Bob Hoskins offers his unvarnished opinion on the architectural dilemmas facing the South Bank. Collection: Beautiful South.
Omnibus
1982 | 50m
Bob Hoskins offers his unvarnished opinion on the architectural dilemmas facing the South Bank.
Collection: Building the South Bank
Collection: Beautiful South
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Throwback: Bob Hoskins talks about urban planning in London’s South BankBy WILLIAM MENKING • Friday May 10, 2019The actor Bob Hoskins was the star of the 1980 film, The Long Good Friday, a London gangster movie that reflected on major anxieties, opportunities, and economic changes taking place in the U.K. In 1982 Hoskins led Barry Norman and the BBC on a riverside walk along the South Bank, and while pointing to new concrete office blocks he calls “Mars Bars” he confronts change in the guise of urban development along the Thames.The coming redevelopment Hoskins claims (and was he ever right) will make the 1960s “redevelopment epidemic look like a rash.” Next to a Coin Street vacant lot, once the site of row houses, but torn down for the 1951 Festival of Britain, he points to another Mars Bar. You see that (the BBC overlays outlines the proposed structures) is what happens if you “don’t consult with local people.” In 1970 “a big property group said they would build flats, shops, and a hotel if they could build a great tower for their staff. Once they got that tower the company brass pushed off down to Surrey and their building was sold off and the new owners are new doing up a bit to let and now they say they are moving out of the tower as well.” Now thanks to these planning decisions what we have is an area that “looks and feels completely dead.” Hoskins was not just a great actor but with deep understanding of culture implicitly understood bottom-up planning. We need planners with his insight and passion.
1982: Omnibus
#OnThisDay 1982: Bob Hoskins took Barry Norman on a riverside walk along the South Bank to illustrate his concerns about development in London....
'My dad was such a good actor he convinced The Krays he was a gangster' - Bob Hoskins' daughter on his gentle side
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HOSKINS, who died in 2014, was often cast as a cockney hardman, but in a new book his daughter reveals that was as far removed as possible from his real personality.
By Rod McPhee 30 MAY 2016
WHEN Bob Hoskins lost his battle with Parkinson’s , a nation mourned the loss of the lovable movie hardman.
In reality, his family say he was a gentle soul who loved cookery and archaeology, not the underworld criminal like his characters in The Long Good Friday and Mona Lisa.
But his performances were so convincing some gangland figures found it hard to distinguish between the actor and the mobsters he played.
Bob’s daughter Rosa, 32, said: “When I was going through all of dad’s stuff after he died, I found a letter. The contents of it are illegible because the handwriting is so poor. But I could read one sentence at the end which said, ‘From your friend Reggie Kray ’...
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