As One Life is released, producer says that Nicholas Winton – the ‘British Schindler’ who saved 669 children – was reluctant for his story to be told

Sir Nicholas Winton, who saved hundreds of children from the Nazis, was so modest that he rejected an initial proposal to make a film about him, according to the producer of One Life, the soon-to-be released biographical drama about the British humanitarian.

Iain Canning told the Observer that, about five years before Winton’s death in 2015 aged 106, he and fellow producer Emile Sherman visited him at his Maidenhead home during a break from shooting their film, The King’s Speech.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The Guardian view on homelessness: don’t cast everyone out again | Editorial

Putting people in hotels during the pandemic made a difference. But far…

Trans woman struggled to get help for mental illness before death, inquest told

Family of Alexandra Greenway say she was passed ‘pillar to post’ and…

‘Love our bogs’: UK should harness all its landscapes in fight for climate – report

First complete assessment of how UK nature-based solutions can combat the climate…

London facing 45C days ‘in foreseeable future’, mayor Sadiq Khan warns

Mayor says interim climate report paints a worrying picture of an underground…