The Scotsman

Scots MP was NHS founder’s ‘dark angel’

- By SHÂN ROSS sross@scotsman.com

She was a Scottish Labour MP who grew up in a Fife mining village during the Depression.

But now a new play, receiving its Scottish premiere, reveals how Jennie Lee, from Lochgelly, was the real power behind the throne, urging her fellow Labour MP husband Aneurin Bevan on in his plans to form the National Health Service.

In the year the NHS celebrates its 70th anniversar­y, Nye & Jennie starts its two-night, plus matinee, run tonight at The Studio, at the Festivalth­eatre inedinburg­h.

Lee, (1904-1988), who later played a key role in founding the Open University, and in 1970 was made Baroness Lee of Asheridge, worked as a teacher before being elected Independen­t Labour Party MP for North Lanarkshir­e in 1929 – a rare occurrence for a woman in that era. In 1945 she became the Labour Party MP for Cannock in Staffordsh­ire.

She met Bevan, the Welsh firebrand MP for Ebbw Vale, in South Wales, on the rebound from an affair with a married MP and the couple married in 1934, and had a tempestuou­s relationsh­ip.

Both of them were loved and loathed by their fellow MPS – Bevan, dubbed the Bollinger Bolshevik by Lord Beaverbroo­k, with Lee, his Lady Macbeth, the dark angel at his shoulder, refusing to allow him to compromise.

Geinor Styles, artistic director of Theatr na nóg, based in Neath, South Wales, said: “The play is about two incredible politician­s of their time, the love they had for each other, their political marriage and their legacy.

“He recognised himself in her. They were both from a Labour Socialist background, growing up in working-class areas where both families were miners.

“Bevan saw this strong, uncompromi­sing individual whose principles were unshaken.

“What the public saw was a great man with a woman by his side. But in actual fact Lee was a major driving force, challengin­g him to go further and further.

“She edited his speeches, debated with him, told him ‘we need to get your arguments straight’. Her influence has largely been overlooked but the play rectifies that wrong.”

Meredydd Barker wrote the script after reading Lee’s autobiogra­phy My Life With Nye.

Barker said the couple were “Socialist royalty” in the 1940s and 50s.

“It’s been forgotten because

0 Labour MP Jennie Lee has been revealed as being the ‘power behind the throne’ of Nye Bevan

anyone who’s in the shadow of Nye Bevan is going to be completely crowded out, to be honest.

“I think the way she influenced him – and many contempora­ries thought it was a bad influence – was that she stops him being so agreeable or making compromise­s

that would normally be made. For somebody who’s famous for seeing through the NHS – which took a lot of strength – Nye was very good at making political compromise­s and Jennie wasn’t.”

As well as the Open University and her influence on Bevan’s NHS, Lee is remembered

by a host of buildings named in her memory. These include the Jennie Lee Students’ Associatio­n in Kirkcaldy, the Jenny Lee Library in Lochgelly and Jennie Lee building at the Open University campus in Milton Keynes.

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