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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

#FreeFatherTed trending following @Glinner's excellent Tweet/X

34 replies

JFDIYOLO · 19/04/2024 08:23

"A few years ago I had an idea for a stage musical based on Father Ted, an idea I felt was equal to and respectful of the enduring affection many held for the residents of Craggy Island’s parochial house.

The story touched on themes that seemed big enough for a West End stage. Jimmy Mulville of Hat Trick Productions @HatTrickProd was excited by my pitch and accompanied me to Dublin to convince my old writing partner Arthur Mathews to embark with us on the project. We then enlisted Neil Hannon of The Divine Comedy, who like Arthur, was one of my oldest friends and one whose development as a songwriter I had watched with delight over the previous three decades.

We began work on a script, encountering all the usual obstacles. Our first drafts were messy and overlong but soon we discovered the key to each character's story and it came alive.

Neil started delivering songs—each one better than the last. Through them, Ted revealed new, hilarious depths to his frustration and Mrs.Doyle had an absolute showstopper that I’m sure would have brought the audience to their feet.

All this to carry the audience merrily along to what I felt was the show's greatest strength, its ending. It was an ending that wrapped up the characters’ stories once and for all, and perhaps shook off some of the gloom associated with the show since Dermot Morgan’s tragic death only days after our final wrap party in 1998.

While we were working on the show, trans activists were busy trying to destroy my life.

I had noticed some years before that troubled children were placing themselves on an irreversible medical pathway that was deeply damaging to their health and peace of mind. In this, they were encouraged by legacy LGB organizations that had catastrophically lost their way. When I began speaking up about it, trans activists reacted as they always do, by contacting possible employers, smearing my name in propaganda outlets like Pink News, which would later come after JK Rowling when she entered the fray. The police were sent to my door multiple times. I was sued by a succession of activists, one of whom was a child predator and vexatious litigant.

But I felt that my colleagues, who were so close to me during all this, who saw the effect that the abuse was having on my life and my ability to make a living, would stand by my side.

That didn’t happen.

The last time I worked on the Father Ted musical. We presented the whole show to executive producer Sonia Friedman and her team. The story was almost there. The songs were exquisite. We'd even worked on a few rudimentary dance routines to give an idea of what audiences would see on stage. But then, I received a call to go to London and the Hat Trick offices. There I was told to remove my name from the show or it would not be made. Jimmy Mulville offered me £200,000 to do so. The money would have been incredibly useful as my other means of earning a living had largely disappeared.

But in the end, I refused for many reasons, not the least of which was that I did not want the legacy of Father Ted to be built on the ruined bodies of gay, autistic, abused and gender-nonconforming children.

Recently, my position in this debate has been vindicated by the findings of the #CassReport , which found that ‘trans healthcare’ in the UK has an inadequate evidence base, a toxic atmosphere within gender clinics that led to whistleblowers being vilified and smeared, and a rush to medicalize children without sufficient regard for the long-term consequences of such interventions.

Once at a meeting, Sonia Friedman, said to me “You’re on the wrong side of history.” I never received an apology from her. I would still appreciate one.

My beliefs—that biological sex is real and important, that women need single sex spaces for their safety and privacy, that their sports should be fair and finally that children should not be subjected to experimental medical protocols—are specifically protected in British law. Furthermore, polling shows that the same views are held by the majority of the British population. Mulville will not explain the problem he has with these views because he knows it will put him out of step with the majority of decent people in this country.

For too long now, Mulville has been sitting on a musical that would be a surefire hit. He is doing this for no other reason than to please the gender cultists on his staff and in the wider, captured media landscape. It’s pathetic, cruel and cowardly. If he doesn't want to make the show, he should get out of the way and let me do it.

Please share this message with your networks and use the hashtag #FreeFatherTed when you can. While it might not result in the return of my work, it will certainly make it more challenging for Mulville (and Friedman) to pretend they had nothing to do with a disgraceful act of preemptive cultural vandalism."

OP posts:
IcakethereforeIam · 19/04/2024 08:56

I'd love to see Father Ted, the musical just on its own merits. Even shorn of what it actually being made would symbolise for @Glinner and of a wider return to sanity.

PaperStarred · 19/04/2024 09:00

IcakethereforeIam · 19/04/2024 08:56

I'd love to see Father Ted, the musical just on its own merits. Even shorn of what it actually being made would symbolise for @Glinner and of a wider return to sanity.

Yes, absolutely. And Neil Hannon is a genius. At least two separately good reasons to mount this show. Go, @glinner.

Iamnotalemming · 19/04/2024 09:18

I would love to see this musical.

HoneyButterPopcorn · 19/04/2024 09:19

i don’t want to see the production company / people who blocked it getting a penny though.

GreigeO · 19/04/2024 11:00

This would be great!

jcakey · 19/04/2024 11:16

Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on. #freefatherted

FranticFrankie · 19/04/2024 11:23

Neil Hannon? Brilliant
Go Father Ted!!!!

GoFaster83 · 19/04/2024 11:27

I wish I was friends with Neil Hannon...

BettyFilous · 19/04/2024 16:37

HoneyButterPopcorn · 19/04/2024 09:19

i don’t want to see the production company / people who blocked it getting a penny though.

I agree.

I would love to see the Father Ted musical. I do not usually like musicals but I love Father Ted and the creative team behind this. Not so much the bloodsucking production company.

theworldie · 19/04/2024 16:44

Once at a meeting, Sonia Friedman, said to me “You’re on the wrong side of history.” I never received an apology from her. I would still appreciate one.

Such arrogance! And so indicative of virtue signalling rather than what is actually factual based on science. Just bothered about being seen to be “on the right side”. Well bollocks to that Sonia whoever you are - we believe protecting women and girls is more important than kowtowing to the bullying few. Luckily most other members of the public agree.

Would love to see this musical - and I laughed out loud at the thought Mrs Doyle’s showstopper!

Yirk · 19/04/2024 16:49

Father Ted should speak, I would love to support your musical Glinner.

elgreco · 19/04/2024 16:52

I'd go.

Dineasair · 19/04/2024 17:09

JFDIYOLO · 19/04/2024 08:23

"A few years ago I had an idea for a stage musical based on Father Ted, an idea I felt was equal to and respectful of the enduring affection many held for the residents of Craggy Island’s parochial house.

The story touched on themes that seemed big enough for a West End stage. Jimmy Mulville of Hat Trick Productions @HatTrickProd was excited by my pitch and accompanied me to Dublin to convince my old writing partner Arthur Mathews to embark with us on the project. We then enlisted Neil Hannon of The Divine Comedy, who like Arthur, was one of my oldest friends and one whose development as a songwriter I had watched with delight over the previous three decades.

We began work on a script, encountering all the usual obstacles. Our first drafts were messy and overlong but soon we discovered the key to each character's story and it came alive.

Neil started delivering songs—each one better than the last. Through them, Ted revealed new, hilarious depths to his frustration and Mrs.Doyle had an absolute showstopper that I’m sure would have brought the audience to their feet.

All this to carry the audience merrily along to what I felt was the show's greatest strength, its ending. It was an ending that wrapped up the characters’ stories once and for all, and perhaps shook off some of the gloom associated with the show since Dermot Morgan’s tragic death only days after our final wrap party in 1998.

While we were working on the show, trans activists were busy trying to destroy my life.

I had noticed some years before that troubled children were placing themselves on an irreversible medical pathway that was deeply damaging to their health and peace of mind. In this, they were encouraged by legacy LGB organizations that had catastrophically lost their way. When I began speaking up about it, trans activists reacted as they always do, by contacting possible employers, smearing my name in propaganda outlets like Pink News, which would later come after JK Rowling when she entered the fray. The police were sent to my door multiple times. I was sued by a succession of activists, one of whom was a child predator and vexatious litigant.

But I felt that my colleagues, who were so close to me during all this, who saw the effect that the abuse was having on my life and my ability to make a living, would stand by my side.

That didn’t happen.

The last time I worked on the Father Ted musical. We presented the whole show to executive producer Sonia Friedman and her team. The story was almost there. The songs were exquisite. We'd even worked on a few rudimentary dance routines to give an idea of what audiences would see on stage. But then, I received a call to go to London and the Hat Trick offices. There I was told to remove my name from the show or it would not be made. Jimmy Mulville offered me £200,000 to do so. The money would have been incredibly useful as my other means of earning a living had largely disappeared.

But in the end, I refused for many reasons, not the least of which was that I did not want the legacy of Father Ted to be built on the ruined bodies of gay, autistic, abused and gender-nonconforming children.

Recently, my position in this debate has been vindicated by the findings of the #CassReport , which found that ‘trans healthcare’ in the UK has an inadequate evidence base, a toxic atmosphere within gender clinics that led to whistleblowers being vilified and smeared, and a rush to medicalize children without sufficient regard for the long-term consequences of such interventions.

Once at a meeting, Sonia Friedman, said to me “You’re on the wrong side of history.” I never received an apology from her. I would still appreciate one.

My beliefs—that biological sex is real and important, that women need single sex spaces for their safety and privacy, that their sports should be fair and finally that children should not be subjected to experimental medical protocols—are specifically protected in British law. Furthermore, polling shows that the same views are held by the majority of the British population. Mulville will not explain the problem he has with these views because he knows it will put him out of step with the majority of decent people in this country.

For too long now, Mulville has been sitting on a musical that would be a surefire hit. He is doing this for no other reason than to please the gender cultists on his staff and in the wider, captured media landscape. It’s pathetic, cruel and cowardly. If he doesn't want to make the show, he should get out of the way and let me do it.

Please share this message with your networks and use the hashtag #FreeFatherTed when you can. While it might not result in the return of my work, it will certainly make it more challenging for Mulville (and Friedman) to pretend they had nothing to do with a disgraceful act of preemptive cultural vandalism."

Love this fella, he’s lost so much yet he’s never backed down, not once.

Hepwo · 19/04/2024 17:13

Ya will, ya will, ya will.

OpusGiemuJavlo · 19/04/2024 17:19

Oh I would love to see this musical.

My (autistic, non-binary identifying) DS is loving the original series at the moment as out current watch-together box set. It's hilarious.

Nicelynicelyjohnson · 19/04/2024 17:22

Honestly shocking that this has been allowed to happen.
Graham Linehan is a hero.

ChaoticBag · 19/04/2024 17:26

I would fucking love to go. I love Glinner and Neil both. And Father Ted <nurses My Lovely Horse mug>

ChristinaXYZ · 19/04/2024 21:21

I hope the musical is finally freed.

BlackeyedSusan · 19/04/2024 21:57

Thank you for sticking up for autistic girls. (And the rest) Mum Of an autistic girl.

Wearingmybluejumper · 19/04/2024 22:18

I’d fly to London to see it!! I love Father Ted 😍

Dontknowhowtodo · 19/04/2024 22:21

Thanks graham.
father Ted has kept this family together by giving us re runs to watch and laugh at together, along with black books, count Arthur strong , it crowd.
you’ve helped us and our DS get together and laugh when we were devastated by our DD turning to this cult and rejecting us.
thank you.

WePanickedAtTheDisco · 19/04/2024 22:32

Graham Linehan is a true hero of our generation. Not only for his views on women’s and children’s rights, but he is also a bloody funny man. The IT Crowd, Motherland, Father Ted, Count Arthur Strong. The absolute best TV shows ever.
This man should stand proud for all he’s contributed to society 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

RainbowZebraWarrior · 19/04/2024 22:43

To be cancelled because you're blindly conceived to be on "the wrong side of history" just shows this whole unquestioning and dangeous mess to be the cult that it is.

They don't understand the meaning of the word "Bigoted"

Signed,

An Autistic Mother of an Autistic girl who I've managed (so far) to keep from believing the lies.

#freefatherted

Time40 · 19/04/2024 22:51

Graham - go on, go on, go on, go on!

I would love to see this musical!

BonfireLady · 20/04/2024 06:49

I'm more of an IT Crowd fan than Father Ted (I liked FT but the IT Crowd was my lol show), however, I love musicals and would definitely go and watch this.

Glinner is finally being vindicated for what he's been flagging for years.