Dame Vera Lynn gone
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Discussion

TUS373

Original Poster:

5,055 posts

305 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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A genuine national treasure gone, aged 103. Great innings.

Eric Mc

124,962 posts

289 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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A great lady. She did so much for morale during World War 2.

Dinoboy

2,599 posts

241 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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I hate the over used 'National treasure' but she actually was one! RIP.

rover 623gsi

5,230 posts

185 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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TUS373

Original Poster:

5,055 posts

305 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
I think Dame Vera Lynn really was a great person of the moment, uniting a country in troubled times, raising morale, and keeping people together where ever they were in the world at the time. She was way before my time, but I doff my cap to her in respect. Unfortunately, many people do not know what respect means now.

pequod

8,997 posts

162 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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TUS373 said:
I think Dame Vera Lynn really was a great person of the moment, uniting a country in troubled times, raising morale, and keeping people together where ever they were in the world at the time. She was way before my time, but I doff my cap to her in respect. Unfortunately, many people do not know what respect means now.
Agreed.

Perhaps we could erect a statue of her, if only there was a spare plinth.....?

RIP Vera

The Mad Monk

11,141 posts

141 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
TUS373 said:
I think Dame Vera Lynn really was a great person of the moment, uniting a country in troubled times, raising morale, and keeping people together where ever they were in the world at the time. She was way before my time, but I doff my cap to her in respect. Unfortunately, many people do not know what respect means now.
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.

anonymous-user

78 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
pequod said:
Agreed.

Perhaps we could erect a statue of her, if only there was a spare plinth.....?

RIP Vera
Somebody would soon come along with evidence that she once made a racist comment in 1932, and before you know it , it'll be her statue getting lobbed lobbed over the White Cliffs of Dover...

Ahonen

5,031 posts

303 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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The Mad Monk said:
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
Wow, you're a prolific poster on here for someone who must be in their mid 90s.

G_Morto

429 posts

82 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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rover 623gsi said:
This is the better version.

https://youtu.be/JeuhCQwwEBw

racezimmer

354 posts

184 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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Bless her. She was so good in ELO...

Just kidding!

In all seriousness, an absolute legend. Great singer well into her late 70's, warm engaging personality, an honest and authentic advocate for the armed forces and a beautiful woman to boot, even into her old age. What a grand old age to live to. A life well lived I would say.

glazbagun

15,176 posts

221 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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Good innings at 103. Shame the VE day stuff was hit by covid, but looks like she went out as well as anyone could hope to. A brave new world for Britain coming up soon with the last of the WWII generation leaving us soon.

Taylor James

3,111 posts

85 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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The Mad Monk said:
TUS373 said:
I think Dame Vera Lynn really was a great person of the moment, uniting a country in troubled times, raising morale, and keeping people together where ever they were in the world at the time. She was way before my time, but I doff my cap to her in respect. Unfortunately, many people do not know what respect means now.
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
Oh do fk off little man

Castrol for a knave

7,182 posts

115 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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The Mad Monk said:
TUS373 said:
I think Dame Vera Lynn really was a great person of the moment, uniting a country in troubled times, raising morale, and keeping people together where ever they were in the world at the time. She was way before my time, but I doff my cap to her in respect. Unfortunately, many people do not know what respect means now.
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
This is you, isn't it?

In the corner of your little field, eating thistles in the rain.




Stella Tortoise

3,123 posts

167 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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The Mad Monk said:
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
Attention seeking tt.

dandarez

13,907 posts

307 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
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Ahonen said:
The Mad Monk said:
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
Wow, you're a prolific poster on here for someone who must be in their mid 90s.
MId 20s more like it!

Competent performer? She, if I remember correctly - I wasn't there but born just after the war - worked in a factory and came home and told her dad she hated it because 'you're not allowed to talk' (imagine that today!) and her dad said 'Well, you can sing, why not do that?'
She said she'd like to help the war effort singing to the troops and said she had no 'baggage', she would go anywhere to help.
The answer was 'Well, we could send you to Burma?'
'I'll go!' she answered.
War torn Burma! Get that around your head Mad Monk. Today's generation would run a f. mile!

RIP great lady.

Alucidnation

16,810 posts

194 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
Ahonen said:
The Mad Monk said:
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
Wow, you're a prolific poster on here for someone who must be in their mid 90s.
Indeed, what a fking bell end.

rofl

TUS373

Original Poster:

5,055 posts

305 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
Indeed, she did go to Burma.

Do take a look at this https://www.nwfa.mmu.ac.uk/blighty/record.php?toke... .

It is my late father, a Warrant Officer in the British Army, in Burma, with his fellow soldiers - singing "We'll Meet Again". My father introduces the song, as featured at the end of the recent ITV 'Captain Tom's War'.

I miss my dad - had all too short in my life, but he was here, doing what he and others had to do, in sometimes awful conditions. The songs were something that brought the troops together.

Eric Mc

124,962 posts

289 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
TUS373 said:
Indeed, she did go to Burma.

Do take a look at this https://www.nwfa.mmu.ac.uk/blighty/record.php?toke... .

It is my late father, a Warrant Officer in the British Army, in Burma, with his fellow soldiers - singing "We'll Meet Again". My father introduces the song, as featured at the end of the recent ITV 'Captain Tom's War'.

I miss my dad - had all too short in my life, but he was here, doing what he and others had to do, in sometimes awful conditions. The songs were something that brought the troops together.
Was he suffering from beri beri or some other tropical disease? His voice sounded really weird.

anonymous-user

78 months

Thursday 18th June 2020
quotequote all
dandarez said:
Ahonen said:
The Mad Monk said:
I don't think so. It was a band wagon that she happily climbed on.

As you say - you weren't there - so you don't know.

I was there, I don't think she was "The Forces Sweetheart", or "raised morale". She was a competent performer. That's it.
Wow, you're a prolific poster on here for someone who must be in their mid 90s.
MId 20s more like it!

Competent performer? She, if I remember correctly - I wasn't there but born just after the war - worked in a factory and came home and told her dad she hated it because 'you're not allowed to talk' (imagine that today!) and her dad said 'Well, you can sing, why not do that?'
She said she'd like to help the war effort singing to the troops and said she had no 'baggage', she would go anywhere to help.
The answer was 'Well, we could send you to Burma?'
'I'll go!' she answered.
War torn Burma! Get that around your head Mad Monk. Today's generation would run a f. mile!

RIP great lady.
Lots of celebrities, comedians etc went out to other hot and dusty places during Telic (Iraq) and Herrick (Afghanistan), you just didn’t hear about it because rather than milk the opportunity for promotion, they wanted to help.

She sang a song, other women helped the war effort by building tanks, flying spitfires and putting soldiers bodies back together....