutely mustn't tell.
35:14Bowd?
35:15When have I ever told?
35:17I've got a knife at the time, and on top of my head.
35:27I've got some way of saying nothing.
35:28I don't know.
35:29I'm sorry, my boy.
35:30I've had some way of saying nothing.
35:31I've said nothing.
35:32I've had to do with that.
35:33I'm sorry.
35:34You're right, Dad.
35:35I'm sorry.
35:37Let's look.
35:38He gave it to me, the Fuhrer, for protection.
35:47Isn't it beautiful?
35:57Well, I've got a secret too.
36:02I'm off to join the communists.
36:09You're going? You're running away?
36:12To Spain?
36:13About? Well, it's wonderful.
36:19What if, one day, we're on opposite sides of the barricades?
36:26For real?
36:28Well, we'll just have to fight for what we believe in, won't we?
36:39The family had come from far and wide to say goodbye to the place where we all grew up.
36:56It was an emotional day for us all.
36:58Oh, there they are.
37:01What's that?
37:06Not much time!
37:08Thank you, everybody.
37:12Right there.
37:18Good morning, pal.
37:20Unity Helmets.
37:23Sit up on this time.
37:25I've taken you to the moon.
37:42Ah, the young master.
37:46Mourning the loss of your inheritance?
37:49Bloody hell no.
37:50No, I'm relieved, if anything.
37:54I mean, I'm not a farmer.
37:56Not a countryman like him, am I?
37:59No, I suppose not.
38:02Yeah.
38:08Such youth, hope and innocence.
38:12Seems like a lifetime ago.
38:13Hm.
38:14Hm.
38:17Hm.
38:18Come on.
38:37Go on, Dacca.
38:38Hello, hello, hello.
38:39All come to bid farewell to the fortress?
38:40Well, it's the end of an era, after all, isn't it?
38:41The decline and fall of the Mitved Empire.
38:42Bobo.
38:43All the way back from the fatherland.
38:44I must say, we're lucky the Fuhrer could spare you for five minutes.
38:45Can someone please tell Nancy that I'm still not speaking to her?
38:46Oh, it's all right, Bobo.
38:47I take it as red.
38:48And you, woman.
38:49How goes married life?
38:50Three weeks in.
38:51Seven countries visited.
38:52And as of yet, not a crushing disappointment in sight.
38:54Excellent.
38:55And has Stubbs found it in her heart to forgive you for marrying with her?
38:57Yes.
38:58Yes.
38:59Yes.
39:00Yes.
39:01Yes.
39:02Yes.
39:03Yes.
39:04Yes.
39:05Yes.
39:06Yes.
39:07Yes.
39:08Yes.
39:09Yes.
39:10Yes.
39:11Yes.
39:12Yes.
39:13Yes.
39:14Yes.
39:15And has Stubbs found it in her heart to forgive you for marrying the man of her dreams?
39:20Not quite yet.
39:21Oh, my word.
39:22It's the longest sulk in the history of sulks.
39:25I'm not saying something in this house.
39:26Hats off, Stubbs.
39:27I'm not sulking.
39:28I'm actually making a rather important point about sisterly loyalty.
39:32Hmm.
39:33Good luck with that.
39:36And you, Decker?
39:38What news of our communist cousin, the dreamy Esmond?
39:42Um, nothing really.
39:45I'd rather gone off him, actually.
39:47Oh, dear.
39:48Oh, poor old Esmond.
39:53Here you all are.
39:55Nard!
39:56You're here.
39:57Yes, join us.
39:58We're just saying our final farewells to the old place.
40:01Aren't we, Nance?
40:07Hello, you.
40:12I've missed you so much.
40:39What's...
40:40What's this?
40:41You're engaged.
40:42Oh.
40:43Well, it's...
40:44It's Mosley's.
40:45Isn't it?
40:46You're engaged to him now.
40:47Um...
40:48Oh, no.
40:49You've married him.
40:50Have you?
40:51No!
40:52Oh, come on.
40:53He's not a monster.
40:54Isn't he?
40:55Isn't he?
40:56Isn't he?
40:58Isn't he?
40:59Tell that to the people beaten up and trampled on in Cable Street.
41:01The women and the children with broken bones and bloody faces.
41:03My friends were among those people and they used to be your friends, too.
41:04Oh, Nard.
41:05Oh, no.
41:06Oh, no.
41:07Oh, no.
41:08Oh, no.
41:09Oh, no.
41:10Oh, no.
41:11Oh, no.
41:12Oh, no.
41:13Oh, no!
41:14Oh, come on.
41:15He's not a monster.
41:16Isn't he?
41:17Isn't he?
41:18trampled on in Cable Street, the women and the children with broken bones and
41:25bloody faces. My friends were among those people and they used to be your friends, too.
41:29Oh, Nard. Who have you become?
41:36Nancy.
41:44I thought I could put politics aside for the sake of my family, but no. There was just
41:58so much hatred bound up in fascism that I knew I had to take a stand against it, whatever
42:03the consequences.
42:04Nancy, darling, time for the photograph. Tom, everyone, come on, come on. One last family
42:11picture.
42:12The sale of the family home marked the end of our girlhood, but it was just the beginning
42:20of our lives as women.
42:25And as Europe hurtled towards another devastating war, the next few years would be even more
42:39tumultuous for us. More scandal and tragedy, more births, marriages, deaths, and one terrible
42:47betrayal.
42:48Uh, shoulders back.
42:49Chin's up.
42:50But I'm getting ahead of myself.
42:54And I'm getting ahead of myself.
43:01Ready!
43:06And I'm getting ahead of myself.
43:18And I'm getting ahead of myself.
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