On a cold and bitter December night, the week before Christmas, I made my first visit to Rotherhithe in 35 years. I was not happy with the idea of going and expected to get lost. I took the recently renamed Windrush Line from Whitechapel – and sure enough was confused when I stepped out onto the streets.
If you know your history you’ll remember the name Windrush as the boat that brought West Indians to our shores after WWII. And there, as if waiting for me, was a descendant of those intrepid travellers. Lawrence directed me to the quaintly named St Marychurch Street, with me feeling I had fallen into Dickens again. But I was in no mood for this trip. I was tired and on the morrow I had to go and see a friend who has descended into the dungeon of Parkinson’s. I was feeling sorry for myself.
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I found the warehouse of the Sands Film Studio and a reviving cup of tea set me straight and brought me out of my grumpy old man’s torpor. And I sat and watched The Man with the Plan. The film is about Sir William Beveridge, who in 1942 wrote a report called Social Insurance and Allied Services. Later called the Beveridge Report, it led to the creation of the welfare state in 1948. It was truly transformational. Presenting us today with the badly made bed we call modern British society: lumpy, uneven and only partially functioning in giving the poorest among us the chances and opportunities to thrive.
I was captured the moment the cinema lights went dark. And for the next hour and a half was a full-blown exposition on why, if we had done what Beveridge advocated, we might be in a better place today. A young student played by Sophie Jenkin takes us through a kind of Alice in Wonderland journey through our contemporary woes; through government ineptitude and distortions of Beveridge’s message. Simon Callow plays a powerfully presented William Beveridge – the anchorman blazing a trail of good sense through the whirligig of poor social governance.
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