- 5 days ago
Category
🎮️
GamingTranscript
00:00Mr Bianchi? Yes, he is.
00:02I only got it last summer.
00:04Best ice cream in Poplar. Guarantee.
00:05I'm sure it is, but at the present moment
00:08we're more interested in delivering
00:10babies than ice cream.
00:12Would you mind turning off the music?
00:15Oh, sorry.
00:24What do you want me to do with these then?
00:27Mm-hmm.
00:29I'll take the runner beans.
00:31We can have those with the chops I've planned.
00:33Everything else can go to the Harvest Festival.
00:35What? But even the Marrows?
00:37They would have won first prize
00:39in the multicultural show if I'd have been ready in time.
00:42They're bigger than toddlers' legs, Fred.
00:44And I haven't the time
00:45to be stuffing them with mince
00:47and making a white sauce.
00:51I'll take them to the nurse's house then.
00:53The children will march
00:55from there to the church in a procession.
00:57Your produce will be
00:59widely admired.
01:03You're nothing, Leah. We're just shit, honey.
01:05These are just what we call Braxton Hicks contractions.
01:08It's your buddy rehearsing for the routine.
01:10I feel a bit of a fool now.
01:13And it's taking Tony away from his van.
01:15That van's our whole livelihood
01:16now I've stopped working.
01:18Have I missed it?
01:19It's all right. Yes, sir.
01:20It was a false alarm.
01:25Good job we never told no one.
01:28I'll get my leg pulled something rotten.
01:33Is there anything you need taking to the post office, sister?
01:37I'm rather more concerned about a letter I took to the post office
01:39two weeks ago.
01:41The one you wrote to the Board of Health?
01:42Yes.
01:44Telling them we would close Nanata's house
01:47if we were no longer allowed to work
01:49as Christian missionaries.
01:51I expected a response from them
01:53at the very least.
01:54It's entirely likely that they're playing games.
01:56Keeping you waiting because you kept them waiting.
01:59One would hope they were above such a pettiness
02:02when there is so much at stake.
02:10Come on, this way.
02:14Idiot!
02:14You took her in too early.
02:16Hey, brother.
02:17You coming to football tonight?
02:18I don't know, Matteo.
02:20I'm not really in the mood.
02:21You stop coming to football.
02:23You stop coming swimming.
02:24You need to make the most of your freedom while you've got it.
02:28Come on, let's go.
02:29You got everything?
02:30Let's go.
02:30See you, baby brother.
02:32You got the bag?
02:35I do not have unlimited quantities of corpucular matter in my veins.
02:40Sister, you're a nurse.
02:42You know as well as I do that blood replenishes itself.
02:47And we need to get to the bottom of what ails you.
02:50We all know what ails me.
02:53I am merely ancient and presumed frail as a consequence.
03:00Sister, I have five minutes before I leave on my rounds.
03:03Would you like me to move the television into your room?
03:06Do you suppose I'm at the point of expiry?
03:10There is no reason to treat me as an invalid.
03:14As the analysis of my blood will testify.
03:23Ladies and gentlemen, the doors to tonight's wrestling in the main hall
03:26will open in five minutes.
03:28No!
03:31No!
03:33No!
03:35No!
03:37No!
03:38No!
03:39No!
03:41No!
03:41No!
03:42No!
03:43No!
03:44No!
03:45No!
03:45No!
03:46No!
03:46No!
03:47No!
03:49I've learned so much about deferment since I gave up drink.
03:55I've learned you can bear anything if you pretend it's forever.
03:59I can postpone.
04:02I can wait.
04:04But putting things off until tomorrow doesn't always work.
04:07because what if tomorrow never comes?
04:13I've been postponing a decision for a long time now.
04:20No?
04:20Come on!
04:21Come on!
04:23No!
04:27You've won!
04:28Enter it!
04:29Enter it!
04:30She's out!
04:32Ring her bell!
04:32Door!
04:33Yes!
04:35It's alright, love?
04:37Harmony?
04:40It's not a decision about drink.
04:43It's a decision about work.
04:46And work is my other addiction.
04:49Is there a doctor in here? Anyone?
04:52I'm an arse.
04:53That'll do. It's a concussion.
04:57If you're staging sporting events, you're legally obliged to have medical help on the premises.
05:02I don't know nothing about, no legal obligations.
05:05This is her, Harmony Savage.
05:08Hello, Harmony. I'm a nurse. I'm sorry you've been hurt.
05:12Occupationalised.
05:14Did you lose consciousness or did you remain aware of your surroundings?
05:17I never went out. I was just putting on a bit of a show.
05:21Punters like it.
05:24I've got to go back out. Finish your job.
05:26Whoa, whoa. You were out cold.
05:28I did the count, but it's over.
05:31Brenda the butcher won fair and square.
05:36They've gone to give out the prize money.
05:39If you can't be absolutely sure that you weren't knocked out,
05:43I really think you ought to go to the casualty department.
05:46I'm gonna go home to bed.
05:50Oh, hello, sweetie.
05:55Who's this?
05:56Carl. My boy. He comes to all my fights.
06:00Come on. Let's pack up and get you in the van.
06:04You really must not drive after blacking out. However briefly.
06:08Any better ideas?
06:12I know it was a false alarm to that heap, but...
06:17It made me think how real all this is.
06:21How we've made a proper grown-up life.
06:26You do go on.
06:28It's like being the baby of the family gave you a great big chip on your shoulder.
06:33It wasn't that.
06:35It was being the one who is no good at all the things the others did.
06:39It's not your fault you won't cut out for the tiling trade.
06:44Besides, I'd rather have a bit of soft scoop than a hundred yards of mosaic flooring.
06:51Come on. Lights out.
06:53What's that?
06:55Nothing.
06:56Tony, there's blood on your singlet.
06:58What is it? Show me.
07:06How long have you had this?
07:08Oh, wow.
07:12I'll put the plaster on it.
07:14You will not.
07:15In the morning, I'm ringing the doctor.
07:27Out we're kept.
07:32Wrestling was all I knew. Even as a little girl.
07:36My dad was burnt savage. Lamb of pamphlet. God rest him.
07:40I used to watch him every time he fought.
07:42It's rather wonderful that you followed in his footsteps.
07:45Even more wonderful if it were legal.
07:47There's a whole ladies circuit up north, just as legitimate as the men's.
07:49But in London, we're outlaws.
07:52I really would like you to be seen by a doctor if at all possible, Harmony.
07:56Oh, my real name's Gwen.
07:59Thanks for seeing us home.
08:01Come on, little him.
08:15I've given up to me sports and everything.
08:19It's so unsightly.
08:22I probably just banged it.
08:25Oh.
08:27It looks like a sebaceous cyst to me.
08:32Antibiotics will take the edge off it, but I think it needs to be removed.
08:36Oh, I got a baby to any day.
08:39All the more reason to get it out of the way.
08:42I'll call St Cuthbert's myself.
08:53Now, that is a birdsong I can easily identify.
08:58The lesser spotted buckle.
09:02Ah, sister, how are you keeping?
09:04I'm keeping on.
09:07If a little more desiccated with every week the passes.
09:12Perhaps I should not linger.
09:15Lest you sweep me up with all the other dead leaves.
09:20I've got a bag of donuts in my shed.
09:22Will they cheer you up a bit?
09:24Are they jam filled?
09:25No, they're the ones with the holes in.
09:27Then I will forego them.
09:29Do you detect a chill in the breeze today?
09:33I reckon I felt the first nip.
09:36I like it when the seasons start to turn, though.
09:38Do you, that time of year, the maest in me behold,
09:43When yellow leaves, or none or few,
09:48Do hang upon those boughs that shake with cold,
09:53Bare ruined choirs,
09:56Where late the sweet birds sang.
10:00In me thou seest the twilight of such day,
10:05As after sunset fadeth in the west,
10:09Which by and by, like night, doth take away their second self,
10:16That seals up all in rest.
10:37Sister Monica Tone,
10:39What's brought this on?
10:43Time, Mr Buckle.
10:47Its passage and its sheer, weary accumulation.
10:54Would you like a cup of tea?
10:57If you will sit and take one with me.
11:10Well, Miss Savage, I'm not seeing anything that needs further tests.
11:14Any other bumps or bruises you'd like me to look at?
11:17I've got a rash, keeps coming up sort of on the back of my shoulder.
11:22If you just slip your blouse off, dear.
11:25Don't believe I've ever met a lady wrestler before.
11:29Imagine it's quite physically taxing.
11:32I call over sometimes, fight or no fight.
11:45I think I know what this is.
11:47It's a skin virus called herpes gladiatorum.
11:51Gladiator, like in Spartacus?
11:54I love a bit of Kirk Douglas.
11:56Don't we always?
11:58I'm afraid this comes from grazing your skin on grubby canvas in the ring.
12:03Your best bet is to wash it daily with medicated soap and bathe the blisters in salt water.
12:09Can I do that with my hips and my knees?
12:11Do you have a rash there as well?
12:12No, we just hurt all the time.
12:15Miss Savage, are you able to take a break from your work for a while?
12:18No. I've got mouths to feed.
12:21Mine and my little boys.
12:28I've been looking forward to this moment all day.
12:31I popped on a market and bought myself a new pair of slippers for the winter.
12:40I never knew you could love a bit of sheepskin on your feet till I came to live in England.
12:44Me neither.
12:47I'm sorry, child.
12:48You're all wrapped up in something?
12:52I'm trying to work out exactly when I started taking a pill.
12:56Calculated against the number of actual pills you have to take before it protects you.
13:00And why is that?
13:02I've never missed a single one.
13:05I'm wondering if it's thrown my hormones out of whack.
13:08I mean, it can do that, can't it?
13:10Child, the whole point of the pill is to throw your hormones out of whack.
13:14That's how it stops you getting pregnant.
13:18Are you late?
13:20I've been late before.
13:23And things just sort of corrected themselves.
13:27That would have been before you had a boyfriend.
13:32Do you think you need to do a test?
13:34No.
13:36Not yet.
13:37Under for death and death?
13:38I need to contaminate Christy.
13:39Oh, God, no.
13:43Do you want to attack?
13:44Do you want to give up?
13:45Show up.
13:47Ah!
13:48Ah!
13:49Ah!
13:53Ah!
13:56What do you mean she can't do that?
14:00Hey!
14:01Yes!
14:01Hey!
14:02It's our close best!
14:03Ah!
14:09Lord!
14:10And ladies!
14:11And gentlemen!
14:12The winner is...
14:14Demolition Debbie!
14:34Are you feeling sick?
14:37This is not good, honey.
14:38But we're going to do a test.
14:41I'll help you.
14:42I don't want anyone to know.
14:44They won't.
14:48My name is Higgins.
14:50Have the samples gone off to the laboratory yet?
14:52They will be dispatched very shortly,
14:54but if you wish to add any to the list,
14:56I'm afraid you must see to the paperwork yourself.
15:14Nurse?
15:15Good morning, Gwen.
15:17Dr Turner remembered an iodine preparation he thought might help with your skin condition.
15:21I told him I'd drop it off.
15:23Have you been in another fight?
15:26Yes.
15:27And I didn't win that one either.
15:35New school's stay, old chap.
15:36I overslept again.
15:38I don't like going in late because it gets told off.
15:41I imagine you're exhausted after a match.
15:43I'm always exhausted, but I'm a mum, aren't I?
15:47And it's just me.
15:48I weren't tired and me and I were slacking.
15:52I'm a stepmother to a little boy of Carl's age.
15:55It certainly keeps one on one's toes.
15:57I hope he talks like you do.
15:59You've got a lovely way of putting things.
16:02Can I make you a cuppa?
16:04A cuppa would actually be extremely welcome, but I should be making you one.
16:12I'm sorry, I'll have to get out.
16:25That's all I've got this time. I'll give you the full amount next week.
16:29I've heard that before and more than once.
16:33I am not a charity.
16:40Now there ain't nothing in here but feathers.
16:43I'm officially skinned.
16:45Do you keep your money in a cushion cover?
16:47I don't trust banks.
16:49At least it's where I know my money is.
16:50Even when I've got none.
16:54Sorry, I've gone dizzy.
16:59Mr. Bianchi.
17:00I'm Mr. Penn Warden.
17:02I'll be removing this cyst for you.
17:04Do you mind if I take a look?
17:14Don't want to go hacking away on the wrong side.
17:22Could just drain this, but I'm leaning on the side of getting the whole thing out.
17:33Your bloods may come back perfectly normal, but I strongly suspect that if you'd have almost passed out in front
17:39of Dr. Turner, he'd want to check your iron levels.
17:41Maybe I just need a tonic.
17:43Maybe you do.
17:45I just think that as another woman who's often had to stand on her own two feet, you need to
17:50be in better condition than this.
17:53You're on your own with your kiddie.
17:55No.
17:57But I was very much on my own for a long time before he and his father came into my
18:01life.
18:03And I know what it feels like to be fighting an invisible opponent.
18:06I fight invisible ones and all.
18:09And I've no doubt you're extremely good at it.
18:11But you need someone more than a wrestling promoter in your corner.
18:15Let us help find out what's causing your malaise.
18:20Nurse Clifford's gone out to the cinema, but Nurse Hyland says we can have the box. Her new slippers came
18:26in.
18:26Could there be a more perfect showcase for nature's bounty?
18:30Oh!
18:31We can do a lot with ribbon and crepe paper.
18:34And that's before we start tying bows round marrows.
18:36Oh!
18:37These lamentable scissors.
18:39They wouldn't cut butter.
18:41Shall I see if I can find a sharper pair?
18:43What we really need is Sister Veronica and her magic pinking shears.
18:48How long has she gone to the mother house for?
18:51A lengthy retreat.
18:54I wasn't allowed to ask.
18:56It's her private spiritual business.
18:58Do you suppose she took her pinking shears?
19:01I would settle for her implements if we can't have her.
19:31Oh, Sister Monica Joan.
19:33I was hoping it was something that could be treated.
19:37But chronic kidney disease is just...
19:40Something that takes old people gently but kindly.
19:44But it takes them.
19:46How long has she been ill with this?
19:49I suspect not long.
19:52How long does she have?
19:55The same.
19:58Unless we can persuade her to accept what treatment there is,
20:02she'll progress to end-stage renal failure fairly quickly.
20:08Till that day comes,
20:10we'll just have to love her as we always have.
20:14But a bit more carefully.
20:22You look happy.
20:24Today is a happy day.
20:28I got a letter from the solicitor.
20:30The decree absolute?
20:31I'm officially a single man.
20:36Everything we do now is ours.
20:38Our choice to make.
20:41The Board of Health requested a meeting.
20:43I told them your diary was full, but they were most insistent.
20:47It's in your diary for Friday.
20:49I anticipate the usual fun and games.
20:53I need to see Anthony Bianchi.
20:56I've just had his histopathology results through from the hospital.
21:00Should I make an appointment for him?
21:03No.
21:04I'll call in on him today.
21:07We told you the truth.
21:08Sister Veronica is on retreat.
21:11You told us she had gone on retreat to the mother house.
21:14She would need her cross in the mother house.
21:16She would need her shoes.
21:18Our sister needed our discretion and I gave that willingly and with love.
21:22I'm sorry if you feel that you should have been informed.
21:27I'm sorry if I have been arrogant in thinking I deserved an explanation.
21:34I can't tell you everything.
21:36Too much of it is personal to her.
21:38But I can say she is struggling with her vows.
21:41And has been given leave of absence for a while.
21:45She's staying at the Oliver Christian Retreat Centre at Gravesend.
21:50Alone.
21:53Without anyone she knows.
21:55Or any friends to support her.
22:00Sister...
22:01Out of all of us.
22:02Sister Veronica emits the most love.
22:05She needs the most love.
22:07She does not know what she needs or wants.
22:11And that is why she has had to go away.
22:18Morning.
22:21Have you come to see Tina?
22:23Mr Bianchi, we've come to see you.
22:29I can't have breast cancer.
22:31I can't have breast cancer.
22:33It's a women's disease.
22:34We know all about that because his mum died of it.
22:39I know.
22:41She was a lovely lady.
22:44And even in the five years since she passed away we've learned so much about it.
22:51I can't have it.
22:52I can't have it.
22:54I'm a man.
22:55It is rare in men.
22:57Especially for someone of your age.
23:00But it's not unheard of.
23:02Everyone has breast tissue Tony.
23:04Men and women.
23:06We have less of it.
23:08But it only takes a couple of cells to go rogue.
23:13And a tumour can start to develop.
23:15I have had some specialist training.
23:19And there are new treatments and new approaches to surgery.
23:31Should I have done something sooner when I first felt the lump?
23:35We are going to focus on the future now Tony.
23:39And we are going to be with you every step of the way.
23:45I don't care whereabouts in your body it is.
23:48You've got the big seat.
23:50We have to face up to it.
23:51We can face up to it together.
23:55Without telling people.
23:57What is that going to achieve Tony?
24:00You need help.
24:01You need love.
24:04Tina.
24:07I need...
24:09Dignity.
24:11I need to feel like a man.
24:16There's a bike for sale.
24:22Maybe for your birthday.
24:24Eh?
24:25If you win your next fight.
24:29Yeah.
24:34Yes?
24:37Doctor.
24:38Gwen Savage's records arrived from her previous practice.
24:42She's been suffering with tiredness and joint pain for five years.
24:46Did the blood test we did show anything?
24:49Nothing at all conclusive.
24:52Just markers for minor inflammation.
24:55Slightly low white blood count.
24:57Could the pain relate to the wrestling?
25:00I saw her in the ring and it's incredibly physical.
25:02But an impact injury would be on one side, not both.
25:08It's as though I'm missing something.
25:11I never liked that.
25:13They said those Braxton Hicks pains was my body tuning up for the baby to be born.
25:18I got used to him, but they've got worse since I found out Tony isn't well.
25:23You've an immense amount to contend with at the moment.
25:26But baby's head is engaged, Tina.
25:28I really don't think you'll have very long to wait.
25:32Oh, this reading is just a little bit higher than I'd like.
25:37We can't have anything else go wrong.
25:40Nothing's going to go wrong.
25:42But I do want you to come over to the maternity home with me.
25:46So Dr. Turner can take a look at you.
26:02Any chance of a 99?
26:03I've an elderly friend, might like a bit of a pick-ne-up.
26:07What's the matter, pal?
26:13Brian!
26:17You ain't put me down for a single match.
26:20I can't afford to promote wrestlers who keep losing.
26:23I can raise my game.
26:25My dad used to say, aim up.
26:27Things will look up.
26:28Your dad was one of the best I ever was.
26:31The Lamb of Panther was revered.
26:34Look, all I can offer you right now is the adult fixtures.
26:37Oh, no, no.
26:39Adult fixtures is one step away from stripping, Brian.
26:41I keep it clean.
26:43It's a place down Deptford where they roll about in jelly.
26:46Girls earn 30 quid about.
26:4830 quid?
26:49I pay 20.
26:53Bring your own bikini.
27:04Usually Tina reads stuff for me, but I don't want to worry all this.
27:09There's going to be further surgery and a radiography assessment.
27:21You're going to have to stop working.
27:23Won't be for long.
27:25I mean, you've got a family to support you.
27:27I've only just proved to them that I'm a man.
27:30And I'm making a go of the van, earning my own living.
27:34And now I've got a woman's disease.
27:36And I can't provide.
27:40I'm telling them nothing.
27:49Geoffrey Franklin?
27:50Mr. Franklin, it's Sister Catherine from Nanata's house.
27:54It's about Sister Veronica.
27:56And I'm calling you in confidence.
28:01I see.
28:03I don't like leaving you on your own, Tony.
28:07Don't be daft.
28:09I'm fine.
28:11Hey.
28:12Look.
28:15Got my appointment through already.
28:18Nothing to be done till then.
28:21It's you and the baby we need to think about now.
28:25Alright.
28:26Just promise me
28:28you'll tell your brothers.
28:32I promise.
28:39You'll need to take these diuretics first thing in the morning
28:42as you don't want to be up all hours of the night.
28:45We can bring the commode into your room.
28:47The commode will not be entertained.
28:50You may come to revise that opinion.
28:53Your tone is brisk, given that my days are numbered.
29:01Everybody's days are numbered, Sister.
29:03Mine as well as yours, one way and another.
29:11But you may be going on for quite a long time.
29:15Possibly feeling slightly better than you have done.
29:19Given that we know what ails you now.
29:23Maybe I do not care to go on for quite a long time.
29:29Let's see how we do, shall we?
29:32With these diuretics.
29:33With these diuretics.
29:34With these diures.
29:50Cole?
30:00Carl?
30:01Carl?
30:12We'll proceed with a full mastectomy of your right breast.
30:15We'll remove the breast tissue along with the lymph nodes and the pectoralis major muscle.
30:23I don't want to do this.
30:25I promise you scarring will be minimal.
30:28And at least you won't be having to deal with foam rubber falsies like my lady patients.
30:39Come on, Carl, where are they?
30:53Can I help you?
30:54I'm Carl Savage's mum. Is he here? Because if he's not...
30:57Carl Savage? I've just checked every member of his class for headlace, including him.
31:02Oh, thank God. Thank God.
31:05Do you want to go in and speak with him?
31:07Gwen? What's happened?
31:08Oh, I couldn't wake up this morning. Carl took himself to school.
31:12It's the worst I've ever felt.
31:15What's this on your face, Gwen?
31:16It's like this all the time.
31:18I'll cover it with pan stick, usually.
31:38You waiting for your wife?
31:40My husband says he can't stand the smell of this place.
31:43Drops me at the door and waits in the pub.
31:47Mr Bianchi?
31:51Is this ever itchy or sore?
31:54No. And it's never all blisters like the one on my back.
31:57It's more like a sunburn.
32:00You've been covering it up with pan stick because it's such a strange sheet.
32:04Like a butterfly.
32:07That herpes gladiatorum on your back was a complete red herring.
32:12This is what leads us to your diagnosis.
32:15Have you ever heard of a condition called lupus?
32:19Nobody in your family has ever had it?
32:21Or mentioned it?
32:22No.
32:23Do you think that's what I've got?
32:25This rash is so distinctive.
32:27I'd put money on it as a diagnosis.
32:29How long will it take to get rid of it?
32:32It's going to be about management rather than cure.
32:36But I promise you we can get you feeling better.
32:39Can't be cured.
32:41But I need to win matches again.
32:43Gwen, you are too unwell to fight.
32:50Tony, thank God I've been worried sick.
32:53How'd it go at the hospital?
32:54It was all fine.
32:56Your doctor's very pleased with me.
32:58Oh, really?
33:01So what happens next?
33:03What treatment are they giving you?
33:04So many pills I'll be rattling.
33:08The important thing is that you are getting some rest.
33:13Not worrying yourself silly.
33:14I'm not now, I've heard your voice.
33:17I love your voice.
33:18I only ever get to talk on the phone.
33:23Because we're together all the time.
33:25And we'll be together again soon.
33:27Shaming.
33:44Tony!
33:46Tony!
33:48Tony!
33:48We're going down the pub.
33:49We're coming.
33:51Tony!
33:51Tony!
33:53Tony!
33:54Tony!
33:54Let's go now.
33:55Let's go.
33:56Yeah, right.
33:56Yeah.
33:57We're going to go.
33:58Oh, God.
33:59Whatever.
34:00Oh.
34:13Oh.
34:21Oh.
34:22Oh.
34:23Oh.
34:24I'd definitely be careful with that dreary swag, because at the very least it would provoke
34:27a degree of fellow feeling in me.
34:29I'm on potato peeling duty.
34:31There's a rota in the retreat house.
34:33Stop.
34:34Stop.
34:35Before you completely break my heart.
34:38Come here almost every day.
34:40Sometimes I have a eclair,
34:42and when the fancy takes me, I have a queen split.
34:45You get a cherry on a queen split,
34:48and there's this little burst of flavour when you bite it.
34:52Tell me you've eaten fish and chips in the street, too, in broad daylight.
34:56Twice.
34:58Although sometimes it feels as though it's the things I don't do
35:02that tell me more about where I am now or where I might go next.
35:07What don't you do?
35:09I don't pray.
35:11I came here to pray, or at least to decide what I ought to be praying for.
35:17But I can't.
35:19And do you know why?
35:21It's not different enough to the convent, Beryl.
35:24And all the snatched patisserie in the world can't disguise the fact
35:28that you are still living the same sort of half-life,
35:31trapped underneath a similar, godly bell jar.
35:36And how do you propose to change that?
35:38Come and stay with me.
35:40Geoffrey.
35:42I am still technically a nun.
35:45I can't live with a man.
35:47You could lodge with a kindly confirmed bachelor.
35:57You've missed two appointments at the hospital, Tony.
36:01Do you have anyone to talk to?
36:04Your brothers, perhaps?
36:06No, I can't.
36:09Not with it being, you know, breast cancer.
36:14It's so humiliating.
36:16I can hear him now.
36:19A typical Tony.
36:23Dr. Turner and I delivered a baby at the maternity home last week, and the mother asked if the older
36:29brother could come in and meet him.
36:31He placed the baby in his little arms, and he was awestruck.
36:38This was his brother.
36:42He promised right then and there to teach him everything he knew.
36:47All his best fighting moves.
36:48A cat gun was mentioned.
36:51And something about which jelly babies tasted best.
36:56Green ones, according to Enzo, always gave me the green ones.
37:03Brothers look after each other, Tony.
37:07I've seen it with my own boys.
37:11Right now, she'll be moaning about me.
37:15She'll be looking after Tina.
37:17Dr. Turner says she can come home if you're feeling up to it.
37:21Of course I'm feeling up to it.
37:28Something tells me something's going to happen tonight.
37:35I read in the papers that Gem and our people will make it tonight.
37:42Stars will be shining.
37:44My sign is aligning with love.
37:49So come on and make it.
37:51Let's take everything that we've been dreaming of.
37:57Something tells me something's going to happen to you.
38:03The smile on my face is the smile you were wearing a moment or two.
38:10So get it together, you see, it's going to be all right.
38:18Something tells me something's going to happen to you.
38:23You stay in the dressing room tonight, promise?
38:27Promise.
38:28And if I win, you'll get that bike, my precious boy.
38:55You're keeping up with us, peppermints, child?
38:58I'm first on call tonight and I still feel quite queasy.
39:01But it's not just in the morning.
39:03Maybe the pill itself doesn't agree with me.
39:08I popped into the surgery when no one was there to check on your results.
39:12I think we need to have a talk.
39:19Oh, I can't seem to get comfortable.
39:24My back is killing me.
39:29Right, Tony, the sheets are wet.
39:35Do you think your walk was a prank?
39:37I thought it'd be more of a whoosh.
39:41Oh, I don't feel right, Tony.
39:47Joyce, what am I going to do?
39:51The pill was supposed to be foolproof.
39:53Honey, the pill was invented by man and is taken by women.
39:58It's always going to be subject to human error.
40:01I will lose my job.
40:03I will have to tell my parents and I hardly speak to them as it is because they don't approve
40:07of Cyril.
40:08What?
40:08I approve of Cyril.
40:10He's a good man and he will support you.
40:13Whatever you choose to do.
40:15Choose to do?
40:17Joyce, I'm not even going to consider an abortion.
40:21That's why it's so hard.
40:24That's why I'm going to get the sack.
40:27Talk to Cyril.
40:29You've got time before you have to tell anybody else.
40:32And I will cover for you in any way I can.
40:39You have enough of peppermint and wash your face.
40:49gentlemen, please take your seats for tonight's teeny moving steamy bikini extravaganza of her fights.
41:02I'm ringing up about Tina Bianchi.
41:05We think she's gone into labour.
41:07I've been timing them for two minutes apart.
41:12Rosalyn?
41:13Rosalyn?
41:14Come quickly.
41:1515, 20.
41:16That's promised.
41:19Put on a good show for the gents, were you girls?
41:22You're like a bit of hair pulling.
41:24Hair pulling's an illegal move.
41:27It's not an illegal game though, is it, Gwen?
41:30Who's going to complain?
41:32Don't do this, Gwen.
41:33Please.
41:34What are you doing here?
41:35You're putting yourself in real danger if you fight tonight.
41:37Your body is severely weakened from lupus.
41:39And your chances of getting injured are high.
41:42And what would Carl do then?
41:43If you're not going to fight, you can hand that money back right now.
42:14A midwife is on her way.
42:16And I'm going to stay with you on the end of this phone until she gets there.
42:22She keeps saying she wants to push.
42:24Tell her to blow.
42:26Tell her to blow as if she's blowing out candles.
42:28Tina, don't push.
42:30Blow.
42:31Blow.
42:33Blow.
42:35Yeah, that's it.
42:36Do it with me.
42:43Wait, wait, wait, wait.
42:47You punch her.
42:48I said no punch.
42:55Dude!
43:01Do you want to tap?
43:02Do you want to give up?
43:05Tony, I need you to describe exactly what you can see.
43:09I don't know what I can see.
43:14Oh, I think it might be the baby's head.
43:21Get up!
43:24Oh!
43:26Oh!
43:29Captain!
43:35No!
43:45Just... just... just...
43:50Can you hear me?
43:52Gwen? Gwen?
43:54Call for an ambulance.
43:56Quickly!
44:01Mr. Bianchi, you need to get ready to deliver this baby yourself.
44:05But you must not hang up. Do you hear me?
44:18Oh, I can see... I can see the egg. It's sort of moving around. I can see its face.
44:26Good! Now, very gently place your hands under its head.
44:30Wait for the next big contraction.
44:32And guide the body out.
44:34Don't pull.
44:35There's something blue wrapped around its neck. Is that supposed to be there?
44:38It's the cord. All you have to do is slip your finger underneath it and lift it over the baby's
44:43head.
44:43It should slide off quite easily.
44:52Have you managed to move it?
44:54It works! It's off!
44:56No!
44:58No!
44:58I'm getting it now.
44:59No!
45:03No!
45:06No!
45:07No!
45:08No!
45:09No!
45:10It's a boy, Tina!
45:17We've got a little boy.
45:37You did it, Tony. You delivered our son.
45:42Just looking.
45:47Well, someone was in a hurry to get into the world.
45:52Wait till we tell all your uncles about this.
46:00There's...
46:02There's my boy.
46:07You were lucky you didn't cause any more damage to your body.
46:10At least I got the rent money out of it.
46:12Gwen, the hospital are asking who will be looking after Carl whilst you're in here.
46:16They're willing to talk to social services.
46:18I bet they are.
46:20Social services will take him off me.
46:21I'm sure that isn't the case.
46:23But Gwen, you're treading a dangerous path in London, even if your health allowed you to keep on fighting.
46:32There are alternatives.
46:35Just as there's alternatives to keeping your money in a cushion cover.
46:38And are you going to tell me what they are?
46:42Because I'd listen to you.
46:45You've told me you know what it is to find things hard.
46:54Another one for the footy team.
46:56A striker.
46:57My turn now.
46:57My turn.
46:59Careful.
47:03And Mrs. Turner's just helping Tina to freshen up.
47:07And then Master Bianchi needs to have his lunch.
47:10The Neo Papa did a good job on his own then, Doctor.
47:13Not many people could deliver their own son single-handed.
47:16But Tony did.
47:17Yeah.
47:19This man, hmm?
47:21He's a proper man.
47:23He certainly is.
47:25And I salute him.
47:29Bravo!
47:37Let's...
47:40Something's come up...
47:42that I'm...
47:46not gonna be able to do single-handed.
47:51I've got cancer.
48:10Breast cancer.
48:12Tony.
48:15I wish Mama was here.
48:20No.
48:22No.
48:32You are the best of us, little brother.
48:37And we...
48:38will not let you go.
49:06I spoke to the surgery, Gwen.
49:08All your records will be sent to the new GP we found for you up north.
49:11Thanks, Nurse.
49:13Thanks, Nurse.
49:13I've got to start looking after myself now, haven't I?
49:16She's not gonna be a wrestler anymore.
49:18I know.
49:19Would you like a hand putting that in the van?
49:22Or are you planning on peddling all the way to Blackpool?
49:24Thanks, Nurse.
49:30And thanks for the advice.
49:32It was like a bold move, taking a job in a gym, training other women.
49:38But it's legal in Lancashire, Gwen.
49:40And you won't be exploited.
49:42It will give your body time to recover.
49:44And my dad would like it.
49:46Good old lamb of pamphering his contacts.
50:17Oh.
50:18I came home from a lunch hour.
50:20Do you want to go for a walk?
50:21No.
50:22I'm afraid I don't.
50:25It seems you've made a decent fist at moving your weekly clinic onto hospital premises.
50:31Yes.
50:32There was some grumbling from patients about bus fares, but I think we're on an even queue.
50:38Good.
50:39Because speaking scientist to scientist, and to paraphrase our friend Charles Darwin,
50:45it is not necessarily the strongest or most intelligent of any given species that survives.
50:50It's the one most adaptable to change.
50:53I know that.
50:55And I know I can't look after my patients properly if I don't today.
50:59A very good attitude to have.
51:02Which is why we're placing you front and centre of our plans.
51:07And closing you down.
51:12Closing us down?
51:14Not as a GP.
51:15Although you'll probably want to join forces with someone else now.
51:19There are real incentives for group practices.
51:22But the council are not going to renew the licence for the maternity home.
51:28But the licence runs out in a matter of weeks.
51:33It's always been renewed as a formality.
51:36This is the brave new world, Turner.
51:39There is no always anymore.
51:41There isn't even an always for me.
51:43The council will have to hand everything over to the National Health.
51:46But while you still have power, you're doing this.
51:50To us and to Nanata's house.
51:54Nanata's house.
51:56They were forever outliers.
51:59And eccentric.
52:00Threatwood, what is the logic in all of this?
52:05How is it going to benefit the patients?
52:07I knew you'd say that.
52:09And it's why we chose to put you at the vanguard.
52:13No matter what goes on somewhere far away in the offices of Whitehall,
52:17there will always be patients.
52:22And you say that as though it's a problem.
52:29I'm so sorry, Cyril.
52:32You wanted to take responsibility, but...
52:34I was absolutely certain that nothing could be better than this magnificent wonder drug
52:40that gave me control over my own body.
52:42We both agreed it was what we wanted.
52:44That it would let us have other things we wanted.
52:48And wanted very much.
52:52We just didn't want this, did we?
52:56I think...
52:58that it's something that has happened a little out of order.
53:03But I wouldn't have taken you to bed if I didn't mean to marry you.
53:06And I always meant to marry you.
53:09And build a life with you.
53:12And building a life with you means more than just rings and mortgages.
53:18And bricks and mortar.
53:22Did you ever close your eyes and try to see our children?
53:28I see our children every day with my eyes wide open.
53:32I see them crossing the street in Poplar or swinging on the swing down at the wreck.
53:38And I think...
53:41We could have a little boy like that one.
53:44Or...
53:45That little girl has a smile like hers.
53:51I thought I'd have to be patient.
53:54And I'm not very good at being patient.
53:58I would not say patience has been a distinguishing characteristic.
54:04And now it doesn't have to be.
54:05And now it doesn't have to be a pleasure.
54:05If you don't have to be patient, I should be at the same point.
54:06If you're tired of being patient, I have to be patient.
54:07If you don't have to take care of him,
54:07you're not being patient yet.
54:07If you don't have to be patient, I am the primary person.
54:08If you haven't been patient, I haven't been patient with you and you have to be patient in my life.
Comments