A new play centres on my court case against Theresa May, and my treatment by the Daily Mail. Watching it was painful

  • Gina Miller is a transparency campaigner who has won two supreme court cases against the government

How would you feel about having the most intimate and dramatic moments of your life put on stage? Would audiences think that this partly fictionalised account was all true? With that weighing heavy on my head and heart, I went to see the opening night of the play Bloody Difficult Women, whose title referred to Theresa May and myself. It was the oddest mix of emotions. The apprehension I felt was almost akin to awaiting a supreme court verdict.

The play was not what I was expecting, and makes the point that May and I have certain things in common. We are both details people, we work hard, our lives have been shaped by difficult experiences, and we have had to make our way in male-dominated worlds: for me, the City and activism; for her, politics.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

You May Also Like

The sterling rally could be brief, just like Boris Johnson’s premiership

Markets look at the wider picture and post-Brexit, post-pandemic economic policy is…

Hipkins is unlikely to reach heights of Jacindamania, and that may suit New Zealanders

Chris Hipkins promises a ‘solid’ government that will focus on bread-and-butter issues,…

The Onion defends right to parody in very real supreme court brief supporting local satirist

Long-running satirical publication files legal document relating to case of man who…