The Guardian (USA)

Film-maker Mike Leigh given freedom of city of Salford

- Jade Hammond

The film-maker Mike Leigh has been honoured with the freedom of his birth city of Salford, after a nearly 40-year career distilling the realities of northern working-class life on to the screen.

The writer and director joins a roster of revered previous recipients of the honour – considered the highest the city council can bestow on an individual – that includes Nelson Mandela, Ryan Giggs, LS Lowry and prime minister David Lloyd George.

The Bafta-winning director has made about 20 films to date – from the 1971 classic Bleak Moments to his latest release, Peterloo, a gritty account of the 1819 massacre ahead of its bicentenar­y in August. The massacre led to the establishm­ent of the Guardian’s first incarnatio­n, the Manchester Guardian newspaper.

Leigh’s internatio­nal accolades include five Baftas, two British independen­t film awards and a Palme d’Or. Collecting the honorary book, medal and certificat­e at Salford civic centre, Leigh said: “What an extraordin­ary honour to receive the freedom of the city of Salford, it is something I could never have dreamed of at Salford grammar school.”

Leigh went on to share memories of growing up on Great Cheetham Street East, as the son of a GP whose surgery was replete with the “continuous sound of the bronchitic coughing of desperate men who were sacrificin­g their lives and their lungs to heavy industry”.

The city’s mayor, Paul Dennett, spoke of Salford’s privilege to recognise Leigh’s great achievemen­ts. He added: “When our magazines, our books, our television­s are so regularly filled with images of the successful, the rich and the powerful, Mike’s work is a refreshing and straightfo­rward reminder of the world in which the majority of people live.”

 ??  ?? Mike Leigh: ‘an extraordin­ary honour’. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/for the Observer
Mike Leigh: ‘an extraordin­ary honour’. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/for the Observer

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