Wes Streeting Mp

Labour MP for Ilford North. Shadow Child Poverty Secretary. RTs ≠ endorsements. For casework e-mail: wes@redbridgelabour.org.uk. 󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

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Book Recommendations:

WS

Recommended by Wes Streeting Mp

Memoir, love story, social history, East End history, how change happens, how equality is won, why Labour governments matter and a cast of characters you won’t find elsewhere. It’s so good I read the book AND enjoy listening to Michael read it to me on audible. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ https://t.co/mo0uKr5ZHF (from X)

Michael Cashman has lived many lives, all of them remarkable: as a beloved actor of stage and screen; as a campaigner for gay rights; as an MEP and as a Labour life peer. Born in the post-war East End of London, young Michael's life is changed when he is spotted in a school play, cast in Lionel Bart's Oliver! and is transported to the glittering West End. Acting on stage and screen into adulthood, he finds his most defining role as Colin in Eastenders, making television history as one half of the first gay kiss ever broadcast on a British soap. But it is a chance encounter in a Butlins resort that leads Michael to the great love of his life: Paul Cottingham, who would become his husband and partner of 31 years. We follow Michael's second act, as with Ian McKellan he founds and chairs Stonewall, fighting tirelessly for civil liberties all over the world before entering the world of politics. His adventures and misadventures lead him and Paul as far and wide as tea in LA with David Hockney to flirting with Joan Collins to flying the rainbow flag over the Albert Hall with Elton John. But Michael's greatest triumphs are seasoned with bitter loss - and he continues his ceaseless fight bearing a profound grief. One of Them contains as many multitudes as its author: glorious nostalgia, wicked showbiz gossip, a stirring history of a civil rights movement, a sorrowfully clear-eyed exposition of Britain's standing in Europe, and an unforgettable love story. Told with warmth, wit and humanity, it is an account of a life lived both left-of-field and firmly embedded in the heart of all that makes Britain liberal and good.