Episode 4 Holiday of My Lifetime with Len Goodman


Episode 4

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Childhood holidays. The anticipation seemed endless!

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The holiday itself? Well, it was over too quickly.

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So, in this series, I'm going to be reliving those wonderful times

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with some much-loved famous faces.

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This is a memory I will treasure!

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Every day I will be arranging a few surprises

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to transport them back in time.

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Please! No?

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-Come on, Len!

-Yeah!

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We'll relive the fun,...

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-A-ha!

-Whoa!

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Oh no! No!

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..the games...

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..and the food of years gone by...

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That's my boyhood in a bowl.

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-Oh!

-My boyhood in a bowl!

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..to find out how those holidays around the UK

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helped shape the people we know so well today.

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Aaarggh!

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So, buckle up for Holiday Of My Lifetime.

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-Close your eyes.

-Yeah.

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And here we go.

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I'm on my way to meet a young lady who's been a household name

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since the mid-90s.

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She was born in Bury in Lancashire in 1976.

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Here she is as a wee one. Oh! Cute as a button.

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She was a natural performer from an early age,

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training at the Oldham Theatre workshop from the age of nine.

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In 1995, she joined a certain Yorkshire soap,

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winning Best Newcomer a year later.

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Shall I Dingle-dangle more clues?

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Get it?

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A few years later, she was in the frame

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to take over from Jeremy Beadle in a certain bloopers show.

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Do you know what? She got it!

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But it was when she put on her dancing shoes

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that she won everybody's hearts,

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earning her the title

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the people's champion.

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Well, if you haven't got it by now, you never will.

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Here's my gorgeous friend, Lisa Riley.

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I'm on my way to pick her up in this crazy Citroen BX,

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just like the one her mum drove

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all those years ago.

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Aw! Smiley Riley! Here comes your old mate Lenny Boy!

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Lisa was born in 1976 in Bury, Lancashire,

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to Cath and Terry Riley.

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Dad ran a printing business, while Mum was head of complaints

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at a travel company.

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Aged just 12,

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Lisa was spotted by a theatre agent

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who put her forward for acting roles.

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Her big TV break came in 1995,

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aged just 19, when she was cast as brash barmaid

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Mandy Dingle in Emmerdale.

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She then appeared

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on the crime comedy drama Hetty Wainthropp Investigates

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before turning her hand to TV presenting,

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taking You've Been Framed to audiences of 13 million.

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It wasn't long before she was gracing the Strictly dancefloor,

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where she danced her way to the semifinal.

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Since then she's become a familiar face on our TV screens,

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in dramas such as Waterloo Road and Moving On.

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Today I'm taking her back

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to a special holiday of her lifetime,

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and I can't wait till she sees the car we're going in.

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Look at the car!

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Ah! No way!

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Ah! It's the same one.

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-Oh!

-Lisa!

-Hello, Leonard.

-Give us a cuddle.

-Ah!

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-You been waiting for that?!

-Lovely...

-Lovely to see you.

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-What do you reckon?

-I can't get over it. It's like a flashback in time.

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How do they get hold of these things? It's incredible.

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I didn't think it existed.

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-To be honest, we don't let everyone know this, they're all mine.

-Oh. OK.

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They're all my cars.

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-I've got, you know, garages galore.

-A little stash?

-Yeah.

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So, where are we going?

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We are going to Bronte village, which is in Haworth.

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It's absolutely breathtaking. I think you're going to love it. Yes.

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-Haworth?

-Haworth, yes.

-You've got to say it like...

-'Owarth!

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-Drop the aitch. 'Owarth.

-'Owarth?

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-"Or, nor, daunt gore." Go on.

-Oh, no, don't go?

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You sound a bit gangsta!

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-"Or, nor, daunt gore!"

-Oh, no, don't go!

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-Well, it's a progression. Yeah.

-We'll go over it as we go along.

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-Now, what's the year?

-It's going to be 1992.

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Now, I can tell you that that was the year...

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-Prince Charles and Diana split up.

-Yes.

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-But, we... We are not splitting up, my darling.

-No.

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We are joined at the hip.

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That's the way I like it.

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To the west of Bradford and just south of Keighley

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sits the village of Haworth,

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or 'Owarth, as our Lisa would want me to say.

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It's also known as Bronte Village,

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as it was made famous by the poets and novelists

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Charlotte, Emily, and Anne,

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collectively known as the Bronte Sisters.

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They were authors of some real literary classics,

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like Charlotte's Jane Eyre

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and Emily's Wuthering Heights, back in the 1840s.

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So come with us on our Bronte adventure,

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as we act out a scene.

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-Kiss me again. And don't let me see your eyes.

-Oh!

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Dance like a dream.

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-Still got it!

-Oh, look at that. Go on.

-Look at them hips.

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And relive the age of steam. TRAIN WHISTLE

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Oh! Oh-ho-ho!

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All in the lovely village of Haworth, Bronte country.

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Before any holiday begins, you must start on a journey.

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For 16-year-old Lisa Riley,

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it was a driving adventure she was already very familiar with.

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So this, actually, wasn't a holiday as such. It was a day trip?

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Yeah. It was a day trip that happened quite a lot

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throughout the year.

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It was, like, my little safe haven.

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So, what was the attraction about going to Haworth?

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-The fact that I'm such a drama queen.

-Right.

-As you well know, Len.

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And I've got this fairytale mind.

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And, of course, the Brontes.

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-Right.

-And I love the Brontes.

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-I think, literally, in my former life, I was Emily Bronte.

-Really?

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-Yes.

-So, there was Emily, there was Charlotte, and who was the other?

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-And Anne.

-Anne was the other one.

-Yes.

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It was just, the knowledge, what they did, these three sisters.

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They had this very mysterious life and it always interests me.

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The more I read, the more I wanted to learn about them and, obviously,

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when we get there, you can see that it's there for the taking.

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-There's so much you can learn about the girls. You know?

-Yeah.

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So, who would have been in the car with you?

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The normal outing in the car would be Mum driving

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and me in the passenger seat. I'm still in the passenger seat.

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-Now, at 39, I still can't drive.

-Right.

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My brother and my dad were dragged along a lot of the time.

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You know, you can tell with blokes,

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they want to be at home watching the cricket.

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-Do you know what I mean?

-Yeah.

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They don't want to be walking up cobbled streets, looking at culture,

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-like me and Mum do.

-No.

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-So, it always became a me-and-Mum thing.

-Right.

-I liked it that way.

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She liked the same things that I did and I like same things she did.

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-So we had great days out.

-Oh, how lovely.

-Yeah.

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It's an especially precious journey for Lisa,

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as in 2012 she sadly lost her mum.

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My mum was a firecracker.

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She was called Catherine. You know Catherine wheel at bonfire night?

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That's my mum. Spinning away. Big personality. Wonderful laugh.

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Lit up a room.

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Yeah, it literally is monkey see, monkey do with me and my mum

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and I'm proud of that.

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Within my career, it was a bit like she became my PA.

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So she'd come everywhere with me when I was on tour,

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when I was filming.

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-She was my backbone. You know?

-Yeah.

-She was brilliant.

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So, she was always there by my side and helping me

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all the time, which was great.

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For Lisa and her mum, 1992 was all about getting to Haworth,

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but there was a lot of other things going on that year, too.

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Nigel Mansell became the most successful

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British Grand Prix driver of the time.

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After being crowned World Champion, he announced his retirement.

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I've been driving for 30 years,

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I represented England at the age of nine in karts.

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Here I am, 30 years later, and, you know,

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perhaps I can say it, I think I am World Champion now.

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It was the end of an era

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for Prince Charles and Princess Diana,

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who formally announced their separation.

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Today, the couple had separate engagements,

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a pattern for the future as we now know.

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The Princess of Wales showed no sign that she knew about this

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afternoon's announcement.

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Reporters tried to ask questions,

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but the Princess ignored them.

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It wasn't a great year for the Queen, either,

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as she watched fire tear through her beloved Windsor Castle,

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causing around £37 million worth of damage.

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And making it all the way to number one in the UK charts

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were American pretty boys Charles and Eddie

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with their soulful hit...

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# Look into my eyes Can't you see they're open wide?

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-# Would I lie to you, baby? Would I lie to you?

-Oh, yeah!

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# Don't you know it's true Girl, I'm in love with you

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# Would I lie to you?... #

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I think that's enough of that.

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In fact we need a bit of bit of peace and quiet,

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and where better to take five than by these wonderful moors?

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-Eh?

-See?

-Oh!

-This is proper beauty. The views and everything.

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It's the way it's, like, so completely untouched

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and they keep it that way.

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I guess this is how you would have known it

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-as a young girl coming here.

-Absolutely.

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Me and Mum, rather than take the motorway route,

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we'd take the scenic route, we'd pull in here, literally,

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and just sort of embrace that.

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-Yeah.

-Don't you find it really romantic?

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-Of course it is.

-I do.

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You know, you look at this and you can understand the Brontes

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-getting that romantic feeling in their stories.

-Absolutely.

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And the mystery of the moors.

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You can imagine it, a cold winter's night

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and that's what portrayed all the time. It's amazing.

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-And the lovely little farmers' cottages.

-Yeah.

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And all the heather.

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That's what I was saying, like, I always envisaged

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having this basket on my arm and, like,

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running through the heather and everything.

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-It'd be fantastic.

-Yeah.

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And you pray that it's, obviously, going to stay like this for ever.

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Well, why wouldn't it? Who would want to come along and spoil it?

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Because it's just perfect.

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Patrick and Mariah Bronte moved to Haworth

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with their daughters in the early 19th century.

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At that time, it was unthinkable

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that the sisters could become published authors.

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But they had other ideas.

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Johnnie Briggs knows all things Bronte.

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They're middle-class clergyman's daughters.

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They have to earn a living

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and the living that's open to them is to be a governess.

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So it's when they come together in 1845

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and make the decision that they are going to take their own place

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in the world, through their own creativity

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and writing stories and selling them for profit.

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In order for them to take their place in the commercial world -

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the world belonging to men - they had to use pseudonyms.

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They had names of Currer, Acton, and Ellis Bell.

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They never said they were men,

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but that world will always assume that they are men.

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It is the moors, this wonderful landscape,

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that is the wild workshop of their imagination.

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It's the elemental forces of nature that rage around

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this wonderful landscape

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that become the backdrop to the characters and stories.

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Back in 1992, Lisa and her mum

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had an hour-long journey from their home to Haworth,

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but the scenery alone wasn't enough to keep them entertained.

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So, what would you get up to, you and your mum?

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Usually, at traffic lights, me and Mum'd be pelting out the song,

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like, in our own little world.

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-Oh right.

-Never bothered at all.

-Yeah.

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-So, you'd have a little singsong, would you?

-Oh yeah. Always.

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-We love a singsong.

-I've got a CD in here.

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Let me see if I can get this old thing going a bit.

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I think it's that.

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Wait a minute.

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Oh! It's jazz hands!

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# Life's candy and the sun's A ball of butter... #

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-It's Barbara!

-Yes!

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# Don't bring around a cloud To rain on my parade!

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# Don't tell me not to fly I've simply got to

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# If someone takes a spill It's me and not you!

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# Who told you you're allowed To rain

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# On my parade? #

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Now we kick!

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-# I'll march my band out... #

-Proper jazz hands!

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# I'll beat my drum... #

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On the drums!

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# And if I'm fanned out Your turn at bat, sir

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# At least I didn't fake it,

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# Hat, Sir, I guess I didn't make it!

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# Get ready for me now Cos I'm a comer

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# I simply gotta march My heart's a drummer!

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-# Don't bring around a cloud To rain on my parade!

-Parade!

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# I'm gonna live and live now

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# Get what I want and know how... #

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-Do you like it?

-I love it.

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-Honestly!

-Proper stage school.

-Yeah!

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Here comes the big bit now. The big finale.

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# ..wham! One shot, one gunshot and bam!

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# Hey, Mr Arnstein

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# Here...I...am! #

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-Way-hey!

-I love it! I love it! Aah!

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Ah! It was like sitting next to Barbara,

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-going across the moors.

-Oh, you flatter me. You flatter me, Len!

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You flatter me!

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When the Brontes first moved to Haworth in the 1820s,

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they lived here in a building called The Parsonage.

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It's now a museum dedicated to all things Bronte,

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and is the first place to go for any Bronte fan.

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It was top of Lisa's list when she came here, back in '92.

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Oh-ho! Lisa!

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Oh, look! See, it's how I remember it.

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Oh, it's just amazing.

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-It's hard to imagine that they would have been in this garden.

-I know.

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-You know? It's just...

-Oh, look!

-Incredible.

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-Sir, could I align you in, please?

-Never!

-Come on, sir.

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-Please, enter the house.

-Catherine, please.

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Oh, thank you, sir.

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Love it!

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The Parsonage has been lovingly restored

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to how it would have been when the Brontes lived here.

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They've even got the original furniture the family used.

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The dining room is usually cordoned off,

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but I've managed to pull a few strings to get us special access.

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So, this is the dining room.

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The Bronte sisters must have sat here.

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-Well, in that chair.

-I know. I can't believe I'm here.

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As a kid, I stood behind the barriers,

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like, never being allowed to even go near.

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Now I'm sat at the table where the girls would have written everything.

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-It's amazing.

-Well, contain yourself.

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There something else just going to come in.

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-Oh-ho!

-Oh, Len!

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The first edition Wuthering Heights.

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This is normally in a cabinet and they're here.

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I really want to touch them.

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Well, you can't. You can look at them.

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-So, look, we've got Wuthering Heights.

-Yeah.

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All the first editions.

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-I can't believe it.

-You nearly touched them, then. Go on. No!

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-You know me.

-Naughty-naughty-noo-noo.

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I can't come here and not do that. This is, like, my idea of heaven.

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My ultimate favourite is, obviously, Wuthering Heights.

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You know, and my fantasy brain, me skipping through the moors.

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You know, wind in my hair. Just as Cathy would be there.

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Waiting, waiting for Heathcliff to just rescue me.

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Do you think it was your love of the Brontes

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and the books that got you wanting to act?

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I really feel that the Brontes really put it in my head

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to the literacy side and the performance side

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and me wanting to be them and to react and be the actress,

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you know, that they created in these brilliant books. Yeah.

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I think it really put me on the map.

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-As a child, were you always in sort of an acting fantasy world?

-Yes.

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Dressing up?

0:16:440:16:45

When I was a kid, everything was fantasy and, literally,

0:16:450:16:48

I'd put my grandma's heels on.

0:16:480:16:49

I loved the clanking of the heels, being like a dolly, and everything.

0:16:490:16:52

Everything was fairytale and a performance.

0:16:520:16:54

That's what I loved. All the time.

0:16:540:16:56

Again, that's what drove me then to join drama school.

0:16:560:16:58

It was inevitable.

0:16:580:17:00

I want to recreate that early childhood Bronte passion.

0:17:000:17:03

and I've got the perfect way to do it.

0:17:030:17:07

I thought, maybe, we could re-enact a scene from Wuthering Heights.

0:17:070:17:12

-Oh! Amazing. Yes.

-So...

0:17:120:17:14

Oh, I love it! I love it! It's like dressing up!

0:17:160:17:18

Look at you. See?

0:17:200:17:22

This is a wee bit small for my size.

0:17:220:17:24

-Oh no!

-Do you love it?

-I love doing it. Honestly!

0:17:250:17:30

-Could I be one of the sisters? Literally.

-Yes!

0:17:300:17:33

I've got some script here.

0:17:330:17:35

I have not broken your heart. You have broken it.

0:17:350:17:38

Do I want to live? What kind of living would it be? When you...

0:17:380:17:42

Oh, God!

0:17:420:17:44

Would you have to... Shut up! This is serious. I'm not having it.

0:17:440:17:49

-Loving it.

-No. You've ruined it.

-Yeah. Sorry.

-So...

0:17:490:17:51

And the Bafta for best interpretation goes to Len.

0:17:510:17:54

-So, we now go to the pink bit, which is you.

-OK.

0:17:540:17:57

"Oh, let me alone, let me alone," sobbed Catherine.

0:17:580:18:02

That's the narrator, "But I've done wrong,

0:18:020:18:04

"I'm dying for it. Is it love?

0:18:040:18:06

"You left me too, but I won't upbraid you. I forgive you.

0:18:060:18:12

"Forgive me."

0:18:120:18:14

SHE GASPS

0:18:140:18:16

-It's like real! That was like, really proper.

-Yeah.

0:18:160:18:19

"It is hard to forgive.

0:18:200:18:22

"And to look at those eyes and feel those wasted hands.

0:18:220:18:27

"My answer, kiss me again and don't let me see your eyes."

0:18:280:18:33

Oh!

0:18:330:18:34

-I was going to give you a full-on...

-Ah, snog!

-No, I'm not.

0:18:340:18:40

'It was like we were back in the 1800s, but, do you know what?

0:18:400:18:44

'I think I'll stick to my dancing.'

0:18:440:18:47

There's more to these parts than the Brontes.

0:18:490:18:51

That's why I've put together seven of the best things to see and do.

0:18:510:18:56

Set in the top of the historic Main Street of Howarth is a little

0:18:570:19:01

shop that's been supplying sweeties for as long as anyone can remember.

0:19:010:19:05

Beightons traditional sweet shop is an Aladdin's

0:19:050:19:09

cave of candy that will take you right back to your childhood.

0:19:090:19:13

Then why not take a ride on the Shipley Glen cable tramway?

0:19:130:19:17

It's Britain's oldest cable-hauled tramway not on cliff

0:19:170:19:21

and was built by a local entrepreneur.

0:19:210:19:24

Richard Freeman is on track with the facts.

0:19:240:19:27

The tramway was first

0:19:270:19:29

opened on the 18th of May 1895,

0:19:290:19:31

when it was built by a local entrepreneur called Sam Wilson.

0:19:310:19:35

And it was built to transport passengers from where we're

0:19:350:19:39

standing now, into the bottom of Shipley Glen.

0:19:390:19:43

The tramway itself has a 20-inch rail,

0:19:430:19:46

the distance between the top and bottom stations is only

0:19:460:19:49

a quarter of a mile. It takes 2¼ minutes.

0:19:490:19:53

We had 22,000 passengers in 2015, which is quite

0:19:530:19:56

remarkable for a small organisation running Saturdays and Sundays.

0:19:560:20:01

'It wasn't just the Bronte sisters that attracted Lisa and her mum

0:20:030:20:07

'to Howarth in 1992, either -

0:20:070:20:09

'a visit to this shop was high up on the itinerary.

0:20:090:20:12

'It's crammed with the sort of spiritual books,

0:20:120:20:15

'cards and gems that the young Lisa loved.'

0:20:150:20:19

-Now, changing the subject somewhat...

-Yeah.

0:20:190:20:23

What is it about this shop that you, you know,

0:20:230:20:26

liked always to come back to?

0:20:260:20:28

Yeah, I've always been, since a very little girl, very spiritual

0:20:280:20:32

and I've loved crystals and energies and auras.

0:20:320:20:35

So we'd always come in here, every time we came to Howarth.

0:20:350:20:38

And I'd always want a trinket or a new crystal or a new pendant

0:20:380:20:41

or new books and stuff.

0:20:410:20:43

But the best time we ever came, we came in the shop

0:20:430:20:46

and I was like, "I really want to start doing angel readings."

0:20:460:20:48

Cos I think that everyone has an angel on their shoulder in life.

0:20:480:20:51

-They're everywhere.

-Yeah.

0:20:510:20:53

And so we came in the shop and, basically, I was like,

0:20:530:20:55

"I want angel cards."

0:20:550:20:57

-To this day I still use them and I love them.

-Do you?

-Yeah.

0:20:570:21:00

-Is there any here?

-Well, because I knew we were coming to Haworth

0:21:000:21:04

and we might come near here, I've brought my angel cards,

0:21:040:21:07

-which were actually bought in this very store.

-Right.

0:21:070:21:10

Shall we see how many angels are around you today?

0:21:100:21:13

-I'm sure that I'm loaded.

-You are, course you are.

-Yeah.

0:21:130:21:16

Right, well, you give them a tiny little shuffle.

0:21:160:21:19

So I'm going to just do your three cards the way I do it and,

0:21:190:21:22

hopefully, your angels are going to give you a nice little message.

0:21:220:21:26

-OK, oh.

-So, basically, you go through there and you drag me

0:21:260:21:28

out three cards, wherever you're feeling the energy from.

0:21:280:21:31

Put one to the left, one in the middle and one at the side.

0:21:310:21:34

That's your first one, yeah. Now, middle one.

0:21:340:21:37

And then the third one on the side, wherever you're getting the feeling from.

0:21:370:21:40

-I'm going to have that top one.

-You're having the top one?

0:21:400:21:43

Brilliant. OK, so, let's have a little look at this one.

0:21:430:21:45

-So, you've got Body Care.

-Oh, oh!

0:21:450:21:48

Oh, you're so ripped, Leonard. You're so ripped.

0:21:480:21:50

-Body Care.

-Body Care.

-Well, that's got me in one, actually.

0:21:500:21:53

Right, let's see what they're saying.

0:21:530:21:55

So, they're saying, "The angels urge you to care for your physical body.

0:21:550:21:59

"You are asked to eat healthy foods and exercise regularly

0:21:590:22:02

"and avoid toxins." Happy with that one?

0:22:020:22:05

That's your middle one. Playfulness! Oh, that's me and you.

0:22:050:22:07

-Oh, yeah!

-That's me and you, isn't it?

-Yeah, yeah!

0:22:070:22:09

Right, let's see what they're saying to you. So, Playfulness.

0:22:090:22:12

"Fun and play is the Angel's way.

0:22:120:22:14

"They are now guiding you to add fun to your life..."

0:22:140:22:18

-Evidently - I'm here.

-Yeah.

-Thank you.

0:22:180:22:20

"..and to know that fun is also a necessity, not just a luxury."

0:22:200:22:24

-That's lovely.

-Wow, that is good.

-See?

0:22:240:22:27

OK, now, your third and final one.

0:22:270:22:28

-Yeah.

-Children. OK, so, the angels are saying,

0:22:280:22:31

"New children may be coming into your life very soon."

0:22:310:22:34

-Oh.

-Do you know what?

-Go on, go on.

0:22:340:22:37

-Five weeks ago...

-Yeah?

-..Alice came into the world,

0:22:380:22:43

my first grandchild.

0:22:430:22:45

-Aw, Len!

-I wonder if that's that.

-Yeah, see.

-Little Alice.

0:22:450:22:49

-I like it.

-Aw, see.

0:22:490:22:51

Now, I'll tell you what I'm going to do, I'd like you to shuffle them.

0:22:510:22:55

OK.

0:22:550:22:57

-Shuffle away, OK. Careful.

-Careful.

-Yeah, now, take three.

0:22:570:23:01

-OK, oh, OK, OK.

-SHE WINCES

0:23:010:23:05

-Take three. One, oh, yes.

-One.

-Two.

0:23:050:23:09

-Two.

-And a number three. Up here?

-Three, thank you, Len.

0:23:090:23:13

-OK, thank you.

-Are you doing me a reading? Oh.

0:23:130:23:17

-Focus, oh.

-Focus.

0:23:170:23:20

-"Think about what you want..."

-Yeah?

0:23:200:23:23

-"..not what you don't want."

-Love it.

0:23:230:23:26

-Next one.

-OK, next one.

0:23:260:23:28

-Listening, oh.

-Listening!

0:23:280:23:30

"This card is a validation from your angels

0:23:300:23:35

"that you are really listening

0:23:350:23:39

"to old Len Goodman.

0:23:390:23:41

-"And pay attention very carefully..."

-Yes?

0:23:410:23:45

-"Focus and listen."

-OK.

0:23:450:23:49

-Last one.

-You're very good at this, Len, I'm very impressed.

0:23:490:23:54

-Romance, oh!

-Romance, oh, yes.

-Love is in the air.

0:23:540:23:58

"This card signifies that your angels have heard your appeals

0:23:580:24:02

"for romance and you are going to be taken with Len Goodman,

0:24:020:24:09

"who you will focus on throughout and listen to..."

0:24:090:24:12

-Yeah.

-"..for a nice cup of tea and some cake."

0:24:120:24:16

Oh, now you're talking!

0:24:160:24:18

-Now you're making me happy.

-So, here we go. Put your cards away.

0:24:180:24:23

-Oh, cup of tea and a cake?

-Now you've got me.

-Yeah, see!

0:24:230:24:28

'These angels have got me all aflutter, I tell you.'

0:24:280:24:31

Now, no holiday is complete without sampling the local food.

0:24:310:24:35

When Lisa and her family came to Howarth in 1992, there was

0:24:350:24:39

one place they'd always visit.

0:24:390:24:42

-So, was this the tearooms you came to?

-Absolutely.

0:24:420:24:46

You can't come to Howarth and not have a lovely pot of tea

0:24:460:24:48

and a little treat, as well.

0:24:480:24:50

-We'd always come somewhere like this every time we came, yeah.

-Yeah?

0:24:500:24:53

When did you get your first big break?

0:24:530:24:56

My first big break was, obviously, Emmerdale, playing Mandy Dingle.

0:24:560:25:00

-Oh!

-Yeah, when I got Mandy, literally, I was put on the map.

0:25:000:25:04

You know, brilliant storylines,

0:25:040:25:06

met brilliant actors that I got to work with.

0:25:060:25:09

And Mandy was only for one episode, you know, originally.

0:25:090:25:12

Only one ever for one, yeah.

0:25:120:25:14

-You were there for one episode and you did seven and a half years?

-Yes.

0:25:140:25:16

So, they brought me back and brought me back again.

0:25:160:25:19

And they said, "Do you want a year's contract?"

0:25:190:25:21

Of course, I said yeah,

0:25:210:25:23

-and there I was, seven and a half years later...

-Ah!

0:25:230:25:25

..with, as I'm told, one of the most popular soap

0:25:250:25:27

-characters in history, which I'm very proud of.

-Yeah.

0:25:270:25:30

Yeah. It was crazy, Len, honestly.

0:25:300:25:32

I remember, at the time, going into my local supermarket,

0:25:320:25:34

and, literally, cos it was my storyline,

0:25:340:25:36

my face was on the front cover of every single TV magazine.

0:25:360:25:40

-Yeah.

-And, of course, my life flipped from that very day.

-Yeah.

0:25:400:25:43

-Do you fancy a cake?

-It'd be rude not to.

-It would, wouldn't it?

0:25:430:25:47

SHE LAUGHS

0:25:470:25:48

-I'll just call for the cake, I think.

-Oh.

0:25:480:25:51

Cake? Cake! Cake time, please!

0:25:510:25:55

Bring on the cake!

0:25:550:25:56

-You have such power, Len.

-I know.

0:25:560:25:59

'Ho-ho-ho, yum, yum, pig's bum, you can't have none!'

0:25:590:26:03

-Oh, look at that!

-Oh!

0:26:030:26:05

Heaven, heaven on an actual tray.

0:26:050:26:08

What was your favourite moment on Emmerdale?

0:26:080:26:11

Oh, favourite moment on Emmerdale...

0:26:110:26:13

There's so many, after all those years. But, I have to say,

0:26:130:26:16

because it's, of course, what the public wanted as well,

0:26:160:26:18

was when they married Mandy and Paddy off.

0:26:180:26:21

The writers tormented it and tormented it, over and over again.

0:26:210:26:24

You know, we broke up, got back together and then, finally,

0:26:240:26:27

they married us off.

0:26:270:26:29

And true Mandy style, where did I spend my wedding night?

0:26:290:26:32

-In prison, of course I did.

-Yeah, of course.

-Of course I did.

0:26:320:26:35

Yeah, so, that's definitely my favourite moment.

0:26:350:26:37

But, after Emmerdale, Lisa went on to even greater things,

0:26:370:26:40

hosting one of ITV's biggest entertainment shows.

0:26:400:26:44

Of course, You've Been Framed, you thought Jeremy Beadle.

0:26:450:26:50

-Yeah.

-And suddenly, he's gone, so it must have been a bit of anxiety.

0:26:500:26:53

Of course, the pressure was on.

0:26:530:26:55

You know, it's prime time, Saturday night.

0:26:550:26:57

Taking over from Jeremy Beadle,

0:26:570:26:59

who'd done brilliant on the show and it was very successful.

0:26:590:27:02

So, yeah, I went out there, was myself, had a ball, loved every

0:27:020:27:06

minute of it and the next thing, the figures of the show soared.

0:27:060:27:10

-Ooh, come on!

-And everybody accepted me. Yeah, it was brilliant.

0:27:100:27:15

The pressure was off then, so it was like, everyone's accepted me

0:27:150:27:18

doing the show, so keep going as I can. It was ace.

0:27:180:27:22

Almost as ace as this lovely spread.

0:27:220:27:25

While we finish off the scones, it's time for the next instalment

0:27:300:27:33

of my seven top tips for a heavenly trip in and around Howarth.

0:27:330:27:38

Bolton Abbey is in the heart of the Yorkshire Dales,

0:27:390:27:42

on the banks of the River Worth.

0:27:420:27:44

You can explore the ruins of this ancient priory

0:27:440:27:47

and discover a landscape full of history and legend.

0:27:470:27:51

Oakworth is a Pennine village, overlooking the Worth Valley.

0:27:510:27:55

Its historic railway station was a filming

0:27:550:27:57

location for the classic 1970 film version of The Railway Children.

0:27:570:28:02

Graham Mitchell is taking the platform.

0:28:020:28:05

Well, I was lucky enough to be cast as the train guard on most

0:28:050:28:08

of the sequences that were taken

0:28:080:28:10

here, at Oakworth Station.

0:28:100:28:12

One of many volunteers from Keighley and Worth Valley Railway

0:28:120:28:15

Preservation Society who were called in to operate

0:28:150:28:18

the trains during the filming.

0:28:180:28:21

Oakworth Station is the most visited place in the village,

0:28:210:28:24

of course, because of The Railway Children film itself.

0:28:240:28:27

And the Railway Society has gone to great lengths to maintain

0:28:270:28:30

this station as it would have been in 1905, which is exactly

0:28:300:28:33

the time when The Railway Children is supposed to have taken place.

0:28:330:28:37

Well, this area is steeped in literary history, isn't it?

0:28:440:28:49

And our Lisa was obviously inspired.

0:28:490:28:52

'And, now, we've seen her in dozens of challenging

0:28:520:28:55

'and intriguing roles.'

0:28:550:28:56

So, you know, there you are on Emmerdale, right.

0:28:560:28:59

-You're there for seven years, or so.

-Yeah.

-Yeah.

0:28:590:29:03

-It was pretty secure.

-Yeah.

0:29:030:29:05

And yet, you said, "No, I'm going to move on."

0:29:050:29:08

-Yeah.

-That's a really brave thing to do. What made you want to do that?

0:29:080:29:13

Curiosity, from what I was taught at drama school, that there

0:29:130:29:16

are hundreds of thousands of scripts out there to be read,

0:29:160:29:20

you know, hundreds of thousands of parts to be played.

0:29:200:29:23

There's so many elements - hosting, radio, film -

0:29:230:29:26

within in our industry, you know, dancing...

0:29:260:29:28

-Yes.

-..that we can do.

0:29:280:29:30

Yeah, but you didn't take the easy option, you've done some

0:29:300:29:33

pretty hair-raising and dangerous parts, really, haven't you?

0:29:330:29:37

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

0:29:370:29:39

They're real people. I like playing real characters.

0:29:390:29:42

My proudest moment was, certainly, when I did Fat Friends.

0:29:420:29:46

When I got this call that they had this part in mind, of Rebecca,

0:29:460:29:48

very tragic soul, self-harmer and all that.

0:29:480:29:51

And it was that deglamorization and I wanted to get in there, with

0:29:510:29:55

-the glasses, looking horrendous, but that's the person she was.

-Yeah.

0:29:550:29:59

That was the character.

0:29:590:30:01

And when your peers ring you up and go, "Do you know what, Lis?

0:30:010:30:04

"You did good there."

0:30:040:30:06

-That's...

-Yeah.

-That's... Money can't buy that.

-No.

0:30:060:30:08

-That's a really special, special thing.

-Yeah.

0:30:080:30:11

Do you know, I think that shows a lot about your character.

0:30:110:30:15

That you're brave. You're not...

0:30:150:30:18

You don't play it safe, you don't go for the roles where you

0:30:180:30:22

-come across all sweet, innocent and charming.

-No.

0:30:220:30:25

I think it shows a lot about you and what you're made of.

0:30:250:30:29

-Shall we wander on, lonely as a cloud?

-Aw!

0:30:290:30:31

-See, a little bit of Wordsworth.

-Look, see! Very impressed.

-Yeah.

0:30:310:30:35

Well, come on, then.

0:30:350:30:38

Lovely. Do you know what? This is like a green dance floor.

0:30:380:30:45

Now, I know it was a while back you did the old Strictly,

0:30:460:30:49

but you were terrific on it. SHE LAUGHS

0:30:490:30:52

Now, do you remember any salsa?

0:30:520:30:55

HE SINGS TO HIMSELF

0:30:550:30:58

-Still got it.

-Oh, look at that!

0:30:590:31:02

Go on, girl!

0:31:020:31:04

Look at them hips!

0:31:040:31:06

HE SINGS SALSA TUNE

0:31:060:31:10

And underneath you go!

0:31:130:31:15

Oh!

0:31:150:31:18

-I'm dancing with Len!

-Whoa!

-I love it!

0:31:180:31:22

-Love it.

-Ha-hey!

0:31:220:31:25

-Thank you!

-Ta-da!

0:31:250:31:29

-Oh, just dancing the day away.

-Dancing the day away.

0:31:290:31:32

'As Brucey might say, didn't she do well?'

0:31:320:31:35

With its cobbled streets and vintage architecture,

0:31:400:31:44

it's easy to see why thousands of visitors flock to Haworth each year.

0:31:440:31:48

But it's not just a tourist destination -

0:31:480:31:51

it's also home to over 6,000 people.

0:31:510:31:54

Local resident and shop owner Julie Rhodes has watched Haworth

0:31:540:31:57

change over the years.

0:31:570:31:59

Well, I've lived in Haworth all my life.

0:31:590:32:01

So I've certainly seen quite a lot of changes, from Haworth being

0:32:010:32:05

a real sort of industrial place with operational mills.

0:32:050:32:10

Everybody's mother seemed to work in the mills.

0:32:100:32:13

We had, probably, four or five mills then in the area that were

0:32:130:32:16

working, still into textiles.

0:32:160:32:20

A lot of the roads were rough and unmade.

0:32:200:32:24

It's only in the last, probably even, 30,

0:32:240:32:27

35 years where these roads have been tarmac.

0:32:270:32:31

You sort of went through a transition period, the '60s,

0:32:310:32:34

the '70s, to the '80s.

0:32:340:32:37

It's become more of a sort of leisure destination.

0:32:370:32:41

Not just for tourists, but for people that live in the area.

0:32:410:32:45

I'm in Yorkshire with Lisa Riley,

0:32:480:32:51

retracing her childhood holiday of 1992. Inside the St Michael

0:32:510:32:56

and All Angels' Church is the Bronte Memorial Chapel.

0:32:560:32:59

It was here that Patrick Bronte, the father of the sisters,

0:32:590:33:03

worked for over 40 years. He was a campaigner and secured clean

0:33:030:33:08

water for residents and also built a Sunday school.

0:33:080:33:11

Well, of course, this is the church where the Brontes used to pray

0:33:110:33:15

-and their father was the minister.

-Yeah.

0:33:150:33:20

This place, more than anywhere in Bronte village, means

0:33:200:33:23

the most to me, cos it's the one I'm so connected to with my mum here.

0:33:230:33:26

-Yeah.

-Like, more than anywhere.

0:33:260:33:28

-And, also, obviously, the Bronte girls are buried here.

-Yeah.

0:33:280:33:31

I think whenever you speak to people, friends and family

0:33:310:33:34

of mine that have been to Bronte village, the first thing they say is,

0:33:340:33:37

-"Did you go to the church?"

-Yeah.

0:33:370:33:39

The first thing, because of the history here and the fact that the girls are laid here.

0:33:390:33:43

-Yeah.

-And, as a family, the leader of the pack, you know, was the dad.

0:33:430:33:47

-This was his workplace.

-Yeah.

-You know, day in, day out.

0:33:470:33:51

-And there is a little plaque down the bottom there.

-Yeah.

0:33:510:33:55

-Shall we go and have a look?

-Yeah, come on.

0:33:550:33:58

So, here we are, Len. This is the plaque.

0:33:590:34:02

Obviously, Emily and Charlotte.

0:34:020:34:04

-Yeah, and they were so young, weren't they?

-Yeah.

0:34:040:34:07

-Emily's 30.

-Yeah.

0:34:070:34:09

And Charlotte is nearly 39.

0:34:090:34:12

-Yeah, it's very cold in the north, Len.

-Yeah.

0:34:120:34:14

They got cold very, very quickly.

0:34:140:34:17

I think this chapel is a very special place for you.

0:34:170:34:20

Yeah, I think the girls lost their mum from a very young age

0:34:220:34:27

-and they were successful and I lost my mum.

-Yeah.

0:34:270:34:30

Coming here with Mum, it's very close to my heart,

0:34:300:34:33

-so I have a real sense of belonging here. It's lovely.

-Yeah.

0:34:330:34:36

You know, I used to go with my mum to the seaside, to Broadstairs.

0:34:360:34:42

And whenever I go there now, I always feel a bit closer to my mum.

0:34:420:34:46

I do, I know. There's a real feeling I've got today

0:34:460:34:49

and that's what I love about it. Because the memories that

0:34:490:34:51

you've given me, by not only coming to Haworth and Bronte village,

0:34:510:34:54

but here, especially, the chapel, means the world to me.

0:34:540:34:58

It was mine and my mum's little safe haven.

0:34:580:35:00

-Yeah, it's lovely.

-Thank you.

0:35:000:35:03

Haworth really does have emotional memories for Lisa,

0:35:030:35:06

but there's something she didn't get to do when she came here in '92.

0:35:060:35:10

While we head there,

0:35:140:35:16

here's the final instalment of my seven tips for any visit to Haworth.

0:35:160:35:21

Bingley Five-Rise lock staircase is the most spectacular

0:35:210:35:24

feature of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal.

0:35:240:35:27

Rising 60 feet into the air, each lock opens from one to another,

0:35:270:35:32

with the top gate becoming the bottom to the next.

0:35:320:35:35

That calls for some careful canal manoeuvring.

0:35:350:35:38

Eureka!

0:35:380:35:40

Hey, that's the name of The National Children's Museum.

0:35:400:35:43

It has hundreds of interactive, hands-on exhibits

0:35:430:35:46

designed to keep little ones entertained for hours.

0:35:460:35:49

And if you're the big kid who wants to relive playtime,

0:35:490:35:53

then take a trip down memory lane to the Illkley Toy Museum,

0:35:530:35:57

where there's over 2,000 years of history to be found.

0:35:570:36:00

Alex is the top dog in this toy town.

0:36:000:36:03

The Toy Museum is a private

0:36:030:36:05

collection of myself and my husband.

0:36:050:36:07

We've been collecting about 20 years

0:36:070:36:09

and the museum's been open about 13 years.

0:36:090:36:12

We started with board games and small cars, such as Dinky's

0:36:120:36:16

and Corgi's.

0:36:160:36:18

Then we moved on to dolls' houses and the miniature Victorian shops

0:36:180:36:23

and houses that you see.

0:36:230:36:25

So, the oldest item is a small terracotta doll from Greece,

0:36:250:36:29

4th century BC.

0:36:290:36:32

It's a little dancing doll, which would've been

0:36:320:36:34

hung on the end of a stick and moved to look as if it was dancing.

0:36:340:36:38

The Keighley and Worth Valley Railway runs through

0:36:430:36:46

the heart of Bronte country and was opened in 1867.

0:36:460:36:50

It's now preserved as a heritage railway line.

0:36:500:36:53

Teenage Lisa didn't get to appreciate it back in '92,

0:36:530:36:57

but I think we can make up for that today.

0:36:570:36:59

Ho-ho-ho! Oh, I've got a treat in store for you.

0:37:010:37:05

-Right, what's this?

-Oh, no!

0:37:050:37:07

-Well, you know, I've loved it, we've done the Brontes.

-Yeah.

0:37:070:37:11

Right, and I thought, "Let's do something maybe a little bit

0:37:110:37:14

-"different."

-OK.

0:37:140:37:15

The train. Now, Oh, no, not just any old train, the steam train.

0:37:150:37:21

-Oh, lovely.

-Chugging along, through the Yorkshire Moors.

-Sounds perfect!

0:37:210:37:27

-Come on.

-Shall we?

-Yeah!

-Fab, come on.

0:37:270:37:29

'This steam-blowing beauty entered service in 1920

0:37:310:37:34

'and spent 45 years thundering across the country.'

0:37:340:37:38

Now, it's fully restored to its former glory.

0:37:380:37:42

Look, "Built 1920."

0:37:420:37:44

-There you are, in Derby.

-Yes.

0:37:440:37:46

-Isn't that fabulous?

-Yeah, you can smell it, can't you?

-Yeah.

0:37:460:37:49

-Aw, I love it.

-Look at that.

0:37:490:37:52

Making it move still involved shovelling

0:37:520:37:54

shed-loads of coal into the furnace.

0:37:540:37:57

'But can Lisa and I do it as good as steam fireman Ralph?'

0:37:570:38:00

-Now, wait a minute, Lisa.

-Yes.

0:38:000:38:02

-20 seconds, who can shovel the most coal in?

-Oh, OK.

-Ladies first.

-Yes.

0:38:020:38:07

-You ready, Ralph? Ready, Lisa?

-Yeah, I'm ready!

0:38:070:38:10

And...go.

0:38:100:38:11

Oh, it's heavy, it's heavy.

0:38:110:38:15

Oh, see.

0:38:150:38:17

Oh, it's well heavy!

0:38:180:38:22

-Go on, Lis!

-Go on, see!

0:38:220:38:24

-Go on, girl, get your back behind it.

-See.

0:38:240:38:26

-Five...

-Oh, oh!

-..four...

-OK, OK!

0:38:260:38:28

..three, two,

0:38:280:38:30

-that's it!

-And how many was that?

0:38:300:38:33

That was about 85 shovels.

0:38:330:38:35

-A likely story.

-Yeah, yeah.

0:38:350:38:38

-Come on, Len, how many was it?

-Move over.

-I got my hands dirty.

0:38:380:38:40

Here I go.

0:38:400:38:42

Oh, Len, that was just... I had five bits on mine,

0:38:420:38:47

he's doing one by one.

0:38:470:38:48

-I think we know who's won this already, don't we?

-Yeah, yeah.

0:38:480:38:52

-Don't be vulgar.

-Not only have I won...

0:38:520:38:56

-That's a proper amount of coal.

-Put your back into it, Leonard.

0:38:560:39:00

LISA LAUGHS

0:39:000:39:02

One thing, we may hoot the hooter?

0:39:020:39:05

Yes!

0:39:050:39:07

-Yeah, go on.

-OK.

-Don't burn yourself on that.

0:39:070:39:09

TRAIN WHISTLE

0:39:090:39:11

Oh! That was ace!

0:39:110:39:13

It was supposed to be a little hoot!

0:39:130:39:16

With the train fired up, no thanks to me, we're ready to go,

0:39:160:39:19

so we'd better take our seats.

0:39:190:39:21

And, while the gorgeous scenery goes by,

0:39:210:39:23

we'll have one final chat about my mate Lisa's fascinating career.

0:39:230:39:27

-Now, you've done TV...

-Yeah.

0:39:270:39:29

..you've done stage, you've been on the television,

0:39:290:39:33

which do you prefer, is there one that you love the most?

0:39:330:39:37

What I love this most is the P word, and it's performing.

0:39:370:39:41

Whether that be film, television, radio, telly, you know,

0:39:410:39:44

I'm just so blessed to do what I love.

0:39:440:39:46

People say, "What are you? Are you an actress?"

0:39:460:39:48

Are you this, that and the other? And I'm just a performer.

0:39:480:39:51

-Yeah.

-I love doing everything that the industry involves, really.

0:39:510:39:54

-Yeah.

-And I'm blessed that I get to do it.

-Right.

0:39:540:39:57

You've been in some massive programmes -

0:39:570:40:00

is there anything you think, "If I could, I'd love to do..."

0:40:000:40:06

-Something, or...

-Yeah.

-Yeah?

-My ultimate dream would be

0:40:060:40:11

a period drama, it really would.

0:40:110:40:13

You know, down in the kitchen, with the hair, with the mop cap,

0:40:130:40:17

-the corset, no teeth.

-Yeah, yeah.

-I'd love to do something like that.

0:40:170:40:21

-That would be great, it really, really would.

-Yeah.

0:40:210:40:23

Well, we've touched on it before, do you think your day

0:40:230:40:26

with your mum in Haworth helped to shape who you became?

0:40:260:40:32

Oh, completely, because mum always let me be who I wanted to be.

0:40:320:40:36

If I wanted to skip round the church and do little role-plays and stuff, she let me.

0:40:360:40:41

Or stand outside the apothecary on the high street in Haworth, you know.

0:40:410:40:45

-Yeah.

-She'd let me be silly and do these characters.

0:40:450:40:47

-That set me up for the person I am today.

-Yeah.

0:40:470:40:51

-Let me get out. Take my hand, madam.

-Aw!

-How was that?

0:40:510:40:57

-Wonderful.

-Wasn't that great?

-A train journey with a true gentleman.

0:40:570:41:01

-Oh, you and I.

-It's been amazing.

-Oh, it was like Brief Encounter.

0:41:010:41:05

You were brief and I was an encounter.

0:41:050:41:07

Exactly!

0:41:070:41:10

'It's been really lovely to spend the day with Lisa and rekindle

0:41:120:41:16

'those wonderful memories of her holiday, back in 1992.

0:41:160:41:20

'There was drama...'

0:41:200:41:22

Kiss me again and don't let me see your eyes.

0:41:220:41:26

'..and some dancing...'

0:41:270:41:29

-Still got it.

-Oh, look at that.

0:41:290:41:31

-Still got it.

-Go on, girl.

-Look at those hips!

0:41:310:41:33

'..as we boarded a train down memory lane.'

0:41:330:41:36

-TRAIN WHISTLE

-Oh!

0:41:360:41:39

-Lisa, I've had a fantastic day.

-So have I, it's been awesome.

0:41:430:41:49

Yeah.

0:41:490:41:51

And, listen, I know you used to share this day with your mum

0:41:510:41:55

and I hope, in a little way, I've taken over from your mum.

0:41:550:41:59

It's been so, so fabulous.

0:41:590:42:01

-It has and she'd be so proud, honestly, Len.

-Oh, great.

0:42:010:42:04

-Yeah, thank you.

-Great.

0:42:040:42:06

Now, talking of memory, this is a scrapbook of all our day together.

0:42:060:42:12

Oh, wonderful.

0:42:120:42:14

-So it's a book of memories.

-A lovely book of memories.

0:42:140:42:17

For Lisa, a photographic memento of our trip to Haworth,

0:42:190:42:23

which will help her remember our Bronte-inspired adventure.

0:42:230:42:27

But I can't leave without giving her something

0:42:270:42:29

nostalgic for the journey home.

0:42:290:42:31

-Do you remember when we set off?

-Yeah?

0:42:310:42:33

-And we had a little singsong?

-Oh, yeah, yeah.

0:42:330:42:36

SHE LAUGHS

0:42:360:42:38

-Barbra Streisand.

-Barbra Streisand's Greatest Hits.

0:42:380:42:41

-Oh! On cassette?

-On cassette, I'm sure you've got a cassette player.

-Yeah.

0:42:410:42:46

-An MP3 cassette player.

-Yeah.

-One of them, yeah.

0:42:460:42:49

-Aw, Len, that's gorgeous.

-Oh, it has been a lovely day. Thanks a million.

0:42:490:42:54

Thank you, darling. Aw, you're a gem.

0:42:540:42:58

'It's goodbye from Haworth and the summer of 1992.'

0:42:580:43:02

A truly special place that Lisa shared with her mum, that will

0:43:020:43:05

remain for ever in her heart.

0:43:050:43:08

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