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Housewife, 49

  • TV Movie
  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Victoria Wood in Housewife, 49 (2005)
DramaRomanceWar

In the late 1930s, Nella Last, a 49 year old housewife living in Barrow-in-Furness on the North West English coast, agrees to send details of her routine to the Mass Observation Project; a n... Read allIn the late 1930s, Nella Last, a 49 year old housewife living in Barrow-in-Furness on the North West English coast, agrees to send details of her routine to the Mass Observation Project; a non-governmental scheme designed to chronicle the lives of ordinary people. When war comes,... Read allIn the late 1930s, Nella Last, a 49 year old housewife living in Barrow-in-Furness on the North West English coast, agrees to send details of her routine to the Mass Observation Project; a non-governmental scheme designed to chronicle the lives of ordinary people. When war comes, Nella defies her over-protective husband to join the local Women's Voluntary Service. Ini... Read all

  • Director
    • Gavin Millar
  • Writers
    • Nella Last
    • Victoria Wood
  • Stars
    • Victoria Wood
    • David Threlfall
    • Christopher Harper
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gavin Millar
    • Writers
      • Nella Last
      • Victoria Wood
    • Stars
      • Victoria Wood
      • David Threlfall
      • Christopher Harper
    • 36User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 3 wins & 4 nominations total

    Photos14

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    Top cast31

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    Victoria Wood
    Victoria Wood
    • Nella Last
    David Threlfall
    David Threlfall
    • Daddy (Will Last)
    Christopher Harper
    • Cliff Last
    Ben Crompton
    Ben Crompton
    • Arthur Last
    Lorraine Ashbourne
    Lorraine Ashbourne
    • Dot
    Sally Bankes
    Sally Bankes
    • Mrs Whittaker
    Stephanie Cole
    Stephanie Cole
    • Mrs Waite
    Marcia Warren
    Marcia Warren
    • Mrs Lord
    Sylvestra Le Touzel
    Sylvestra Le Touzel
    • Mrs Lynch
    Wendy Nottingham
    • Miss Finch
    Jane Lowe
    • Mrs Higham
    Dorothy Atkinson
    Dorothy Atkinson
    • Mrs Mac
    Sian Brooke
    Sian Brooke
    • Evelyn Edwards
    • (as Siân Brooke)
    Laura Power
    • Madeleine Whittaker
    Jason Watkins
    Jason Watkins
    • Dr Roger Brierley
    Daisy Haggard
    Daisy Haggard
    • Jill
    Clare Wille
    Clare Wille
    • Pru
    Alan Cox
    Alan Cox
    • Dennis
    • Director
      • Gavin Millar
    • Writers
      • Nella Last
      • Victoria Wood
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    7.61K
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    Featured reviews

    9drew-121

    A Treasure

    As a long time fan of Ms Wood, I was very happy to watch this sojourn into the drama world. The writing contained her usual naturalistic flow, the evocation of 1940's Barrow was superb and the journey portrayed by Ms Wood as Ella was totally believable.

    The subtle way in which she dealt with such issues as those raised by her son Cliff was heartening and again true of the period. Her grasp of the historical perspective, the way families lived and coped with the war was so very true and at the end of the film I was left with a sense of having witnessed real life not a drama.

    Great acting from David Threlfall and Stephanie Cole.

    The best thing on TV over Christmas by far!
    9nturner

    Insight Into A Lost Generation

    Victoria Wood is a famous British comic actress who has surely shown that she also has a superior for drama - both writing and acting - in this excellent made for television film based upon a real person. During World War II in England, housewife, Nella Last's experiences were recorded by the Mass-Observation organization founded in 1937 to record the daily experiences of British citizens for social research.

    The film starts with Nella as being almost complete frustrated with her role as housewife. She is a middle-aged woman who has devoted her entire self to the care of her husband and their two sons. The war has just started, and her sons are leaving to serve in duties other than combat.

    Nella's only connection with anything creative is her younger son. He is the one who encourages his mother to go beyond the confines of the house in order to seek fulfillment. Nella begins to blossom when she volunteers for the Women's Voluntary Service and starts to submit her observances of daily occurrences to Mass-Observation.

    Over the objections of her husband - a joiner - Nella volunteers for the WVS. There she must face the insults of the women in charge for she is merely the wife of a laborer whereas they are wives of members of higher classes. With spunk and wit, Nella forges ahead and becomes an invaluable member of the organization.

    At home, Nella receives almost no support from her husband - a man not able to express emotion. Because of this weakness, he appears to be somewhat of a villain, but there are a few touching scenes in the screenplay where the viewer is able to see past his hard surface to a man who genuinely loves his wife.

    Nella's son, Cliff, may be the most complex character in the film. Clifford Last who eventually entered battle was wounded and after the war, moved to Australia where he became a well-known sculptor.

    This is a fine film that gives insight into the lives of women of Nella's generation and invites the viewer into an "everyday family" that is certainly far from that.
    8Jackanackanory

    Heart-warming wartime drama

    Although I am not a fan of Victoria Wood as comedienne (I just never understood her comedy and therefore never found her funny) I was intrigued by the concept of this drama so I watched it.

    I am glad I did, as it was a very well written drama that looks into life in the perspective of a mother Nella Last who sees her life change around her, more often than not in the way peoples attitudes are and also throughout the war realises she doesn't know those close to her including her family as well as she thinks she does, this in turn makes her look at her own lifestyle and realises she must change in some aspects too.

    Although I may not be a fan of Victoria Wood in her primary guise, (as a comedienne), as an actress she has proved in this drama she is a first-rate actress and considering she wrote this drama, a decent writer too.

    On the whole a nice heart-warming wartime family drama.
    7broadrk

    Faithful to the book?

    Very few scenes were ones reported in the diary but Wood's film conveyed its substance very well indeed. Beautifully handled, for example, was Nella's naive inability to recognise Cliff's homosexuality. But I thought her 'Nella' was too passive. You can see the film's nervy, pensive introvert in her intimate writing but her diaries also make it clear that she could be feisty and would have come across to others as able and assured. Nella herself contrasts 'the quiet, brooding woman who, when alone, draws the quiet around her like a healing cloak and the gay lively woman who 'keeps all going'''.
    10robert-temple-1

    The Meek Shall Inherit the Earth

    This superb film was made because of the remarkable personal qualities of the British television comedienne and comedy writer, Victoria Wood, who has always had her serious side as well, as she shows here. Wood wrote and starred in this film, which was brilliantly and sensitively directed by old pro Gavin Millar, one of British television's most famous drama directors. Victoria Wood has always enjoyed an enormous popularity with the public at large because she is so 'down to earth' and so 'real', and her quaint folksy approach to humour, drawing upon her northern roots, expressed sardonically in her northern accent, is dear to the hearts of the British in a way which no foreigner could ever understand. She has always refused to do anything about her appearance, and the public have lived through her stages of being too fat, then being less fat, along with her, as if she were a family member of everyone's. She would never allow a surgeon anywhere near her face. She is what she is, and 'you can take it or leave it'. Her excruciating honesty is much prized by everyone except the phonies and the pseuds. Here, she has chosen to dramatize the story of a shy, excessively meek and self-effacing, ordinary woman during the Second World War. The story is drawn from the extensive, poignant, and revealing diaries of this woman who lived in the north, and were submitted to Mass Observation over many years, and whose name was Nella Last. She was identified as 'Housewife, 49'. It is necessary to explain how these diaries came to be written. In 1937, a small group of writers and artists in London (several of whom I knew towards the end of their lives, namely Kathleen Raine, William Empson, and Julian Trevelyan), decided they were fed up with the inadequate press coverage of the public's true reactions to the abdication of King Edward VIII. They decided to set up their own amateur opinion-gathering project, and they called it the Mass Observation Movement. One of the three main driving forces behind this was the poet Charles Madge, whom I never knew, but Kathleeen Raine was his widow, and she used to talk to me a lot about Mass Observation, on which she had once worked indefatiguably herself, so I have some understanding of what those people thought they were doing. They solicited diaries from ordinary people, over 500 of them around the country, who supplied them on an unpaid and purely voluntary basis. One shy and thoroughly obscure person who did this was Nella Last. Her story grew and grew, and from her seemingly drab and ordinary life, a vast and moving drama grew, like a poppy appearing on a desolate battlefield. Victoria Wood has crafted an amazingly moving and fascinating film based upon this tale of someone who was not merely ordinary and obscure, but meek and retiring. Nella Last opened her heart, and recorded all the things which most of us would be too intimidated to relate, about who really did what to whom in her town, and how she and they felt about it. The result is an absolutely astounding revelation of just how interesting the lives of seemingly boring people can really be, when examined in depth and with compassion. This film is a testament to the rich and intensely-lived lives of the meek, the helpless, the repressed, and the oppressed. These are the people we pass in the street and don't notice. They have feelings too, they have their joys and their sorrows, but they keep them to themselves and suffer silently. Nella Last broke the rule of silence, the 'omerta' of the obscure, and she spoke out of the depths of her suffering heart about what it is like to be a nobody and to be treated as one. She also described her slow climb up towards a degree of self-confidence, her achievement against all the odds at doing something constructive for the War Effort, yes, she, Nella Last, the nobody. She ended up being, in her small way, a somebody. And that is her story, and it was so worth telling. And only somebody with the heart and the soul of a Victoria Wood could or would ever have dared to try. And the success is total. The performances of the other people in this incredible film are breath-taking in their honesty and heart-breaking in their intensity. David Threlfall is an actor many of us remember for his unforgettable portrayal on stage of Smike in Dickens's 'Nicholas Nickleby', a quarter of a century ago. Here, he portrays Wood's husband, a man so immobilised by the inability to express his feelings that it is perhaps the greatest classic film portrait ever achieved of a man frozen into silence, whose feelings are powerful surging currents, but whose lips are sealed, and only his pathetic, pleading eyes reveal anything at all. The women who play the many vivid supporting roles in the film are all so brilliant that one gasps. When the film is over, you feel you have left a group of friends whose personalities are seared into your memory. These are real people, this is a real film, this is a real story. Watch it and learn. It deserves to be shown in schools, to humanize some of the feral young who have no feelings and no compassion, and whose idea of life is to go around stabbing each other to death in the streets, as they do nearly every day in London now. Above all, this story of Nella Last is a study in loyalty, and of the ultimate true human values which she exemplified in her hidden life of obscurity, poverty, and invisibility to the world. What an achievement this is! And how proud Victoria Wood should be of what she and her inspired colleagues have done in making this film!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Was cited as a crucial moment in Victoria Wood's career, as prior to this one-off, Wood was predominantly associated with her comedy work. "Housewife, 49" saw her take on a serious role, showcasing her skills as a versatile actress.
    • Goofs
      The second time Nella Last gets off the bus at the Town Hall, the Forum 28 Theatre is visible on the top window of the bus. That is where Forum is situated, but it was not built until between the 1960s and '70s.
    • Quotes

      Nella Last: [voiceover] ... There is, of course, my sister-in-law's rather peculiar whirlwind engagement.

      Dot: Still can't believe it. Went to the Isle of Man--got myself a man!

      Mrs Whittaker: Good job you didn't go to the Isle of Dogs!

    • Connections
      Featured in The South Bank Show: Victoria Wood (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      The First Noël
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 10, 2005 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Домохозяйка 49
    • Filming locations
      • Marsden, West Yorkshire, England, UK(Red Cross shop scenes.)
    • Production company
      • Granada Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £1,600,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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