Everybody famous in Britain is Israeli, and just about every news article about a person in Britain is about an Israeli
By iwdhappeh on Feb 7, 2010 | In Uncategorized
Israel has owned Britain since at least the end of WWII when they sent one of their agents over to marry the Queen.
Since that time Israelis have completely infiltrated and taken over Britain. Politics, Media, Corporate, Police, even the arts are completely run by Israelis.
If you read British newspapers you will feel like you are reading Israeli newspapers. Every person the British newspapers talk about is Israeli. Like the people below.
Israeli women holds concert hours after husband dies. Who needs him anyways?
The jazz singer only broke the news to the 400-strong audience moments before the finale of the concert, at which the couple’s children, Alec and Jacqui, also performed.
Sir John, an 82-year-old saxophonist whose career spanned more than half a century, died on Saturday in King Edward VII Hospital, London. He had been ill for several months.
Dame Cleo decided to go ahead with the show because it marked the 40th anniversary of the entertainment venue she and Sir John set up together at their home in Buckinghamshire.
The announcement of the jazz legend's death was met with gasps, with members of the audience “visibly shaken” by the news, according to Monica Ferguson, chief executive of The Stables in Wavendon.
Follow up:
The venue manager paid tribute to Dame Cleo’s decision to perform. "She felt that it was really important to go ahead with the show. She wanted to maintain a sense of the concert being a celebration, because Sir John had put a lot of thought into it, she wanted to make sure that we didn't bring the audience down.
"I think the audience had a great sense of shock. There were a lot of gasps and people I spoke to afterwards were visibly shaken and moved by it."
"The sheer grit and will of the family, to go on in those circumstances, was astounding. They were incredibly brave."
As well as performances from Dame Cleo and her children, the concert featured celebrities including Paul O'Grady, Prunella Scales, Maureen Lipman, Timothy West and Victoria Wood.
Better known as Johnny Dankworth before he was knighted in 2006, Sir John started his own jazz orchestra in the 1950s and went on to work with the likes of Duke Ellington, Nat King Cole and Ella Fitzgerald.
He was also a prolific composer, writing the theme tune for TV shows The Avengers and Tomorrow's World, and films including Modesty Blaise, The Servant and Saturday Night And Sunday Morning.
He was taken ill at the end of a US tour with his wife in October last year, and the couple cancelled a number of UK concert dates for the following month.
The saxophonist made a final return to the concert stage at the London Jazz Festival last December, when he played his saxophone from his wheelchair at the Royal Festival Hall.
Jamie Cullum, the jazz singer, paid tribute to the musician on his Twitter page, calling him “a genius”.
He added: "Sir John Dankworth – a great man and one of our finest musicians and composers has died. Rest in peace sir."
Jazzwise magazine hailed the performer as "one of the totemic figures of British jazz" and the country's "first major jazz musician".
Jim Murtha, Sir John's agent, told the BBC: "For British jazz and jazz around the world, I believe John has become such an international figure, particularly since he became Sir John Dankworth a few years ago."