Riot Women (2025) s01e01 Episode Script

Episode 1

1
This programme contains some scenes which some
viewers may find upsetting from the start,
deals with suicide from the start
and contains strong language
CLOCK TICKS FAINTLY
ICE CLINKS IN GLASS
PHONE RINGS
Hello? MAN: - Beth.
-Nick.
-What's this text?
You've sold her house and
spent £240,000 on a policy?
Yeah, I did. Erm,
so, the solicitor
She's not going
to live that long.
Well, we don't know how
long she's going to live.
But the point is, for however
long she does live, she's covered.
So she's got good care
and a good home and
And neither of us need to
worry our frazzled little heads
about any of it any more.
That's £240,000 that we would
have inherited, eventually.
-It should have been discussed.
-I did discuss it -
-with her solicitor.
-With ME.
Discussed with me!
And Abi Gail.
It's got nothing
to do with Abigail.
And you know she
was a saver, Mum,
all her life she saved for a rainy
day. Well, this is her rainy day.
-It costs £5,000 a month in that care home.
-How much?
And if she lives for more than three
years, which she could easily do
-How much?
-..then she's covered.
This is 24-hour, round the
clock dementia care, Nick.
This is someone who
is doubly incontinent,
and regularly wide awake
at 3:00 in the morning,
singing Boogie Woogie
Bugle Boy From Company B!
And insisting she has to get to
Marks & Spencer before they close!
It never stops!
And it doesn't come cheap.
Well, could you not
find somewhere cheaper?
-No.
-What about the NHS?
Oh, what planet do you live on?
-So, well, what do ordinary people do?
-We ARE ordinary people.
They sell their houses
and spend their savings
and give up their careers
and do it them self.
That's what ordinary
people do. So
fuck your inheritance!
Because this is the
way the cookie crumbles
when you don't visit your
own mother for six years!
Arsehole!
SHE STIFLES A SOB
SHE SNIFFLES
STUTTERING SOB
PHONE BUZZES
Oh! Fuck!
-Jess.
-Oh, snotty.
Sorry. Erm I
thought you were Nick.
What are you doing?
Nothing. Why?
Do you want to be
in me rock band?
You what?
Let's start a riot
We won't be quiet
Riot women gonna set
this world on fire. ♪
Me rock band. I'm going
to form a rock band.
-Why?
-For fun. For the refugees.
There's a talent contest. The school
are organising a talent contest -
for the parents, not the nippers
- and I thought we could enter.
So I need you on board,
cos you can play the piano.
Hang on. What?
Right, look So, I went to
school assembly this morning
cos Rocco was being a tree -
he was very good, actually -
and it was all about
the refugee crisis.
Which one?
Oh, uh
Ukraine? Syria? Yemen?
Sudan? One of them.
Anyway, it was all
about, "What can I do?"
"What can I do to help?"
And then, Charlie, the head,
said that the parent governors
had decided on a talent contest.
-Why was Rocco a tree?
-A tree before an explosion and after.
It was heartbreaking.
Yeah Well, it would be.
Yeah. So, anyway, there'll
be a bit of all sorts,
you know, like, erm
-..singing, stand-up, ventriloquism.
-Oh, really? -And I thought
..rock band. Why not? Steve left
his drum kit when he cleared off.
It's been going mouldy in the
garage for God knows how long.
And I've always fancied
a crack. So, erm
So, I thought we could do a
cover, you know, like, uh
Like, maybe ABBA? Waterloo,
something like that.
Take A Chance On Me.
I thought you said ROCK band?
Yeah, well, not ABBA. I
just thought it'd be easy.
Well, easier than
you know, Nirvana.
But, Beth, it can be anything.
Anything we can get
our heads around.
Thank you.
-Sorry. How's your mum?
-The same. Just the same.
Oh, bless.
Anyway Come on,
lovely. What do you think?
Oh, please say yes. I could
do with a bit of a laugh,
and I know you could.
Beth?
Beth, you still there?
I'm only happy when it rains
I'm only happy
when it's complicated
And though I know you
can't appreciate it ♪
-You all right, boss? -Keep smiling.
-I'm only happy when it rains
You know I love it
when the news is bad
Oh, why it feels so
good to feel so sad
I'm only happy when it rains
Pour your misery down
Pour your misery down on me
Pour your misery down
Pour your misery down on me
I'm only happy when it rains
I feel good when
things are going wrong
I only listen to
the sad, sad song
I'm only happy when it rains
I only smile in the dark
My only comfort is the
night gone black ♪
PHONE: - Emergency. Which
service do you require?
I'm only happy
when it rains ♪
SOUND MUFFLES
FAINT SIREN
You on a bass guitar? Oh, my
giddy God. Can I come and watch?
The more the merrier.
It's all in a good cause.
Can you actually play, though?
This lad said he'd lend me
his and give me a few tips.
And, you know, if the
worst comes to the worst,
I can just stand there looking cool,
jiggling about for 3.5 minutes.
-You won't look cool, though, Holly. You'll look like a dick.
-Thank you.
-Who's on drums? - Jess. - Do I know her?
-Landlady down The Duke.
-Purple hair. Or is it green at the moment?
-Oh!
I love her. She's off
her nut. She can play?
-She's -No.
-No.
But she reckons she knows somebody
who can play keyboard a bit.
Do you need a singer?
9-2-4-2, code six.
Cos I am properly crap at singing,
so it sounds like I fit right in.
We're not going to be
crap. We're going to be
We're going to be OK. So you
just keep your negative nonsense
in a little box on a little shelf
inside your little head, all right?
Your sister's shit at singing as
well, so shall we both turn up?
-You all right, love?
-She's down here.
Somebody said she got
hold of a load of knives?
Yeah, they're still
in the packaging.
Right, well, can you clear the store
for me? I want everybody outside.
-She a regular, love? Do you know her name?
-No. Sorry.
Oh
SHE SIGHS
- PA SYSTEM: - ..we
appreciate your cooperation
and apologise for any
inconvenience. Thank you.
Hello, love. You all right?
Whoa. I'm going to need
you to put the knife down.
SLURRING: - You don't want
to be coming any closer,
-cos it's all broken glass all down here.
-We can sort everything out.
But first things first, I need
you to put the knife down.
-What's your name, love?
-Whose? -Yours.
-Why?
-Just asking.
How stupid. What's she
want to know my name for?
Just put the knife on the
floor, nudge it towards me,
-and then we'll deal with everything else.
-What's happened, lovely?
Nothing. I just
dropped me vodka.
OK, but you've been
behaving erratically,
-and people are concerned, so
-Oh, yeah? -Yeah.
-And you've clearly had a bit to drink, so
-I wasn't nicking it.
I was going to pay for it
Do I look like a criminal?
-Is that what you think I look like?
-How many pills have you taken?
Seriously, none.
They was Tic Tacs.
So, concentrate, I want
you to put the knife down,
because it's upsetting people.
I haven't got a knife.
You've got a knife in your hand.
Other hand.
-There it is. -Oh
-So, I want you to put it down
onto the floor gently,
and kick it towards me.
I would, but
It's taken long enough to get this
little sod out of the package.
-What are you going to be needing it for?
-Well, between you and me,
and the gatepost,
I've been having a
bit of a shit day.
-Yeah?
-Yeah.
I had some bad news
last Tuesday
And there was some more excrement
on top of that on Friday,
and there's just some other
stuff occurred this afternoon.
It's just
all gone downhill from there.
Well, we want to
help you, all right?
Nothing so bad that we
can't sort it out, so
Yeah, well, you say that.
But you know fuck all, bitch!
-So, don't be so glib.
-Do you want to talk about it?
-Fucking hell
-Are you all right?
-I'm having hot flush!
-Oh, you're a bit young for that.
Oh, the fucking bastard
started early, didn't it?
Have you considered HRT?
-Ah!
-Drop the knife, drop the knife. Let go!
-Drop it!
-Ah!
Uh!
Ah! Ah, you fucker! Oh
Oh!
Ah!
I'm arresting you for
Section 5, Public Order.
You do not have to say anything,
but it may harm your defence
if you do not mention
when questioned
something you later
rely on in court.
Anything you do say may be given
in evidence. Do you understand?
9-6-7-5. We've got a
1-1-2 female. No name.
SIREN WAILS
So, Princess Peach, you going
to tell me your real name?
Christ. You still here?
Just because the custody sergeant
wouldn't let you into his cells
with all that painkiller,
vodka cocktail inside you
-doesn't mean you're not still under arrest.
-Oh, give me a break.
What are we waiting
for now, mental health?
I suppose so.
Where's the other fella?
Nisha? Gone home.
Her shift finished.
So did mine, but we tossed a
coin to see who got the pleasure,
-and, hey, I won.
-It's all wasted on me, all this sarcasm.
-Do you want to know a secret?
-No. -Today's my last day.
When I finally finish
this shift, if ever I do,
-that's me done, forever.
-Yeah?
30 years.
So what?
-Big fat pension?
-Well, hardly.
But a pension, yeah.
-Yeah, you paid off your mortgage?
-Almost.
My mum chipped in,
so I was lucky.
And freedom Well, I say
freedom. She's got dementia, so
-You live with your mother?
-No, she's round the corner.
-What about yourself?
-What ABOUT myself? -Today?
I'm not judging you.
From a police point of view,
I really don't give a toss.
I'm hoping when mental health
turn up, they'll advise me
you're not fit to be
detained. I'm just asking
as one menopausal
woman to another.
Well, I ain't got a mother,
cos she died when I were nine.
Ain't got a mortgage, either.
Are you
Kitty Eckersley?
As in your dad is
Keith Eckersley?
Well, he was.
If he's alive.
Last I heard, he was in Spain.
If you're going to run a police
check on me, just do bear in mind
most of it's made up by you lot.
Wow.
Keith Eckersley
So
So, what about today, Kitty?
-What happened today?
-Change the fucking record.
Are you still feeling suicidal?
Well, I guess I'll be discussing
that with my mental health team.
If they ever show up.
-Jesus Christ.
-You going to be sick again? -No.
Won't be doing karaoke
with this throat
RHYTHMIC PIANO PLAYS
SHE PLAYS ABBA'S WATERLOO
-Oh, shut me up if I've said it before.
-You've said it before.
No, but I can't stand to even
listen to the news any more.
-Mum, you say it every day.
-Do I?
-Every other day.
-No, but it's true, though, Jerry.
It started during the pandemic,
when we were all waiting to hear
how many people had
died the day before.
And then, one day, I
just switched it off.
Cos when you look at it, it's all
bombs, rocket attacks, refugees,
poverty, inequality,
exploitation, hunger,
anger, shootings, torture,
hatred, abuse, misery.
And you know what's
behind it all, Jerry?
-It's men. -Yeah, Mum
-Every time, men.
Mum, I'm going out tonight.
Can you look after the babies?
-We're not babies.
-And it's just getting worse. -Mum?
Tonight? No, I'm busy.
It is. I agree, it's all men.
Doing what? Shut up, Jerry!
Oh, my God. This band
meeting, uh, practice.
Don't tell Jerry to shut up.
The band practice for this
charity bash. I have told you.
-You're not serious?
-Of course I'm serious. In fact, I was going to ask
you if you can keep an eye
on Auntie Mary, Miranda.
-Why does somebody have to keep an eye on me?
-Miranda? - Yeah?
-Uh, sure, of course.
-Oh, my God.
Actually, I did have a panic attack
in the middle of the night thinking,
"Oh, blimey, what have I
gone and said I'll do now?"
But it'll be fine. It'll be fine.
And here's the thing, Jerry
Men make wars, women
pick up the pieces.
-This is it.
-So, Putin starts this war in Ukraine,
and you're going to sort it all
out by making a fanny of yourself
-in a talent contest?
-Correct.
Shit. Bet Volodymyr Zelensky
wishes he'd thought of that.
What a numpty. Bet
he's kicking himself.
You can take the
mickey all you like.
I'll be the one on the
right side of history.
Who's doing behind the
bar if you're doing that
and Miranda's keeping
an eye on Auntie Mary?
I don't need anyone
keeping an eye on me.
You are. You're on the rota.
I've just told
you I'm going out.
-You haven't told us where.
-Like that's relevant.
-Your mum just likes to know where you are, that's all
-Oh, Jesus,
Jerry! You don't even live here!
-Don't get involved.
-Dyson's coming round tonight, so me and him
can do the bar and keep
an eye on Auntie Mary.
-You do need keeping an eye on, Mary. You go wandering.
-And the babies?
Why have you fixed up to go out
when you know you're on the rota?
You do know you can't just call up
your mates and be a band, don't you?
You do know people spend
years of their lives
learning to play an instrument?
And you do know that, traditionally,
there is talent involved?
It's for fun. It's for charity.
I don't need to be that good.
Well, she has got
a point, though.
Probably do have to know what you're
doing just to sound, you know
-bad.
-Well, I've got Beth, she's musical.
-Which one's Beth?
-Beth. Old friend from school.
Actually, her mum and my mum
were at Greenham Common together.
And Auntie Mary, she was
there for four years.
They were going to
change the world.
Yeah, look how that turned out.
-Right, I'm off. -Oh, bye, Jerry.
-I'll see you when I see you.
-You drive safely, all right?
-See you, Jerry. -See you later.
-Missing you already, Jerry. Jerry-atric.
-Oh, my God
-What have I said?
-She's kidding. -I'm not.
-See you later. -See you.
-See you, love.
Where'd you find 'em, Mother?
What's your band going
to be called, Granny?
Well, thank you, Rocco, for asking
such a lovely can-do question.
Well, so far, we're all
women of a certain age, so
The Old Bags Department?
THEY LAUGH
See, I quite like that.
The Bim Bags? Bimbo,
bin bags. Get it?
Ooh. She's on fire.
INDISTINCT CHA
Let it go, seriously. She's
miserable with everyone.
She's miserable because
her husband left her,
because her son has a
crush on his in-laws,
so she barely gets a look
in, even at Christmas.
And because she's not
getting any younger.
Oh, and her mother's
got dementia, so
And just because she's
head of department,
don't run away with the idea
that she's some genius teacher
with a mad infectious
passion for the written word.
-The kids think she's a boring old
-Oh.
-Morning, Beth.
-Morning.
-Morning.
-Morning, Beth.
BELL RINGS
Amy? You printed
out your worksheets?
Oh. Um
-You made her cry.
-She's not three.
Or 16, even, or 17, or 23. She's
26. She's got a master's degree.
I shouldn't have to point out every
morning that she has to print out
-her worksheet.
-Yes, but there are ways of saying things.
On three occasions, she's
wasted valuable lesson time
because she's failed to
print out worksheets,
or printed out the
wrong sheets, twice.
Twice she's done that. I just simply
pointed it out, which is my job.
She might be 26 but
you're twice her age?
More. And we have a duty of
care. YOU have a duty of care.
You interviewed
her, you chose her.
I liked her. I still
like her. I just
You have a responsibility
towards her.
And you have a duty
of care to me
as well, in fact.
And I'm not too great right now.
It's a tonal thing, Beth.
I nearly killed
myself last night.
I was there with
a blue nylon rope.
I poured myself
a very large G&T.
I'd written a note to
to my son, Tom.
I had the thing around my
neck. I was ready to go.
And the phone rang, twice.
Can you believe that?
I'm like Uncle fucking Vanya, I
can't even kill myself properly.
What I'm going to do, Beth -
and this isn't to humiliate you,
and I don't want you
to hear it like that -
I'm going to ask Barnaby to
mentor Amy going forward.
It's a step up for him. It's one
less thing for you to worry about.
An apology wouldn't go amiss,
but I can see that might not be
where you are just now, just yet.
But
Yeah, that's where we are now.
Do you think that women of
a certain age can become
you know, invisible?
I mean, seriously,
can someone say,
"I nearly killed myself last night,"
and you don't even kind of hear it?
-Have you been to the doctor?
-What doctor?
-Your doctor?
-No.
Oh, well, a while ago.
He put me on antidepressants.
He said they won't
work for three months,
so I didn't bother with them.
I know you've had things to
deal with over the last year,
with your marriage and so forth,
and I sympathise with that, I do,
of course I do, but
there's only so many times you
can bring it into work with you.
And, Beth, you
shouldn't exaggerate.
When did I exaggerate?
Not about self-harm.
I wonder why you think
I'm exaggerating.
Again, maybe it's the tone.
Let's keep talking.
And do remember our new policy
of maintaining a
community of trust.
Do you ever feel like you're
living in an alternative universe?
No.
SHE GASPS
Shit!
Kitty.
I made you some tea.
Come on, it's 1:30.
I need you to get moving. I
need you to be out of here.
-I feel like shit.
-Yeah, well, let's get some breakfast inside you,
and then you need to get down into
Hebden Bridge and get on a bus.
-I need a shower.
-You can have another shower,
-and then you've got to get up to the council offices in Halifax.
-Why?
We talked about this last night.
So they can sort you out
with a temporary address
and put you on a waiting list
for something more permanent.
You know it'll be like some
shitty infested bed and breakfast.
Only till you're eligible
for something more permanent.
In two years. Fuck that.
Yeah, obviously, it's better
if you can persuade a friend
to let you have a room
or a settee for a bit.
-Do you want some muesli?
-God, no.
-Tea?
-Thanks.
-Has it got?
-500 sugars? Yep. Come on.
One of your boys came in
earlier to find his shoes, Adam.
-Think I shocked him.
-Yep.
He's fit, isn't he? Who'd
he get that off, then?
So, I'm going out in
about half an hour
to see a fella about a guitar.
-So you need to get your backside into gear
-Do you know what?
-I'm all right. I'll stay here.
-No, Kitty.
I took you in cos all the
hostels were full last night,
and because I personally would
never see a woman who's bleeding
as heavily as you are, who's
just tried to end it all,
sleep on the street.
But I've got a house full
with both boys still at home,
and I need my settee,
I need my front room.
I've done what I can -
it was an emergency -
but you've got to help
yourself now, all right?
PHONE RINGS
-Mum, hi.
-These aren't my biscuits.
Sorry, bi? What biscuits?
I wouldn't give this sort
cupboard space, so it's a mystery
how they got in here at all.
Right, I tell you what,
I'll be round in a bit.
I was in A&E all night with
Anyway, I ended up doing
overtime and didn't get back in
-till 4:00 in the morning, so
-It'll be that Veronica.
Anyway, I've told her
not to come again.
-I'm sick of her.
-She comes round to help you.
-She's just doing her job.
-I'm going to put the chain on in future,
-and then she won't be able to get in.
-No, Mum
Well, I say I'll put the chain on.
You know, she can get through it.
-What do you mean?
-She brings a fella in during the night,
and they have sex in
my little back bedroom.
-Sorry What?
-Veronica.
-She doesn't.
-Oh, no, she does. I've heard them.
-What fella? -Well, I don't know.
-Mum, why would Veronica
sneak into your house in
the middle of the night
-to have sex with a fella?
-Well, they'll be having a fling.
-Mum, she's
-They can't go home if they're cheating on their partners,
-can they? Think it through.
-She's a carer.
She's a professional
carer, she'd lose her job.
-She wouldn't do that.
-Says you.
Nobody can get into
your house at night
if you lock up properly, Mum.
Well, SHE can.
-Well, have you seen them?
-No. I hear them. -Well, so
-How do you know it's Veronica?
-I recognise her voice.
-Have you said anything to her?
-No.
She's a big woman. What
if she turns nasty?
-I'm coming round.
-When?
-Yeah, now.
-Oh, OK.
So, what are we doing
about these biscuits?
I'll deal with the biscuits.
See you later. Bye. Bye-bye.
Right, come on,
shower. Whatever.
I need you to be heading
down to that bus stop,
cos I've got things to do.
-I mean now!
-Urgh!
I don't need another shower.
Fucking hell.
-Not with your shit shampoo.
-Cruelty-free shampoo.
And you do need
another shower, love.
I've got a bit of business to see
to myself, in fact, so no problem.
So grateful. "Thank you so much."
"No, the pleasure was all mine."
Ooh
-Up, Kitty!
-Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
LINE RINGS
VOICEMAIL: - Hi, this is
Tom. Please leave a message.
PHONE RINGS
You can fuck off.
Right, fuck it!
TYRES SCREECH
How are you, Miss?
-Calvin. - Do you play?
-Guitar? No. Do you?
Calvin, you know this morning
when you held open the
door for Aliyah and Jo,
quarter past eight this morning,
heading in through the
science block door?
-Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
-Did you not see me
loaded with books and
bags just behind you?
-Was you?
-Yeah. Or did you see me and think,
"Oh, whatever, she can manage"?
Or did you just not see me?
There's no wrong answers.
I'm just doing some research.
The last one, obviously.
Cos, of course, I would've
held the door open
for a lovely lady like
yourself, if I'd seen you.
I was less than ten feet
away and closing in.
Probably gazing at
Aliyah's assets.
Course you were.
Sorry.
OK.
-I'd sell my granny's arse for that Gibson.
-Mm.
Hello, hello. You just
looking, guys, or?
I was thinking about
buying a new keyboard.
Sure, do you want
to? This way.
-Is it for yourself?
-For myself, yes.
Right, so we've got these models.
Start around the 350 mark.
Very popular with
people such as yourself.
I'm in a rock band. I need something
a bit more dangerous than that.
OK. What kind of?
I was thinking of a more
proper-big digital doo-dah.
-Oh, nice!
-Miss, did you say you were in a band?
-Yeah.
-What sort of stuff do you play?
-Punk ish, mainly, that kind of vibe.
-Oh.
You don't normally get keys
and synths in punk bands.
Yeah, well, we're
kind of experimental.
Although Devo, the Screamers,
Atari Teenage Riot,
-yeah? Nice. Exciting.
-What's your band called, Miss?
Riot Women. We sing songs
about being middle-aged
and menopausal and
more or less invisible.
-Wow.
-Yeah. And you thought the Clash were angry.
MUSIC: Weak by Skunk Anansie
Lost in time
I can't count the words I said
When I thought
they went unheard
All of those harsh
thoughts so unkind
Cos I wanted you
And now I sit
here, I'm all alone
So, yes, it's a bloody mess
Tears fly home
A circle of angels deep in war
Cos I wanted you
Weak as I am
No tears for you
Weak as I am
No tears for you
Deep as I am
I'm no-one's fool
Weak as I am
Weak as I am
Weak as I am
Am, Am
Weak as I am
Am I too much for you?
Weak as I am
Am I too much for you?
Weak as I am
Am I too much for you?
Weak as I am ♪
CAR ALARM WAILS
SHE YELLS
-Hey, I'm calling the police right now!
-Where are my things?!
-Did you hear me? I said I'm calling
-You call the fuckers,
it's 999. I want my things,
-you lying, two-faced bastard!
-I'm filming all this.
Think they might be
interested in your little
SNIFFS
habits
-Shut the fuck
-Oh, there she is.
There's your shit from your
grubby little shag pad.
Now, you stay away from my
husband, you two-bit whore!
Hey!
Arsehole!
Weak as I am
Weak as I am ♪
You fucking disgust me.
Right, foot down, Fakir.
ALARM CONTINUES
Twat!
PHONE RINGS
-Tom. -Oh, hi. How's it going?
-Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
-Um, thanks for calling me back.
-I didn't know I was.
Yeah, called you
about an hour ago.
Ah, OK. Well, I was
just ringing Hang on,
-what are you ringing me for?
-Well, I was just wondering about
whether you've heard anything from
the adoption services about
-about your birth mother.
-Oh, er
No, I've not heard anything, no.
-It's been four weeks.
-I know, yeah, but, er
Well, they're probably as
short-staffed as everybody else,
aren't they? I WILL let you
know, Mum, if I hear anything.
Yeah, yeah, sure.
Obviously, I'd like to know.
Yeah, of course.
-OK, so
-So yes.
So, I was ringing you because
you know how we were coming
over for Sunday lunch
at the end of next
month on the 27th?
Yeah, for my belated
Mother's Day.
Is it possible that we could push it
until the 17th of the month after?
We've been invited to an engagement
thing with Fern's friend Alicia.
Obviously, it's a big one-off
thing in Surrey, so
And all of our Durham friends
will be there as well,
so if we miss it, we
miss it, whereas
Yeah. I'm just going
to go now because
I've literally just
got back from work
-and I'm still sitting in the car.
-Oh, sorry.
-No, no.
-Well, look, let me know when you get a minute, won't you?
Yeah. Yeah, I will, I will.
-Bye!
-Bye! Bye, bye, bye, bye.
LAUGHS: - No!
-You did well. - That was really bad.
-You did well. - No.
KNOCKING ON DOOR
DOG BARKS
Oh, hallelujah.
I just got your message just now,
and I was just passing, so
I left that message at, like,
two o'clock this afternoon.
I've been stuck in
theatre all day.
First with a woman who came
in with a cord prolapse,
then I had a woman with a retained
placenta after the cord snap,
and then I had a woman
with a third-degree tear.
Yeah, seriously. When I
started this job 200 years ago,
you delivered one baby at once. Now
I'm racing between three different
-women in three different recovery rooms.
-And breathe.
-What's that for?
-Oh, this lad I arrested a couple of months ago
lent me his bass.
Jess round The Duke asked me
to do this charity thing, so
Just tell me about Mum.
So, yeah, so I went
round to Mum's.
No sign of any break-ins
or anybody doing anything
they shouldn't be doing
in her back bedroom.
So I finally got to speak to
the doctor, and apparently
PHONE BUZZES
Oh, hang on.
SHE CHUCKLES
-What? -Aw!
-What?
Oh, just this guy I met
-on my dating app.
-You didn't?
Yeah. Seen him a couple of
times, and, yeah, he's
Still living with his
wife? Hung like a hamster?
-Collects bus tickets?
-He's all right.
Actually seems quite normal compared
to, you know, some of the others.
So, yeah, anyway, apparently,
this is one of the things
-that can happen when they get dementia.
-What is?
You get people coming having
sex in your back bedroom?
No, they get auditory
hallucinations.
-Eh?
-Yeah. Look it up, nurse.
I deliver babies. Why would I
know anything about geriatrics?
They were slow when she
said it. I mean, she's deaf!
She couldn't hear if Veronica
was having sex with a giraffe
in her back bedroom,
never mind some fella.
Anyway, the point is,
for her, it's real.
And she's frightened.
And I know you don't want
to think about it, but
I'm wondering
if it's time she came
to live with one of us,
cos she's just not
coping properly
SHE SIGHS
any more.
Yvonne!
SHE EXHALES
-Do you want to be in a rock band?
-What?
MUSIC: The Passenger by Iggy Pop
They're young, they're busy,
the world's their oyster,
I understand that. It would
just be nice once in a while
not to always be the one being
shuffled off onto the back burner
again. And I know it's silly,
but I worry he
might not tell me,
even if his birth mother
did get in touch with him.
-Well, why wouldn't he?
-Oh, I don't know.
To protect my feelings,
I can imagine him saying.
I just
What?
I worry she'd be such a novelty,
and he'd be so taken
up with her that
Oh, come on, she might be
a novelty for five minutes.
Why shouldn't he have a relationship
with her if that's what he wants?
I just sometimes feel that
they've all had the
best of me for years.
And now that I've got nothing
left to give, I'm dispensable.
I'm boring and dispensable.
No, you're not. Oh, come on.
Look, whoever the hell she is,
-she's not going to replace you, Beth.
-Sorry.
Going on.
Hey, I've got a secret.
-You have? Have you?
-Just the one.
SHE CHUCKLES
OK.
I bought a subscription to
these online drumming lessons
about six or seven months
ago, and they're really good.
It's all pre-recorded,
so, you know,
you don't have to talk
to anyone or anything.
And I play with these, like,
dampener pads on the heads
so no-one can actually
hear me in the garage.
-So you can already play?
-Yeah. Well, you know, badly.
Yeah. So when they mentioned
the talent contest, I thought,
"This is it. This is my chance
to come out the closet."
I can be as bad as I like,
and everyone will actually
think I've done quite well,
considering I've only been
at it a few short weeks.
-Let's have a look.
-Come on, then.
COMPETENT DRUMMING
SHE LAUGHS
-Whoo!
-Whoo-hoo-hoo!
Why is that a secret?
Can't exactly practice
in the house, can I?
Auntie Mary'd think
the aliens had landed.
-You should, though.
-It's not that.
It's all the smart-arse
comments I get from bloody Chloe
whenever I try and do
anything a bit different.
She's so rude about Jerry.
Honestly, bless him.
I mean, I know he's a bit
bloody ordinary, but so am I.
Oh, Chloe. Tell her to fuck off.
I know.
I do!
Now and then. It doesn't
make any difference.
-You're not ordinary, by the way Ooh!
-Steady.
Far from it. I
Bit weird, but I
remembered something today.
I was in a music shop in
Leeds, and it all came back.
Years ago, I bought
an electric guitar.
I was in the sixth form, I think
you must have just dropped out.
I had a Saturday job
and I saved 120 quid,
and I bought an electric
guitar and a little amp,
and I had completely
forgotten I'd done that.
Hang on, so so you can play?
Oh, no, no! No, I
didn't persevere.
I don't even remember what happened
to it. I must have sold it.
I could never fathom the
manual, beyond the basics,
and it never occurred to me to get
lessons. But I had that desire.
And so did you, didn't you?
Way back then. Why do you
think we never talked about it?
-We listened to enough music.
-It would've been all right
-if we were lads. If we'd have been lads, it'd have been cool.
-Jess
I bought a keyboard this
afternoon, a serious keyboard.
-Seriously? - Mm.
-Oh, my God. Was it expensive?
Mmm
I thought, "Fuck it. Why not?"
I've been so low lately.
With, uh, Mum,
and Martin deciding to
bugger off for some reason
that's never been clear to me.
And Tom and work. But this
this really fired my imagination.
This really made
me think, "Yes!"
For the first time in longer
than I care to remember,
a buzz of something
not unlike actual joy.
Oh, babe!
-Can I say something, though?
-Yeah, yeah.
I'm not sure about Waterloo.
Oh, we don't have
to do Waterloo.
I think we could do
something much angrier.
Something more about us.
Women like us who are where
they are in the world,
and then suddenly, all
this nonsense happens
-that they never even saw coming.
-Yeah.
-Difficult parents.
-Oh, my God, Auntie Mary.
Midlife crisis husbands. And your
child's still doing your head in.
-Still. -And then the menopause.
-Oh, fucking menopause!
Tearful at every tiny stupid
thing. The anxiety, the brain fog.
-Yeah.
-And in the middle of all that
-you become invisible, even to yourself.
-You're right.
-Even when you're screaming and shouting, you're invisible.
-I know.
-How does that happen?
-I don't know. Mad.
Just when you thought you'd
got traction in the world,
just when you finally
think, "I've got it sorted."
-I know.
-So I think, whatever we do,
we should do it with attitude.
We can do whatever we want.
PHONE RINGS
Hang on. Miranda.
-Miranda!
-Where have you gone, Mum?
There's a couple of ladies
asking after you at the bar.
-Right, OK. They're here.
-Oh! -Woohoo!
-Come on. Come on.
-Oh!
-Oh! Hiya, Beth.
-Chloe, you look
Don't wait up.
-Another new fella?
-God knows.
-Thank you.
-You getting this round in?
-Yeah, I'll get this one.
-Cool. -£12.50 a round
-Jess? -Yes?
-We're the singers.
-I'm Nisha. - Ahhh!
-Hiya! - Fantastic!
-Aww! Yeah, this is my sister, Kam.
-Hi!
-Hiya, hi. This is Beth. Beth?
-Hiya.
Beth's playing piano. Keyboards.
And these are friends of Holly's.
Holly's playing bass. You've not met
Holly yet. So you work with Holly?
-I do, yeah. Kam's a hairdresser.
-Hi.
And we're both tone-deaf,
so we're going to nail it.
-Oh, yeah. We do owt for a laugh.
-You're tone-deaf?
SINGING BADLY: - Waterloo,
couldn't escape if I wanted to
Dah-dah-dah-dah - BOTH,
OUT-OF-TUNE: - Waterloo! ♪
-Well
-My fate is to be with you ♪
I had a thought about
that, actually, in fact.
What I was wondering was,
instead of doing Waterloo,
-we could sing something else.
-Yeah. -Like what?
Well, um, for instance,
I was thinking of
SISTERS SQUEAL
Here she is!
-Hiya!
-The newly retired lady of leisure, Holly Gaskell! Brrrrap!
-Get out the champagne, Miranda.
-No, no, no.
Oh, yes, yes. Come on, 30
years! It's the end of an era.
You can't retire from the force
without a glass of champagne.
-We've got it all ready.
-Not for me. I'm gas intolerant.
I've brought Yvonne, my sister.
She did guitar years ago
when we were young, so
-Hello. -Hello.
-Right, Beth, Holly, Yvonne.
- YVONNE: - So what's
the plan, exactly?
Need to know what nights you're
rehearsing, how long for.
Cos I've got a lot
of other commitments.
Also, when is this event?
-Um
-And have you got someone who can actually sing?
Cos that's the key to
something like this.
They don't want someone who can
sing, they want someone who's shit!
Well, hang on, we don't
want someone who's shit.
We just don't mind if
they aren't perfect.
I thought it was a
lack-of-talent contest.
-Lack-of-talent contest?!
-What she said.
No, that was a joke. It's
a it's a talent contest,
but it's local, so it'll all
probably be a bit, you know, shit.
-But that's all I meant.
-And we're performing what?
-BOTH: - Waterloo!
-Let's get it on the karaoke.
-Can we turn the karaoke on, Jess?
-No, no, no. It's board games night.
This lot'll panic and clear off
if they think it's karaoke night.
We're not rehearsing,
we're not having a boogie?
No, no, we're just discussing.
-I-I, er - MIRANDA: Here you go, bubbles, Mum.
-..can I suggest
-Champagne? Champagne?
-Ooh.
Can I just suggest that we don't
get too hung up on Waterloo?
What I was wondering was
whether we shouldn't cover
something a bit edgier.
-I like Waterloo.
-Oh, it's a good pop song.
But if you're talking
about being in a rock band,
then surely you want to be
doing something a bit more
-More, um
-Yeah. I mean, wouldn't it be kind of cool if we
if we could do
Well
Well, what is the ultimate
rock and roll song?
-Ooh, er
-Oh, God.
-Ultimate rock and roll song?
-Pass.
Is it Smoke On The Water?
Layla? Back In Black?
-All Night Long?
-Edge Of Seventeen?
It Smells Like Teen Armpit?
SISTERS LAUGH
Satisfaction!
I'm talking about Satisfaction.
Can you imagine Satisfaction
sung by women, women
of a certain age -
well, most of us -
isn't that interesting?
-Yeah.
-I'd do anything.
As long as I know which
strings to twang
Pluck? Pick? Pickle? YVONNE:
- Hang on, Satisfaction?
Think it through, the
words. It's all wrong.
-We can't sing that.
-Why not? -We're women.
-So what? It's funny BECAUSE we're women.
-Is it?
-Oh.
-Well, poignant, then. Like we're still up for it.
I think it's funny and poignant.
But not nearly as funny as a bunch
of 80-year-old blokes singing it.
-No, you don't, it's stupid.
-It's not stupid, it's!
It's challenging.
It's a suggestion.
Look, if we don't want to do
Waterloo, why don't we do
Ring, Ring. Honey, Honey.
Money, Money, Money.
Ooh! Gimme, gimme, gimme ♪
-Voulez-Vous!
-That's still kind of missing the point
I was trying to make
about edgier, but, um
Is it meant to be edgy, though? Is
it not just meant to be a laugh?
Sure. I'm just suggesting
that we can be edgy
if we choose to be.
Let's just stick with
Waterloo, for God's sake.
I need to know dates, I need to
know what nights you're rehearsing,
where, how long for, and the
date of the actual thing.
Yeah. Let's not try and
actually enjoy ourselves, eh?
What, by being angry?
Yvonne just likes
to pin things down.
Be clear about dates. It's
her way of enjoying herself.
Sure. Well, I've got things I
could be doing myself this evening.
I just don't think we
should be doing Waterloo
just because it's the first
thing that Jess thought of,
which she admits might
not be the right thing.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah,
absolutely. Champagne?
-No, I'm driving.
-Oh, right, OK. So, look,
I think the date the PTA are working
towards is the 17th of next month.
But why is she Why are
you even here, Yvonne, is it?
If all you care about is how much
this is going to inconvenience you?
Because I don't like letting
people down at a later date
if I haven't established all
the facts in the first place.
Thought that was a
bit of a no-brainer.
Sorry, can I just say
Congratulations to Holly!
HOLLY CHUCKLES
No, 30 years of public
service! Come on!
Cheers, sweetheart.
It's amazing. Amazing.
Thanks. Not awkward at all.
YVONNE: - Fine, whatever.
Let's sing a song that makes
us all look like lesbians.
-God's sake
-I don't mind looking like a lesbian.
-I am a lesbian.
-I don't mind looking like a lesbian.
She is a lesbian, actually.
Right, OK. Tell you what, Jess,
you phone me when you have
decided what we're doing.
Because I've got a pile of
marking that I need to be doing.
-So I'll see you later.
-Beth Oh, Jesus!
Beth, I'll ring
you. I'll call you.
- DISTANT SINGING:
- Mine is forever
Might last a day, yeah
Mine is forever
When they get what they want
And they never want it again
When they get what they want
And they never want it again
Go on, take everything
Take everything, I want you to
Go on, take everything
Take everything, I want you to
And the sky was all violet
I wanna get more
violent, more violent
And I'm the one with no soul
One above and one below
Might last a day, yeah
Mine is forever
Might last a day, yeah
Mine is forever
When they get what they want
And they never want it again
They get what they want
And they never want it again
Go on, take everything
Take everything, I want you to
Go on, take everything
Take everything, I dare you to
I told you from the start
Just how this would end
When I get what I want
And I never want it again
Go on, take everything
Take everything,
I want you to go
Go on, take everything
Take everything, I want you to
It's my life
All mine, all mine
Go on, take everything
Take everything,
take everything
Take everything! ♪
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