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Josie Jagger, Actress: Costumed Girls Captured in Bondage. Josie Jagger is an actress, known for Costumed Girls Captured in Bondage ( 2015).
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Beckett, Jagger, Wodehouse, Davies: cricket’s culture club. Brought to you by:.
“I know of no game more fitting than the age old game of cricket,” muses Ray Davies on the Kinks’ Preservation: Act 1. “It has honour, it has character and it’s British. We may still be waiting for lifelong fans such as Mick Jagger and Eric Clapton to declare their passion in verse and chorus, but other musicians have metaphorically made the red ball sing. Roy Harper sang When An Old Cricketer Leaves The Crease, the ballad guaranteed to get any rheumy-eyed batsman blubbing: “You never know whether he’s gone/If sometimes you’re catching a fleeting glimpse/Of a twelfth man at silly mid-on/And it could be Geoff, and it could be John/With a new ball sting in his tail”. If not Geoff or John, then how about Fred? In rather more raucous style, indie funsters Half Man Half Biscuit’s contribution to the canon includes Fuckin’ ’ell, it’s Fred Titmus – a surreal ditty about constantly bumping into the Middlesex and England off-spinning legend in the supermarket, the park and the railway station.
The Duckworth Lewis Method went further and took their name from the sport’s terminology for the unfathomable rules used recalculate scores when bad weather intervenes. Singer Neil Hannon described their first album, released just before the 2009 Ashes, as “a kaleidoscopic musical adventure through the beautiful and rather silly world of cricket”, exemplified by songs with evocative titles like The Coin Toss, Rain Stops Play, and Gentlemen and Players. The last of that trio is redolent of the bygone age most famously captured in the poem Vitai Lampada, by high-blown Victorian Sir Henry Newbolt: “There’s a breathless hush in the Close tonight/Ten to make and the match to win”. Not forgetting the line everyone knows: “Play up! play up!/And play the game!”. Through Tom Brown’s Schooldays and the novels of P G Wodehouse, cricket’s rose-tinted traditions go largely unchallenged; it isn’t until Joseph O’Neill’s 2008 novel Netherland, the tale of a Dutch expat playing the game in post-9/11 New York, that the genre gathers some urban grit.
O’Neill shares a lit-cricket pedigree with fellow Irishman Samuel Beckett who, as every pub quiz aficionado knows, is the only Nobel prize winner yet to appear in Wisden. Richard Harris’s 1979 play ‘Outside Edge’ depicted a cricket team in various stages of marital breakdown. Later a one-off TV drama featuring Prunella Scales and Maureen Lipman, Outside Edge also became a mid-1990s sitcom with a cast including Timothy Spall and Josie Lawrence. Differences of another kind were at the heart of Caryl Phillips’s 1987 film Playing Away, which pitted the archetypal village cricketers of Sneddington against a West Indian team from Brixton during the local community’s indelicate “Third World Week”. So what’s the best ever cricket movie? The Final Test might win a vote or two. Written by Terence Rattigan, a decent player himself in his youth, it’s set around Sam Palmer’s last appearance for England. With cameo appearances from Len Hutton and Denis Compton and interspersed with clips of real Ashes action, the film’s main chracter, Sam, hopes his son Reggie will be at The Oval to watch him bat against Australia one last time.
But Reggie is torn – he’s a budding writer and has an appointment with a well-known poet. It turns out that the poet is a huge cricket fan so they both head to the ground … only for poor Sam to get out for a duck. Perhaps inevitably, it’s to Bollywood that most cricketing film buffs turn – and to Lagaan, a three-hour epic set in dusty Raj-era India and nominated for an Oscar for Best Foreign Film in 2001. When a group of villagers protest against high land taxes, their haughty British rulers challenge them to a match to decide whether they must pay up. Do they win? You’ll have to watch the movie to find out.
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