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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:12,074 Support us and become VIP member to remove all ads from www.OpenSubtitles.org 2 00:00:31,406 --> 00:00:33,579 (CROWD SHOUTING) 3 00:00:43,877 --> 00:00:47,427 Lenny McLean was the toughest man in Britain. 4 00:00:48,173 --> 00:00:49,675 MAN: He was a very dangerous man. 5 00:00:55,305 --> 00:00:57,352 JOHN HUNTLEY: If you can imagine a pot of boiling water 6 00:00:57,432 --> 00:00:59,480 and it's always simmering, it's ready to boil. 7 00:00:59,893 --> 00:01:03,397 The film you are about to see shows an incredibly violent fight, 8 00:01:03,480 --> 00:01:05,482 which, for some at least, is entertaining. 9 00:01:08,986 --> 00:01:11,742 JAMIE MCLEAN: I've heard stories that he would go up the Camden Palace 10 00:01:11,822 --> 00:01:13,243 and challenge black belts in this and that 11 00:01:13,323 --> 00:01:16,748 and he just goes out and just knocks them completely spark out. 12 00:01:16,994 --> 00:01:20,999 He is like a dog, he either gets bitten and rolls over and dies, 13 00:01:21,081 --> 00:01:22,458 or he is going to come back and bite you. 14 00:01:27,296 --> 00:01:30,641 Lenny was the man who came back and bit you and bit you hard. 15 00:01:34,511 --> 00:01:35,808 (BELL RINGS) 16 00:01:37,681 --> 00:01:39,149 (CROWD CHEERING) 17 00:01:52,613 --> 00:01:56,203 MAN: If you're losing your temper, you're capable of doing anything, 18 00:01:56,283 --> 00:01:58,081 you're capable of murder really. 19 00:02:20,974 --> 00:02:22,897 JAMIE: There is a lot of negative stuff said about him. 20 00:02:24,603 --> 00:02:29,200 If you never met him you would have a certain way you would think about him 21 00:02:30,984 --> 00:02:34,741 and the main mission with the film would be to let people know 22 00:02:34,821 --> 00:02:36,785 that there's a different side to my dad 23 00:02:36,865 --> 00:02:38,913 that you probably ain't read or seen on YouTube. 24 00:02:39,034 --> 00:02:43,625 I mean, he was extremely, extremely funny, quick-witted one-liners, 25 00:02:43,705 --> 00:02:47,005 you know, and you would probably take an instant like to him. 26 00:02:49,294 --> 00:02:51,922 The physical abuse and the drinking turned him into a monster really. 27 00:02:53,674 --> 00:02:56,803 But I think there is something more than just the abuse and the alcohol. 28 00:02:58,011 --> 00:03:01,106 I think there's something deeper, I think there's something that we've not touched on. 29 00:03:01,264 --> 00:03:02,686 - Charlie? - Yeah? 30 00:03:06,645 --> 00:03:09,234 JAMIE: Probably I've boxed as an amateur and done some amateur fights when I was a kid 31 00:03:09,314 --> 00:03:13,739 and I do box and I do love going to the boxing gym and training, but fight... 32 00:03:13,819 --> 00:03:16,867 Not really, I don't think it really was... I didn't really... 33 00:03:16,947 --> 00:03:22,203 I like fight, I like sparring, I like doing the competitive side of it, but fighting, no. 34 00:03:25,789 --> 00:03:30,340 I've got a temper. If someone upsets me, I've got a slightly bad temper, yeah, 35 00:03:31,753 --> 00:03:35,678 and I had a problem last year and I went to prison for having a fight with somebody 36 00:03:36,842 --> 00:03:39,265 and I was charged with GBH Section 18. 37 00:03:39,928 --> 00:03:42,556 In the end, I pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of ABH, 38 00:03:42,639 --> 00:03:44,107 but I still went to prison for it. 39 00:03:46,184 --> 00:03:49,859 Going to prison was an eye-opener. I definitely don't want to go back there. 40 00:03:54,901 --> 00:03:58,121 So I need to know the truth why my dad become such a violent person. 41 00:04:01,658 --> 00:04:03,830 I mean, you've taken a lot of punishment you've dished it out. 42 00:04:03,910 --> 00:04:05,833 What's the worst thing you've ever done to anyone? 43 00:04:06,204 --> 00:04:11,461 Er, in one of the bare knuckle fights, I bit a guy's nose off. 44 00:04:12,127 --> 00:04:13,424 (CROWD GROANING) 45 00:04:14,296 --> 00:04:16,385 JAMIE: Probably the first time I see something like that 46 00:04:16,465 --> 00:04:18,843 was down when we had the caravan. 47 00:04:24,347 --> 00:04:27,100 All the kids down the caravan used to drive on these like little motorbikes, 48 00:04:27,184 --> 00:04:32,359 scramblers, rev-and-gos, and I used to let all the kids go on my one 49 00:04:32,439 --> 00:04:35,654 and one day a girl came out, and she was a little bit older than us, 50 00:04:35,734 --> 00:04:39,157 I was about eight or nine and she was about 15 and she wanted to go on my bike 51 00:04:39,237 --> 00:04:40,830 and I said, "Look, you've got to wait your turn." 52 00:04:41,448 --> 00:04:44,327 Anyway, she's pushed me off the bike and tried to get on the bike 53 00:04:44,409 --> 00:04:47,379 and me and her started to have like a set to, like, a fight. 54 00:04:47,996 --> 00:04:50,335 Her dad come out the caravan and tried to hit me 55 00:04:50,415 --> 00:04:53,419 and said, "You want a fight, you fight me." 56 00:04:53,502 --> 00:04:56,676 Dad's come out the caravan and said, "No, if you want a fight, you fight me," 57 00:04:57,964 --> 00:05:00,888 and then me old man just sort of let go, I've never seen anything like it. 58 00:05:02,552 --> 00:05:06,807 Absolutely just annihilated the geezer, just smashed him absolutely to pieces. 59 00:05:07,974 --> 00:05:09,942 And the whole place was just silent. 60 00:05:13,772 --> 00:05:15,610 And as he stood up, and the man was unconscious on the floor, 61 00:05:15,690 --> 00:05:18,864 and he stared at me and pointed a finger at me and said, "See what you have done now," 62 00:05:18,944 --> 00:05:20,657 and I was sort of frightened to get told off and he said, 63 00:05:20,737 --> 00:05:23,240 "Your tea's cold," and walked indoors like there's nothing had happened. 64 00:05:23,323 --> 00:05:26,872 It just sort of was just like a normal day of someone going to work 65 00:05:26,952 --> 00:05:29,956 in the post office or a builder and it was, it didn't affect him. 66 00:05:30,330 --> 00:05:32,669 And after that, he just went in the caravan and shut the door 67 00:05:32,749 --> 00:05:34,001 and that was the end of that. 68 00:05:44,135 --> 00:05:47,309 Growing up in post-war Britain in the late '40s, early '50s, 69 00:05:47,389 --> 00:05:48,982 there was nothing about, no money. 70 00:05:50,559 --> 00:05:54,063 In the East End, the doors was open, kids running around outside. 71 00:05:55,063 --> 00:05:58,359 I know you don't see a lot of it now, but there used to be stray dogs running around, 72 00:05:59,025 --> 00:06:00,527 food where they have been pregnant 73 00:06:00,610 --> 00:06:02,362 and people throwing buckets of water over them, 74 00:06:02,445 --> 00:06:06,036 you know, if someone knocks on your door for sugar or milk or, you know, 75 00:06:06,116 --> 00:06:07,459 you would give it to them. 76 00:06:08,869 --> 00:06:11,497 Look, mate, you're on camera. You're on camera, they're filming you. 77 00:06:11,580 --> 00:06:12,581 Oh, right. 78 00:06:12,747 --> 00:06:14,124 What have you done wrong? 79 00:06:14,791 --> 00:06:16,168 Everything. 80 00:06:18,753 --> 00:06:22,427 JAMIE: Playing on dumps, bomb sites, burnt-out buildings, 81 00:06:22,507 --> 00:06:24,846 you know, that's what you used to do. 82 00:06:24,926 --> 00:06:26,678 I suppose everything seemed happy at the time, 83 00:06:26,761 --> 00:06:30,061 but no one really knew what was going on behind closed doors. 84 00:06:36,062 --> 00:06:37,439 No. Well, uh... 85 00:06:47,741 --> 00:06:48,788 RUBY WAX: Right. 86 00:06:53,121 --> 00:06:54,122 (ECHOING) 87 00:06:59,085 --> 00:07:03,966 JAMIE: This is Geffrye Court in Hoxton. My dad was born here in 1949. 88 00:07:05,342 --> 00:07:07,681 This is where my dad grew up with his brothers and sisters, 89 00:07:07,761 --> 00:07:10,308 Boo, Kruger, Barry and Linda 90 00:07:10,388 --> 00:07:14,643 and the Walls, John-John, Sue, Bill Boy, Kenny Wall and Puff. 91 00:07:20,065 --> 00:07:21,692 His real dad died in his 20s. 92 00:07:24,319 --> 00:07:28,074 And then my nan remarried to Jim Irwin when my dad was about four, 93 00:07:30,116 --> 00:07:35,088 and I suppose the physical abuse started around that time. 94 00:07:37,499 --> 00:07:40,127 My stepfather, he broke my legs when I was five, 95 00:07:40,210 --> 00:07:44,134 broke my jaw when I was six, broke all my ribs when I was seven, 96 00:07:44,214 --> 00:07:46,308 bashed me right up until I was 12. 97 00:07:48,385 --> 00:07:50,228 JAMIE: Let me tell you how bad the abuse was. 98 00:07:50,512 --> 00:07:52,309 Not only was it physical, it was mental. 99 00:07:52,389 --> 00:07:53,766 They would be hit with belts, 100 00:07:53,848 --> 00:07:55,937 my dad said sometimes he'd be home from school, 101 00:07:56,017 --> 00:07:57,519 be put straight to bed with no dinner, 102 00:07:57,602 --> 00:07:59,479 and all his cousins and friends would be playing outside 103 00:07:59,562 --> 00:08:02,065 and it would be light out, nice sunny day in July. 104 00:08:02,148 --> 00:08:03,486 I mean, the abuse was so bad, 105 00:08:03,566 --> 00:08:07,032 that in the summer, they wore long trousers and long tops 106 00:08:07,112 --> 00:08:09,831 to help cover the broken bones and the bruises. 107 00:08:10,407 --> 00:08:12,830 And they lived over in here, this block here. 108 00:08:18,039 --> 00:08:21,755 His stepfather used to bash him up and say, "I'm the Guv'nor." 109 00:08:21,835 --> 00:08:26,011 So that would be ringing in my dad's ears throughout his teens and his adult life. 110 00:08:27,465 --> 00:08:30,680 And then what happens, hate builds up inside you 111 00:08:30,760 --> 00:08:31,761 and you become... 112 00:08:32,679 --> 00:08:34,147 You hate the world. 113 00:08:37,642 --> 00:08:40,612 The turning point was one cold winter. 114 00:08:40,937 --> 00:08:44,110 It was thick snow outside and Kruger had wet the bed. 115 00:08:44,190 --> 00:08:48,490 He was only a baby and Jim had really laid into him, really, really severely hurt him, 116 00:08:48,570 --> 00:08:55,249 and my dad picked him up and took him in a, like a homemade go-kart, 117 00:08:55,368 --> 00:08:58,042 dragged it through the snow, went round to Nanny Campion's house 118 00:08:58,830 --> 00:09:01,458 and she just weren't having it, so she got hold of Jimmy Spinks. 119 00:09:01,875 --> 00:09:03,546 Jimmy Spinks, that was his uncle, 120 00:09:03,626 --> 00:09:06,379 Jimmy Spinks was the Guv'nor of Hoxton at that time 121 00:09:06,463 --> 00:09:08,636 and he used to mind all the corner betters, 122 00:09:08,882 --> 00:09:10,553 all the bookies on the corners that used to bet 123 00:09:10,633 --> 00:09:13,512 and, you know, he was a person that you just didn't mess with, 124 00:09:13,595 --> 00:09:16,599 you know, if you went to have a fight with him you had to turn up with 10 people. 125 00:09:17,640 --> 00:09:20,143 Jimmy Spinks, he went round there with a cutthroat razor, 126 00:09:20,226 --> 00:09:24,481 Nanny Campion, she went round there with the old fashioned big glass ashtrays 127 00:09:25,106 --> 00:09:26,949 and they smashed the fuck out of him. 128 00:09:28,818 --> 00:09:30,786 And then he just disappeared for two years. 129 00:09:32,739 --> 00:09:34,202 My dad's relationship to Jimmy Spinks, 130 00:09:34,282 --> 00:09:35,870 he was probably like a father figure to him really. 131 00:09:35,950 --> 00:09:39,375 Everyone looked up to him and I think he aspired to be like him. 132 00:09:40,038 --> 00:09:42,252 Because that's the hero figures you grew up with in the East End, 133 00:09:42,332 --> 00:09:45,296 you grew up with local villains or hard men 134 00:09:45,376 --> 00:09:48,596 and, you know, that's the way they wanted to be in them days. 135 00:09:48,922 --> 00:09:53,511 Back in the '50s and '60s, in the East End, it was normal to see grown men 136 00:09:54,135 --> 00:09:58,857 have a hand to hand fight in the street if they had some dispute. 137 00:10:00,100 --> 00:10:01,693 And it was a cultural thing. 138 00:10:01,810 --> 00:10:04,484 And to be tough meant people sort of left you alone. 139 00:10:06,272 --> 00:10:07,945 So Lenny became tough. 140 00:10:12,070 --> 00:10:16,450 His first paid fight was around the age of about nine or 10 141 00:10:16,533 --> 00:10:18,329 here in Geffrye Court. 142 00:10:18,409 --> 00:10:20,662 There was a bigger kid picking on one of his sisters 143 00:10:20,745 --> 00:10:24,294 and his mum said, "You better go down there, you better deal with that boy, 144 00:10:24,374 --> 00:10:27,253 "and if you do, I'll give you some money to go and buy some cream cakes." 145 00:10:27,335 --> 00:10:29,799 And I don't think he needed persuading to have a cream cake 146 00:10:29,879 --> 00:10:31,176 because he did like a cream cake. 147 00:10:31,256 --> 00:10:34,179 Within a flash, he went down there, smashed the bully up, 148 00:10:34,259 --> 00:10:35,346 come back, and said where's his cream bun? 149 00:10:35,426 --> 00:10:36,598 She went, "I've to go to the shop and get it." 150 00:10:36,678 --> 00:10:37,974 He said, "Well, how long are you going to be 151 00:10:38,054 --> 00:10:40,393 "because I'm going to go bash someone else up. I want two cream buns." 152 00:10:40,473 --> 00:10:41,941 She went, "No, Len, only the one." 153 00:10:42,892 --> 00:10:45,361 I think he probably had a flavour for it then. 154 00:10:54,028 --> 00:10:55,867 Obviously, when my dad come out of Borstal, 155 00:10:55,947 --> 00:10:57,994 things had changed for him physically, you know. 156 00:10:58,074 --> 00:11:00,163 Two years in a young man's life, 157 00:11:00,243 --> 00:11:02,245 changes in your body takes, it's unbelievable, 158 00:11:02,328 --> 00:11:05,460 so when he come out of prison and see Jim Irwin 159 00:11:05,540 --> 00:11:08,794 and their first altercation, and my dad punched him, 160 00:11:08,877 --> 00:11:12,381 he went green and then he knew that abuse would stop there and then. 161 00:11:13,131 --> 00:11:17,430 I was going to give him a strong talking to once, 162 00:11:17,510 --> 00:11:21,101 but on my mother's death bed, she promised me, 163 00:11:21,181 --> 00:11:25,855 you know, "Please, please, don't have a go at him," 164 00:11:25,935 --> 00:11:28,233 and I promised her I would never have a go at him. 165 00:11:28,646 --> 00:11:31,149 And I found out about two weeks ago, he'd died. 166 00:11:32,692 --> 00:11:35,406 And I don't drink, I ain't drunk for 20 years, 167 00:11:35,486 --> 00:11:36,829 I had a shandy that night. 168 00:11:53,630 --> 00:11:55,724 Hi, Boo, you all right? 169 00:11:56,049 --> 00:11:57,972 Yeah. How's Kruger? 170 00:11:58,343 --> 00:12:00,971 No, I ain't rushing you for the interview, no. 171 00:12:01,054 --> 00:12:04,227 No, really, I ain't really. No, look, whenever you're ready. 172 00:12:04,307 --> 00:12:06,856 Obviously, I'm making sure Kruger is all right first 173 00:12:07,769 --> 00:12:10,147 because obviously it seemed like he was up for it. Um... 174 00:12:10,939 --> 00:12:14,404 Oh, all right, OK. Well, let me know. OK. All right then. 175 00:12:14,484 --> 00:12:16,987 I'll put it in the budget, don't worry. 176 00:12:17,070 --> 00:12:18,572 All right. Send him my love, then, yeah? 177 00:12:18,655 --> 00:12:21,408 All right. I'll call you later. I love you. Bye, bye. 178 00:12:21,532 --> 00:12:23,204 JAMIE: We were supposed to film Kruger and Boo today, 179 00:12:23,284 --> 00:12:25,161 my dad's brothers and sisters, 180 00:12:25,245 --> 00:12:29,169 just, er, but it's been pretty hard to try and get people to talk on camera, 181 00:12:29,249 --> 00:12:31,297 especially his family. They don't want to do it, so. 182 00:12:42,887 --> 00:12:45,140 Knock on the door and see if she's in. 183 00:12:45,223 --> 00:12:47,851 Is there anyone in, Joe? Nan? 184 00:12:48,017 --> 00:12:49,564 JOE: You all right, where are you going, Guv? 185 00:12:49,644 --> 00:12:52,238 Where is the dog? Come in then, come in. 186 00:12:53,564 --> 00:12:54,861 JAMIE: How are you, Lyns, are you all right? 187 00:12:54,941 --> 00:12:56,318 LINDA: I'm fine, shut the door, Joe. 188 00:13:08,830 --> 00:13:12,880 JAMIE: Lenny got married at the age of 19 and my mum was 17. 189 00:13:13,668 --> 00:13:15,381 My mum, she can remember walking up the street 190 00:13:15,461 --> 00:13:18,089 and she could actually see my dad's mattress on the street, 191 00:13:18,715 --> 00:13:21,221 so she go to Rose, "What's that?" She goes, "Oh, it's Lenny's mattress." 192 00:13:21,301 --> 00:13:22,347 She went, "Why'd you throw the mattress out?" 193 00:13:22,427 --> 00:13:24,849 She went, "Well, I ain't having him back, Val, you've got to have him." 194 00:13:24,929 --> 00:13:28,394 She said like, looked round and thought, "Let's see what sort of life I'm in for then 195 00:13:28,474 --> 00:13:30,067 "if his mum's trying to get rid of him." 196 00:13:32,020 --> 00:13:35,820 Here's Caliban Towers here. I think we used to live on the 13th floor. 197 00:13:37,859 --> 00:13:39,280 When they was younger, my mum and dad used to have, 198 00:13:39,360 --> 00:13:41,488 because they were probably the first one, couple to have a flat, 199 00:13:41,571 --> 00:13:44,791 so they used to have a lot of house parties up there and they used to get pissed 200 00:13:45,074 --> 00:13:47,247 and what him and his cousins used to do is hang off the top, 201 00:13:47,368 --> 00:13:50,917 13th floor by their fingers, and see who could hang there the longest without pulling up, 202 00:13:50,997 --> 00:13:52,418 who would get tired and look. 203 00:13:52,498 --> 00:13:56,673 So can you imagine hanging up there on the 13th floor like that, 204 00:13:56,753 --> 00:13:59,006 freezing cold, drunk, and see who could stay the longest. 205 00:13:59,088 --> 00:14:00,965 Now, if you slipped or made one move you're dead. 206 00:14:01,341 --> 00:14:02,718 They play PlayStation 4s now. 207 00:14:02,800 --> 00:14:06,100 Years ago, you used to play hang off the balcony on the 13th floor. 208 00:14:16,814 --> 00:14:19,988 Drinking, he probably thought was a good medication 209 00:14:20,068 --> 00:14:21,155 to help him forget. 210 00:14:21,235 --> 00:14:24,705 But what he didn't realise, drinking was the worst thing for him. 211 00:14:27,909 --> 00:14:31,004 This is the Lion and Lamb pub. He literally drove them mental in there. 212 00:14:32,205 --> 00:14:35,044 He had so many fights here they had a picture of him behind the bar, 213 00:14:35,124 --> 00:14:36,376 "Please do not upset this man." 214 00:14:36,459 --> 00:14:38,673 I mean, this is the pub that he used to do his party trick as well. 215 00:14:38,753 --> 00:14:40,842 Remember the old glass tankards? 216 00:14:40,922 --> 00:14:44,426 He used to line them up across the bar, get pissed and with the palm of his hand 217 00:14:44,509 --> 00:14:47,181 he would smash every single one down in one go. 218 00:14:47,261 --> 00:14:50,310 His hand, mum used to come and his hand would be absolutely cut to pieces. 219 00:14:53,851 --> 00:14:55,940 My mum said that the pub used to be packed, 220 00:14:56,020 --> 00:14:58,860 she said you would order a drink at the bar and everyone would be on edge 221 00:14:58,940 --> 00:15:00,278 and everyone would wait for him to go to the toilet, 222 00:15:00,358 --> 00:15:02,489 and as soon as he walked in the toilet, the whole pub would empty out, 223 00:15:02,735 --> 00:15:04,612 so there would just be her and him and the band. 224 00:15:04,862 --> 00:15:06,409 I think even the barman left. 225 00:15:06,489 --> 00:15:09,459 And so at the end of the night, he'd end up bashing the band up drunk. 226 00:15:10,159 --> 00:15:13,003 People were literally like, "Shut your doors," 227 00:15:13,162 --> 00:15:15,164 and everyone would sort of go inside 228 00:15:15,248 --> 00:15:18,001 and he would be like a raging bull in the street. 229 00:15:21,629 --> 00:15:23,968 JAMIE: In them days, people didn't report it to the police, did they? 230 00:15:24,048 --> 00:15:26,012 Just sort of, these lots knew him anyway 231 00:15:26,092 --> 00:15:28,014 because sometimes they would ring them up at night and say, 232 00:15:28,094 --> 00:15:29,095 "Look, we've got Lenny here. 233 00:15:29,178 --> 00:15:31,222 "We've nicked him for fighting again and we'll release him in the morning." 234 00:15:31,305 --> 00:15:32,393 But you didn't have to go through the courts. 235 00:15:32,473 --> 00:15:34,020 They'd just nick you and leave you in the cell overnight 236 00:15:34,100 --> 00:15:36,148 and let you go in the morning and that's how it was in them days. 237 00:15:37,770 --> 00:15:41,195 Probably the final straw was he was out with his mate Jimmy Briggs. 238 00:15:43,776 --> 00:15:46,199 Well, we're actually in the Spread Eagle now and it's quite mad 239 00:15:46,279 --> 00:15:48,031 because this is where he had his last drink. 240 00:15:48,114 --> 00:15:50,742 Obviously this is where he nearly killed a man or he did kill a man. 241 00:15:51,868 --> 00:15:54,872 He'd been out drinking all day with his friend Jimmy Briggs 242 00:15:54,954 --> 00:15:56,456 and he'd pulled a bird. 243 00:15:56,956 --> 00:15:59,709 My dad was sitting there, the girl was sitting there, 244 00:15:59,792 --> 00:16:02,170 and then my dad said, "Come on, we'll go somewhere else." 245 00:16:02,253 --> 00:16:04,592 Jimmy says, "No, no, I am going to stay with this bird." 246 00:16:04,672 --> 00:16:08,429 So the bird turns round to my dad and says, "You heard what he said. Fuck off." 247 00:16:08,509 --> 00:16:10,431 My dad told Jimmy to tell her to shut up 248 00:16:10,511 --> 00:16:13,976 or he would put her over his knee and smack her arse 249 00:16:14,056 --> 00:16:17,397 and then Jimmy said, "Don't fucking speak to her like that, we'll fucking go outside." 250 00:16:17,477 --> 00:16:19,775 And that's what happened. They walked outside. 251 00:16:23,065 --> 00:16:25,988 And he said to him, "Come on then, I'm the fucking guv'nor." 252 00:16:26,068 --> 00:16:28,912 As soon as he said that to my dad, his back would go up. 253 00:16:29,071 --> 00:16:30,243 He's looking at him thinking, 254 00:16:30,323 --> 00:16:32,951 "What I've been through, you cunt, and you think you are the guv'nor?" 255 00:16:33,034 --> 00:16:34,752 And he would turn into summat evil. 256 00:16:36,078 --> 00:16:37,796 I think Jimmy threw the first punch 257 00:16:38,039 --> 00:16:40,292 and then my old man kept punching and punching and punching, 258 00:16:40,374 --> 00:16:43,548 till he couldn't punch any more and broke both his hands on his face, 259 00:16:45,087 --> 00:16:48,091 which is quite fucking, that should be brutal enough, 260 00:16:48,174 --> 00:16:51,472 and when he couldn't use his hands no more, he used his teeth, 261 00:16:51,552 --> 00:16:53,771 and he tried to bite his wind pipe out. 262 00:16:55,014 --> 00:16:57,893 But as he is biting him, he's fucking consuming the flesh 263 00:16:59,185 --> 00:17:01,028 and he killed him, Jimmy Briggs was dead. 264 00:17:03,147 --> 00:17:05,900 They brought him back to life on the operating theatre 265 00:17:05,983 --> 00:17:09,740 and I can remember my dad coming up and coughing the human flesh 266 00:17:09,820 --> 00:17:11,742 and I could hear my mum screaming and saying, "Len, Len, 267 00:17:11,822 --> 00:17:13,950 "that is human flesh you are coughing up and spitting up, 268 00:17:14,116 --> 00:17:15,584 "what have you done, what have you done?" 269 00:17:16,661 --> 00:17:18,163 And obviously, he's gone to bed, 270 00:17:18,246 --> 00:17:20,544 woke up the next day, heard of what happened, 271 00:17:21,290 --> 00:17:25,420 and he then decided that enough was enough, 272 00:17:25,503 --> 00:17:27,096 you know, he stopped drinking. 273 00:17:28,047 --> 00:17:30,636 What do I think about that story? Am I horrified about it? 274 00:17:30,716 --> 00:17:32,093 No, not really, I am not horrified at all. 275 00:17:32,176 --> 00:17:34,929 If you want my honest opinion, you know, what do you expect? 276 00:17:35,012 --> 00:17:37,856 I mean, you expect to get a hiding, not to get your fucking, 277 00:17:41,018 --> 00:17:43,567 throat bit out, but, you know, 278 00:17:44,772 --> 00:17:47,525 that's how we done things in them days in London. 279 00:17:51,279 --> 00:17:53,202 JAMIE: Street fighting all the pubs round in Hoxton. 280 00:17:53,531 --> 00:17:56,785 99% of the time, the aggravation, he caused it. 281 00:17:58,119 --> 00:18:01,623 And then, all of a sudden, I suppose, he thought it could work in his favour. 282 00:18:02,540 --> 00:18:05,379 So basically, you would go and get kids starting trouble in all the pubs, 283 00:18:05,459 --> 00:18:07,798 then all of a sudden Lenny would come in and give them a back hander 284 00:18:07,878 --> 00:18:10,927 and chuck them out, but really, it was him causing the trouble. 285 00:18:11,132 --> 00:18:12,803 So he would go to all the pubs in Hoxton and say, 286 00:18:12,883 --> 00:18:15,181 "Look," he said, "You're getting quite a bad element in here," 287 00:18:15,261 --> 00:18:17,975 he said, "Why don't I do this?" He said, "Every Friday I'll come down, 288 00:18:18,055 --> 00:18:19,932 "pick some wages up, all you got to do is say, 289 00:18:20,016 --> 00:18:23,145 "'Lenny is minding the door here'," and he said, "All the trouble will stop." 290 00:18:23,269 --> 00:18:26,359 I think he thought, you know, "This ain't a bad way to make a living, easy money. 291 00:18:26,439 --> 00:18:28,778 "I ain't got to get up at, you know, do a nine-to-five. 292 00:18:28,858 --> 00:18:32,031 "I can just go in the pubs, take money off the publicans, 293 00:18:32,111 --> 00:18:34,239 "eat my dinner in there and go home." 294 00:18:34,322 --> 00:18:35,949 And that's how I suppose the door work started. 295 00:18:39,744 --> 00:18:41,997 Anyone who grew up in Hoxton knew him from an early age. 296 00:18:42,079 --> 00:18:46,209 He had a reputation when he was 13 or 14 years old as the best fighter, 297 00:18:46,292 --> 00:18:50,047 so, you know not to mess with Lenny because they know anyone mucks about, 298 00:18:50,129 --> 00:18:54,971 you know, he will just deal with it in a severe and extremely violent way. 299 00:18:55,051 --> 00:18:57,181 He was just in there, bang, done, next. 300 00:18:57,261 --> 00:18:59,058 And if he took a couple he'd probably didn't even feel it, 301 00:18:59,138 --> 00:19:00,981 cos he was so in the zone at the time, innit. 302 00:19:01,140 --> 00:19:04,230 You would see people's faces change when they give it their best shot 303 00:19:04,310 --> 00:19:06,779 - and he didn't even notice it yeah, yeah. - Yeah. 304 00:19:06,979 --> 00:19:08,196 It's always going to be a worry, innit. 305 00:19:10,775 --> 00:19:12,363 ASKEW: And these pubs were frequented 306 00:19:12,443 --> 00:19:16,284 by teams of gangsters and villains and armed robbers. 307 00:19:16,364 --> 00:19:19,208 London was having robberies that were prolific. 308 00:19:19,367 --> 00:19:22,707 My father was involved in that sort of fraternity 309 00:19:22,787 --> 00:19:24,289 and I can remember these guys 310 00:19:24,372 --> 00:19:26,374 and they looked like they was out of films. 311 00:19:26,457 --> 00:19:30,298 You know, they pull up in lovely cars and the old rollnecks on, 312 00:19:30,378 --> 00:19:33,757 but they were seriously, seriously heavy villains 313 00:19:33,839 --> 00:19:36,637 who, who, you know, they used shotguns, 314 00:19:36,717 --> 00:19:40,096 they went and jumped over the pavement as they say, you know what I mean? 315 00:19:40,179 --> 00:19:41,977 They robbed, they robbed banks. 316 00:19:42,765 --> 00:19:47,231 If there was a dispute, more than likely someone would come back with a shotgun, 317 00:19:47,311 --> 00:19:49,483 and Lenny had to be amongst these men. 318 00:19:49,563 --> 00:19:53,443 So you can imagine, you can't be some fleeting wallflower, 319 00:19:53,526 --> 00:19:55,573 you got to be the toughest man there is. 320 00:19:55,653 --> 00:20:01,035 But afterwards, we was like job's done, it's finished, shook their hands, 321 00:20:01,117 --> 00:20:02,664 made sure they were all right, get them back. 322 00:20:02,868 --> 00:20:05,462 He would go to work being extremely violent and come home and be extremely loving. 323 00:20:06,414 --> 00:20:07,540 Two different sides. 324 00:20:07,915 --> 00:20:12,214 He'd have his nice, stable family life and us as kids, we just see him as Uncle Len, 325 00:20:12,294 --> 00:20:16,174 but when he was out in the real world, you know, his life was at risk. 326 00:20:16,257 --> 00:20:18,931 I mean, people did pull shooters on him and they shot him. 327 00:20:21,804 --> 00:20:24,227 JAMIE: We're in the Barbican where Jovi's nightclub used to be. 328 00:20:25,266 --> 00:20:26,854 I mean, it was actually here, 329 00:20:26,934 --> 00:20:28,773 Jovi's was here, this is how it was, this is the entrance 330 00:20:28,853 --> 00:20:30,650 and it was a glass entrance, the same as it is today, 331 00:20:30,730 --> 00:20:32,232 obviously it's a Pret a Manger now. 332 00:20:32,773 --> 00:20:35,821 I think the night he got shot, Monday to Thursday, it wasn't really busy, 333 00:20:35,901 --> 00:20:37,448 so he would do the door on his own, 334 00:20:37,528 --> 00:20:40,202 but weekends he would get his mate Billy Sullivan to help him 335 00:20:40,573 --> 00:20:45,625 and two fellas on a motorbike drove past and let a double-barrelled shotgun off. 336 00:20:45,745 --> 00:20:49,090 Billy Sullivan's fainted, all the girls have gone rushing to him, 337 00:20:49,248 --> 00:20:52,546 but me old man run outside the nightclub, 338 00:20:52,626 --> 00:20:54,128 seen the motorbike coming past, 339 00:20:54,211 --> 00:20:55,675 he chased them up the road 340 00:20:55,755 --> 00:20:58,719 and kicked the back of the wheel and the wheel of the motorbike wobbled 341 00:20:58,799 --> 00:21:01,347 and he said, "He nearly, nearly fell." He said, "If they would have fell," 342 00:21:01,427 --> 00:21:02,473 he said, "I would have got them." 343 00:21:02,553 --> 00:21:05,142 So he's gone back inside, but as he's gone back in, 344 00:21:05,222 --> 00:21:08,312 all the staff and all the girls are, "Are you all right, Bill? You all right? 345 00:21:08,392 --> 00:21:09,393 "I think he's been shot." 346 00:21:09,477 --> 00:21:10,815 And he was sitting there and as he looked round, 347 00:21:10,895 --> 00:21:13,648 he could feel all his back of his legs soaked, you know, like, 348 00:21:13,731 --> 00:21:15,861 I suppose like when you wet yourself, but just covered in blood. 349 00:21:15,941 --> 00:21:18,069 So they rung an ambulance and said, "Len, it's gonna be five minutes." 350 00:21:18,152 --> 00:21:20,780 So he said, "Five fucking minutes? I'm going to bleed to fucking death here, 351 00:21:20,863 --> 00:21:21,864 "so I'll fucking walk over there." 352 00:21:21,947 --> 00:21:23,449 They went, "No, you can't walk, we will get a cab." 353 00:21:23,741 --> 00:21:26,205 So a cab driver has pulled up and he went, "Take me to Bart's." 354 00:21:26,285 --> 00:21:28,708 He said, "You ain't fucking getting in my cab you're covered in claret." 355 00:21:28,788 --> 00:21:30,710 He said, "I've just been fucking shot, take me to Bart's!" 356 00:21:30,790 --> 00:21:33,462 Anyway, they've took him to Bart's, walked in there, 357 00:21:33,542 --> 00:21:36,340 there was a porter half asleep at the counter like that, 358 00:21:36,420 --> 00:21:38,884 so he's walked in and went, "Excuse me, sir." He went, "Yes." 359 00:21:38,964 --> 00:21:41,092 He went, "You ain't got anything for two arseholes, have you?" 360 00:21:41,175 --> 00:21:43,889 And the geezer's seen the fucking hole like that in the back of his trousers, 361 00:21:43,969 --> 00:21:46,848 blood pouring down the back of his legs, he's gone, "Aah." 362 00:21:48,390 --> 00:21:51,230 You know, and I said to him, "Oh, I bet you regret that night being shot. 363 00:21:51,310 --> 00:21:52,436 "I bet you wish you had never went to work 364 00:21:52,520 --> 00:21:53,733 "that night." He said, "No, not really," 365 00:21:53,813 --> 00:21:55,736 he said, "Because it helped me sell loads of books." 366 00:21:58,192 --> 00:22:01,366 But I can remember from that day onwards, 367 00:22:01,904 --> 00:22:03,617 as soon as he went back to work 368 00:22:03,697 --> 00:22:06,951 like, I would stay awake most nights waiting for him to come in 369 00:22:07,034 --> 00:22:08,581 and hear the door shut and then I would go to sleep, 370 00:22:08,661 --> 00:22:11,039 and that went on for years and years and years and years. 371 00:22:11,747 --> 00:22:14,375 You know, so it does affect you, it affects the family. 372 00:22:33,310 --> 00:22:37,690 NARRATOR: Pugilist is a mixture of a Greek and Latin word meaning to fight with fist. 373 00:22:38,274 --> 00:22:42,245 Boxing is to clench the fist holding the fingers and a thumb into a box. 374 00:22:46,240 --> 00:22:47,953 Ancient Greeks believed fist fighting 375 00:22:48,033 --> 00:22:51,081 was one of the games played by the gods on Olympus. 376 00:22:51,161 --> 00:22:53,789 Thus, it became part of the Olympic Games. 377 00:22:53,873 --> 00:22:56,921 In Roman times, the sport began to thrive. 378 00:22:57,001 --> 00:22:58,628 Duels to the death were the norm. 379 00:23:01,755 --> 00:23:03,257 From the Victorian era, 380 00:23:03,340 --> 00:23:06,344 the bare knuckle disappeared with the onset of the Queensbury Rules. 381 00:23:10,890 --> 00:23:14,438 The 10 count, gloves on hands, referees. 382 00:23:14,518 --> 00:23:15,895 People got disinterested. 383 00:23:17,897 --> 00:23:21,492 It was only in the 1970's that there was resurgence in interest. 384 00:23:30,534 --> 00:23:33,629 Using a clenched fist is one of the earliest forms of aggression. 385 00:23:34,705 --> 00:23:38,045 It's as old as running and hunting, it's as old as mankind itself. 386 00:23:38,125 --> 00:23:41,925 No weapon at hand, the fist is the best weapon we have. 387 00:23:43,297 --> 00:23:44,298 Come on! 388 00:23:45,966 --> 00:23:47,513 (CROWD SHOUTING) 389 00:24:01,690 --> 00:24:05,781 Very different from boxing, you have to hit the man with the outside of your fist 390 00:24:05,861 --> 00:24:07,363 so you don't break your hand. 391 00:24:09,198 --> 00:24:11,371 And you must control your adrenaline. 392 00:24:20,167 --> 00:24:22,795 In the ring, it's an art form, it's a science, 393 00:24:22,878 --> 00:24:26,052 and to be a champion boxer you have to be trained from childhood. 394 00:24:27,091 --> 00:24:29,310 Lenny never had that kind of training. 395 00:24:40,980 --> 00:24:42,527 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 396 00:24:46,193 --> 00:24:47,536 (CHEERING) 397 00:24:53,575 --> 00:24:56,795 The first bare knuckle champion was James Figg in 1790. 398 00:24:57,788 --> 00:25:00,628 Other famous champions were Jack Broughton, Tom Cribb, 399 00:25:00,708 --> 00:25:03,006 Tom Spring, Jim Wall, Jem Mace. 400 00:25:03,544 --> 00:25:07,390 There are statues in pubs all over the country named after these fighters. 401 00:25:08,007 --> 00:25:11,181 They were celebrated by common folk, kings and queens. 402 00:25:17,182 --> 00:25:19,935 You could go to a bare-knuckle fight nowadays. 403 00:25:24,815 --> 00:25:28,661 I mean, all these guys, they look raw, they look tough, they look big. 404 00:25:34,950 --> 00:25:37,703 But they haven't got the tenacity of a Lenny McLean. 405 00:25:37,786 --> 00:25:40,501 They break a finger and they sit down and they are breathing heavy 406 00:25:40,581 --> 00:25:41,669 and they sit down. 407 00:25:41,749 --> 00:25:45,879 I mean, Lenny would fracture a hand, break his wrist, you wouldn't even know. 408 00:25:55,971 --> 00:25:57,768 It was on the street in his prime, 409 00:25:57,848 --> 00:26:01,397 Lenny could have knocked out Mike Tyson, Klitschko, any of them, 410 00:26:01,477 --> 00:26:05,482 on the cobbles, that is, because he was fast, precise, strong 411 00:26:05,564 --> 00:26:08,737 and he could take a terrible hiding, you see. 412 00:26:08,817 --> 00:26:10,819 That's where Lenny's strength lay. 413 00:26:12,613 --> 00:26:14,490 He took so much punishment as a kid. 414 00:26:16,116 --> 00:26:20,587 These kids today are proud of having 10 or 20, maybe even 30 fights on their card. 415 00:26:21,830 --> 00:26:24,674 Lenny McLean had 2,000 up and down the country. 416 00:26:29,505 --> 00:26:31,678 (CROWD CHEERING) 417 00:26:32,841 --> 00:26:38,723 But the reality of this is those lads are getting hurt after one or two bouts. 418 00:26:38,806 --> 00:26:41,480 I mean, Lenny had thousands and never whinged. 419 00:26:43,477 --> 00:26:47,072 Some fights, he didn't even take his coat off, he just steamed in. 420 00:26:52,778 --> 00:26:54,701 (CROWD SHOUTING) 421 00:27:01,578 --> 00:27:05,294 To Lenny, it was like drinking a cup of tea. There was no getting psyched up. 422 00:27:05,374 --> 00:27:09,971 He treated kindness with kindness, but violence with extreme violence. 423 00:27:11,380 --> 00:27:13,929 For him, that was normal. 424 00:27:22,766 --> 00:27:26,191 JAMIE: I think he just enjoyed fighting, I think he really did enjoy it, you know. 425 00:27:26,311 --> 00:27:29,485 I think my mum actually said to me once, she said, she said to me, 426 00:27:29,565 --> 00:27:32,318 "Len, why do you do it?" He said, "I just like hitting people. 427 00:27:33,360 --> 00:27:35,579 "You know, it makes me forget." 428 00:27:36,446 --> 00:27:37,743 You know, forget what? 429 00:27:56,800 --> 00:27:59,723 The reason he got involved in the unlicensed boxing 430 00:27:59,803 --> 00:28:03,435 was he was probably out drinking with his friends and seen the posters on the wall 431 00:28:03,515 --> 00:28:06,143 and everyone is talking about someone else being a hard man, 432 00:28:06,226 --> 00:28:08,398 but obviously what people saying his reputation, 433 00:28:08,478 --> 00:28:11,448 Lenny this, Lenny that, he thinks he's an 'ard man. 434 00:28:12,357 --> 00:28:15,452 So actually looking at the poster he'd think, "Yeah, I could do that." 435 00:28:40,344 --> 00:28:41,687 (CROWD CHEERING) 436 00:28:43,513 --> 00:28:48,610 Roy Shaw, basically, he'd just come out of Broadmoor, OK, he was certified insane. 437 00:28:48,727 --> 00:28:52,322 Strong as a bull, very, very powerful man. 438 00:29:02,574 --> 00:29:05,327 When he was actually, I think it might have been in Broadmoor, 439 00:29:05,410 --> 00:29:07,541 he smashed his way out of the cell with his head. 440 00:29:07,621 --> 00:29:10,043 This is the sort of guy that you're dealing with, you know. 441 00:29:10,123 --> 00:29:12,421 Complete and utter loose cannon. 442 00:29:24,888 --> 00:29:27,016 He was regarded as a psychopath. 443 00:29:38,652 --> 00:29:41,030 He was a complete raving lunatic. 444 00:29:44,574 --> 00:29:45,700 Roy. 445 00:29:46,660 --> 00:29:48,037 To the Guv'nor. 446 00:29:48,120 --> 00:29:49,588 ALL: To the Guv'nor. 447 00:29:56,670 --> 00:30:01,011 JAMIE: So, when he picks up and reads the paper about Roy Shaw's the Guv'nor, 448 00:30:01,091 --> 00:30:05,562 he's looking at that obviously and thinking, "You ain't the fucking Guv'nor." 449 00:30:08,140 --> 00:30:12,145 Now, no one would say anything about Roy Shaw because of the reprisals of it. 450 00:30:12,561 --> 00:30:16,610 Now, all of a sudden you look at your dad, how old was he, 25? 451 00:30:16,690 --> 00:30:19,655 And now you've got 25-year-old kid come out of the woodwork, right? 452 00:30:19,735 --> 00:30:21,031 He's walking around saying, 453 00:30:21,111 --> 00:30:23,614 "I know what I'd do with him, I'd knock him spark out." 454 00:30:25,615 --> 00:30:27,709 25-year-old kid. 455 00:30:27,826 --> 00:30:31,876 He'd be going into Roy Shaw's local pub throwing darts at pictures of him, right. 456 00:30:32,331 --> 00:30:34,959 Didn't care, absolutely fearless. 457 00:30:38,170 --> 00:30:39,216 So instead of him thinking, 458 00:30:39,296 --> 00:30:41,424 "Right, well, I've got to fight this one to build up the ladder, 459 00:30:41,548 --> 00:30:42,970 "I might as well go straight to the top," 460 00:30:43,175 --> 00:30:44,721 and that's the easiest way to get the best reputation. 461 00:30:44,801 --> 00:30:46,644 If you beat the best fighter, you are the best fighter. 462 00:30:47,512 --> 00:30:50,310 Word's obviously got back to Roy. "There's this kid going around the East End, 463 00:30:50,390 --> 00:30:53,189 "he reckons, he reckons he know what he'll do with you." 464 00:30:53,352 --> 00:30:56,026 I just picked up a paper one day 465 00:30:57,230 --> 00:30:59,733 and there was that Shaw in the paper saying, 466 00:31:00,067 --> 00:31:02,240 he's the Guv'nor, he's the best fighter in London, 467 00:31:03,779 --> 00:31:04,951 and I knew I could beat him, 468 00:31:05,822 --> 00:31:07,074 I knew I could beat him. 469 00:31:08,325 --> 00:31:11,920 So a few friends and I got together, stuck a few quid up and challenged him. 470 00:31:12,954 --> 00:31:14,706 MAN: Now Roy wants to fight big time. 471 00:31:15,582 --> 00:31:16,795 I just couldn't take anything from him. 472 00:31:16,875 --> 00:31:20,470 I couldn't take anybody telling me what to do or telling me off, you know. 473 00:31:20,962 --> 00:31:23,340 Right, all of a sudden the fight's on. 474 00:31:32,099 --> 00:31:35,397 HUNTLEY: Well, the first fight, your dad, when he was in his mid-20s 475 00:31:35,477 --> 00:31:37,320 he was so confident in his own ability, 476 00:31:37,979 --> 00:31:40,653 he didn't bother to train. "I know what I'd do with this guy." 477 00:31:40,982 --> 00:31:43,030 "Crash, bang, wallop, 15 seconds, 478 00:31:43,110 --> 00:31:45,738 "he'll be unconscious, end of story, I can go home, finished." 479 00:31:45,862 --> 00:31:47,535 (CROWD CHEERING) 480 00:31:47,781 --> 00:31:51,661 MAN: But, Roy Shaw, he was a professional fighter before he got arrested. 481 00:31:54,704 --> 00:31:58,083 HUNTLEY: You see, whereas he's hit people on the chin before and they've gone spark out, 482 00:31:59,042 --> 00:32:03,218 now Roy, he was an ex-pro, he's still there after a couple of rounds. 483 00:32:04,047 --> 00:32:10,054 So all of a sudden, your dad, he realises that things ain't going quite his way, right. 484 00:32:11,555 --> 00:32:12,852 MAN: And then he got beat 485 00:32:14,141 --> 00:32:16,564 and it was because of a lack of, lack of training. 486 00:32:21,648 --> 00:32:26,575 The second fight, I would say that he trained a little bit harder. 487 00:32:27,946 --> 00:32:30,620 MAN: There was a scrapyard, I think it was down near Roman Road, 488 00:32:30,824 --> 00:32:32,701 and they used to train in the scrapyard. 489 00:32:39,833 --> 00:32:40,834 (MAN SPEAKING) 490 00:32:44,880 --> 00:32:46,723 MAN: There's your trainer, Ted Heel. 491 00:32:49,676 --> 00:32:50,889 Yeah, it is great. 492 00:32:50,969 --> 00:32:53,222 - Train, box. - You wanna bottle, cunt? 493 00:32:54,890 --> 00:32:56,478 All lorries along here, 494 00:32:56,558 --> 00:32:58,606 half Minis, half Mini engines, 495 00:32:58,810 --> 00:33:02,234 engines, there used to be caravans, there used to be tyres all the way along here, 496 00:33:02,314 --> 00:33:04,653 and there used to be a mad horse that used to run around, 497 00:33:04,733 --> 00:33:07,072 that used to live in a corrugated iron shed 498 00:33:07,152 --> 00:33:09,154 and them chasing the horse out so that they could train. 499 00:33:15,911 --> 00:33:16,912 (MAN SPEAKING) 500 00:33:23,251 --> 00:33:24,798 MAN: Go on kid, wind it up. 501 00:33:25,420 --> 00:33:27,172 JAMIE: With punch bags with sand in. 502 00:33:27,255 --> 00:33:29,970 I mean, if you ever punched a punch bag with sand in, it is, 503 00:33:30,050 --> 00:33:31,552 well, you can't do it, you'll just break your knuckles. 504 00:33:31,968 --> 00:33:36,348 And then they put gas bottles up with rope round it and trained in the centre. 505 00:33:42,604 --> 00:33:44,982 And this is the actual place that it was 506 00:33:45,899 --> 00:33:47,822 and it's a park now, you could have a picnic in it now. 507 00:33:49,194 --> 00:33:50,195 (MAN 1 SPEAKING) 508 00:33:52,781 --> 00:33:53,748 (MAN 2 SPEAKING) 509 00:33:54,199 --> 00:33:55,200 (MAN 1 SPEAKING) 510 00:34:06,002 --> 00:34:08,800 HUNTLEY: With your dad, he had that way about him. 511 00:34:08,880 --> 00:34:11,554 I mean, he'd be up to all sorts of tricks all the time, you know. 512 00:34:45,875 --> 00:34:47,172 He'd have you in fits. 513 00:34:52,340 --> 00:34:54,434 You know, he was a bit of a big kid at times. 514 00:34:55,343 --> 00:34:57,391 (LAUGHING) 515 00:34:58,138 --> 00:35:00,812 HUNTLEY: Even in the second fight, your dad, he didn't really train hard. 516 00:35:02,601 --> 00:35:04,945 JAMIE: But he was becoming a boxer. 517 00:35:06,187 --> 00:35:10,237 And those old-school methods of training where it's all sort of minimalist, 518 00:35:10,317 --> 00:35:12,365 it's what helps a fighter. 519 00:35:14,779 --> 00:35:16,660 MAN: Right, Ken, you're the, you know you are the trainer, 520 00:35:16,740 --> 00:35:18,287 how long before you reckon he's ready? 521 00:35:19,159 --> 00:35:21,537 I think he would be ready at the end of this week. 522 00:35:25,373 --> 00:35:26,750 He'll knock him out in the second round. 523 00:35:32,172 --> 00:35:33,219 MAN: What does your son think of him? 524 00:35:33,381 --> 00:35:35,725 Jamie, what round will your dad do him in? 525 00:35:35,884 --> 00:35:37,636 - In the first. - First? 526 00:35:37,719 --> 00:35:40,848 - One punch, one punch. - One punch. 527 00:35:40,930 --> 00:35:42,602 - Yeah. - It's easy, innit, it's easy. 528 00:35:42,682 --> 00:35:43,979 - Yeah. - Easy. 529 00:35:44,684 --> 00:35:48,024 I'll knock him out either in the first or the second. 530 00:35:48,104 --> 00:35:49,230 JAMIE: No, first. 531 00:35:49,939 --> 00:35:53,029 If it goes, if it goes more than, if it goes more than eight rounds 532 00:35:53,109 --> 00:35:54,611 I can't get beat on points. 533 00:36:09,084 --> 00:36:12,714 MAN ON ARCHIVE: More than 2,000 East Enders scented something out of the ordinary 534 00:36:12,796 --> 00:36:14,218 and were not disappointed. 535 00:36:16,383 --> 00:36:18,181 (CROWD CHEERING) 536 00:36:30,105 --> 00:36:31,357 COMMENTATOR: ...First right-hander. 537 00:36:31,439 --> 00:36:33,658 That is a punch. He looks a bit knackered. 538 00:36:33,900 --> 00:36:35,243 Ohh, oh! 539 00:36:46,496 --> 00:36:51,546 Classic Lenny McLean one-liner was that he was being interviewed by a reporter once 540 00:36:51,626 --> 00:36:54,846 and the reporter said of Roy Shaw, he said that... 541 00:36:55,588 --> 00:36:59,512 REPORTER: Roy Shaw now blames his rather spectacular defeat on the fact 542 00:36:59,592 --> 00:37:03,016 that before the fight, he was foolishly advised, he says, 543 00:37:03,096 --> 00:37:05,474 to take a particular form of herbal tea. 544 00:37:06,141 --> 00:37:09,896 So I thought, well, on the night, what I'll do, I'll take more, 545 00:37:09,978 --> 00:37:11,816 so it'll make me feel stronger for the night, 546 00:37:11,896 --> 00:37:14,649 so on the night of the fight, about three hours before, 547 00:37:14,733 --> 00:37:18,073 I took four times the amount, but I didn't just take the capsules, 548 00:37:18,153 --> 00:37:20,155 I took the liquid stuff, which is the stronger, 549 00:37:20,989 --> 00:37:24,118 but what happens when you take over the amount, it sedates you, 550 00:37:24,701 --> 00:37:27,875 so really, I was sedated, and my wife could have knocked me over. 551 00:37:28,329 --> 00:37:29,581 And Lenny said, "Listen..." 552 00:37:29,748 --> 00:37:32,968 All he took was a right hander, and what happened in the second round. 553 00:37:34,961 --> 00:37:37,840 And he is racking about, he took this and he took that. 554 00:37:37,922 --> 00:37:39,139 I don't care what you took. 555 00:37:39,382 --> 00:37:41,976 Now that's Lenny McLean, that's classic, you know. 556 00:37:42,218 --> 00:37:44,812 REPORTER: Why is it so important to beat him, in this particular fight? 557 00:37:45,680 --> 00:37:47,023 Well... 558 00:37:49,851 --> 00:37:51,899 I've got a bee in my bonnet about him. 559 00:37:53,605 --> 00:37:57,360 He realises now, your dad, that fitness does come into it, 560 00:37:57,484 --> 00:38:00,031 because it don't always go one round. 561 00:38:00,111 --> 00:38:01,741 Maybe they can hang on, 562 00:38:01,821 --> 00:38:04,536 maybe they might get on their bike and run for a round, 563 00:38:04,616 --> 00:38:06,705 but you've got to have the stamina to, with... You know, 564 00:38:06,785 --> 00:38:08,708 to carry on, so that's when he come to the gym. 565 00:38:21,174 --> 00:38:24,139 Freddie Hill's Gym it was like a real rough, tough sort of gym. 566 00:38:24,219 --> 00:38:27,143 It was like a throwback to the days of the Rocky films, really, you know. 567 00:38:27,388 --> 00:38:30,729 If you look at the gyms today they're all sort of high tech and, you know, 568 00:38:30,809 --> 00:38:32,937 whereas, like, Freddie Hill's gym was like real rough 569 00:38:33,019 --> 00:38:34,987 and really spit-and-sawdust place, you know. 570 00:38:35,730 --> 00:38:38,734 JAMIE: I think it was just absolutely stinking, the place, 571 00:38:38,900 --> 00:38:42,325 it stunk of stale beer downstairs and sweat and tobacco upstairs. 572 00:38:43,112 --> 00:38:46,035 ASKEW: Nowadays, you walk in the gym, they're all sort of plush, 573 00:38:46,115 --> 00:38:47,617 people putting on hand cream. 574 00:38:50,537 --> 00:38:54,041 JAMIE: So this is it, Freddie Hill's gym. This is where all the pros come here, 575 00:38:54,123 --> 00:38:55,170 the Finnegan brothers, 576 00:38:55,250 --> 00:38:58,423 I think Marvin Hagler trained here when he fought Alan Minter. 577 00:38:58,503 --> 00:39:01,256 As you can see, it's a block of flats. 578 00:39:01,381 --> 00:39:03,970 Every place we go now is a block of flats or a park. 579 00:39:04,050 --> 00:39:05,722 I mean, I can remember coming here as a kid, 580 00:39:05,802 --> 00:39:08,180 everyone used to sign their names on the ceiling. 581 00:39:08,263 --> 00:39:12,484 Every fighter that ever went in there, black felt-tip, white walls, sign their name. 582 00:39:13,935 --> 00:39:15,523 I mean, when they used to train here, 583 00:39:15,603 --> 00:39:17,901 I mean, it wasn't like the trainer would take you on the pads, 584 00:39:17,981 --> 00:39:19,733 I mean, he would just sit there on his desk, 585 00:39:19,941 --> 00:39:22,239 smoke his roll-up going, "Yeah, do this, do that." 586 00:39:22,861 --> 00:39:24,829 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 587 00:39:31,160 --> 00:39:32,537 JAMIE: You know, there would be smoking roll-ups, 588 00:39:32,620 --> 00:39:36,341 training in roll necks and they're bloody doing like eight, nine rounds of sparring. 589 00:39:59,814 --> 00:40:03,068 HUNTLEY: I was training in the gym and your dad walked in and, you know, 590 00:40:03,151 --> 00:40:04,403 and he asked for Freddie Hill, I said, 591 00:40:04,485 --> 00:40:06,032 "He's not about, but he shouldn't be long," you know. 592 00:40:06,112 --> 00:40:08,448 So he said, "All right," and I remember there was a speedball hanging up 593 00:40:09,073 --> 00:40:11,041 and that had been hanging up for years, this ball. 594 00:40:13,244 --> 00:40:15,542 And he hit this speedball with a left hook... 595 00:40:17,874 --> 00:40:21,094 It took off at about 50 mile an hour on the other side of the ring. 596 00:40:21,628 --> 00:40:23,596 And I thought to myself, "We've got trouble here." 597 00:40:26,799 --> 00:40:28,801 Freddie Hill was an old throwback trainer as well, 598 00:40:28,885 --> 00:40:31,388 he was again just like out of a Rocky film, you know. 599 00:40:31,888 --> 00:40:34,352 Uh, which suited your dad, it suited him down to the ground 600 00:40:34,432 --> 00:40:36,479 because the modern trainers today 601 00:40:36,559 --> 00:40:39,607 wouldn't have been able to handle your dad, really, 602 00:40:39,687 --> 00:40:41,564 because your dad was a larger-than-life character, 603 00:40:41,648 --> 00:40:44,071 he wanted it his way and that was it. 604 00:40:44,651 --> 00:40:48,406 With Freddie Hill, he had the personality to be able to deal with that. 605 00:40:49,280 --> 00:40:52,955 FREDDIE: Len, fight fucking fast, will you? Come on. 606 00:40:53,701 --> 00:40:55,453 Go on, throw some punches. 607 00:40:58,665 --> 00:41:01,588 HUNTLEY: And your dad had a lot of respect for Freddie Hill. 608 00:41:01,668 --> 00:41:03,887 FREDDIE: Nice. All right, John. 609 00:41:04,379 --> 00:41:07,423 HUNTLEY: What Lenny would do is Lenny would just walk through punches, take punches, 610 00:41:07,507 --> 00:41:09,554 cos he knew they couldn't hurt him anyway, 611 00:41:09,634 --> 00:41:12,056 but what Freddie wanted to do, he wanted to try and teach him 612 00:41:12,136 --> 00:41:14,605 how to slip punches because when you slip a punch 613 00:41:14,722 --> 00:41:17,934 you can counter and when you can counter, you can do damage without actually taking any. 614 00:41:18,101 --> 00:41:20,604 So then you used to be a warm up for him, didn't you? 615 00:41:21,062 --> 00:41:23,064 What Freddie asked me to do, "You go in with Lenny 616 00:41:23,147 --> 00:41:26,487 "and what I want you to do, I just want you to just fire 617 00:41:26,567 --> 00:41:28,740 "loads and loads of jabs at Lenny, quick-fire jabs," 618 00:41:28,820 --> 00:41:31,159 bang, bang, bang, and all Lenny had to do was, 619 00:41:31,239 --> 00:41:34,368 all he had to do was learn how to slip, like that. 620 00:41:44,585 --> 00:41:46,633 MAN: Being a lightweight, if you can slip in with John, 621 00:41:46,713 --> 00:41:49,933 you're going to slip any heavyweight, you're going to see it coming from a mile off. 622 00:41:54,053 --> 00:41:55,892 So every time I'd jab, he slipped, 623 00:41:55,972 --> 00:41:59,021 and as he slipped, you could come in with a left hook or a right counter. 624 00:42:07,442 --> 00:42:09,864 In the beginning, I was catching him, I've got to be honest with you. 625 00:42:09,944 --> 00:42:11,742 I was catching him on the top of his head guard. 626 00:42:13,489 --> 00:42:16,959 After two or three days, I wasn't catching him no more. 627 00:42:22,457 --> 00:42:24,459 And he was very hard to hit in the end. 628 00:42:35,720 --> 00:42:38,269 I know that he had run over Victoria Park 629 00:42:39,724 --> 00:42:41,101 so he was getting fitter now. 630 00:42:41,392 --> 00:42:42,735 They was training serious. 631 00:42:43,227 --> 00:42:45,776 HUNTLEY: He was getting fitter, he was getting even stronger. 632 00:42:49,442 --> 00:42:53,868 He had a, he had like a fast track to becoming a pro boxer. 633 00:42:54,238 --> 00:42:56,491 It's just a toughie, you know, but as a fighter, 634 00:42:57,116 --> 00:42:58,538 I'd book him as nothing, 635 00:42:59,535 --> 00:43:00,832 I'll beat him easy this time. 636 00:43:07,794 --> 00:43:10,138 You'll see it. It'll be a different fight entirely. 637 00:43:13,174 --> 00:43:15,268 MAN: It's a fight between two men who are going to fight. 638 00:43:16,219 --> 00:43:18,017 Both are strong men, both are fit men. 639 00:43:18,513 --> 00:43:20,476 No weaknesses whatever with these two men, 640 00:43:20,556 --> 00:43:22,809 and this would be a definite fight the public want to see, 641 00:43:22,892 --> 00:43:27,066 it's by public acclaim, and the people know that they're not being brought in from abroad, 642 00:43:27,146 --> 00:43:29,399 they know that both men are strong, they're both Londoners, 643 00:43:29,899 --> 00:43:33,870 and people who want to see the fight of the two sportsmen together 644 00:43:33,986 --> 00:43:35,988 and as far as we're concerned they're going to see a fight. 645 00:43:36,072 --> 00:43:37,368 REPORTER: You've got £300 on it. 646 00:43:37,448 --> 00:43:40,201 Three. I lost five last time, that was it, 647 00:43:40,284 --> 00:43:42,999 but I got some friends of mine are putting a lot of money on. 648 00:43:43,079 --> 00:43:45,582 Apparently, McLean is the favourite, you know, 649 00:43:45,665 --> 00:43:49,169 so then everyone, every man to his own what's it called, but... 650 00:43:50,169 --> 00:43:51,261 Roy'll do him. 651 00:43:51,712 --> 00:43:54,090 So by the time the third fight comes round... 652 00:43:57,885 --> 00:43:59,262 (GROANING) 653 00:43:59,554 --> 00:44:00,555 HUNTLEY: Your dad was up for it. 654 00:44:00,638 --> 00:44:02,811 He wanted to make sure, he wanted to put it to rest. 655 00:44:03,599 --> 00:44:05,442 LENNY: You know you have got to survive in the East End. 656 00:44:06,060 --> 00:44:08,779 Be the best fighter, be the Guv'nor. 657 00:44:11,232 --> 00:44:12,609 I'll kill that Roy Shaw. 658 00:44:24,871 --> 00:44:27,543 And I always remember before the fight, in the dressing room, 659 00:44:27,623 --> 00:44:28,670 just as he was going to go out. 660 00:44:28,958 --> 00:44:31,461 That's why they call me Daddy Cool, look at me. 661 00:44:31,544 --> 00:44:33,966 Hour before a fight, cool as a cucumber. 662 00:44:34,046 --> 00:44:38,096 That's why I've got to win and that's when he will come second. 663 00:44:38,176 --> 00:44:39,889 And I'm actually sitting next to him, 664 00:44:39,969 --> 00:44:41,061 cool as a cucumber. 665 00:44:41,179 --> 00:44:44,102 I was literally sitting next to him on the sofa, 666 00:44:44,182 --> 00:44:46,605 that is why they used to call him Daddy Cool, weren't it? 667 00:44:47,143 --> 00:44:49,191 Well, Roy Shaw he's pacing up and down, isn't he? 668 00:44:49,979 --> 00:44:52,107 Get that on tape, McLean's a poof. 669 00:44:54,317 --> 00:44:56,945 JAMIE: And they filled the Rainbow Theatre up, 13,000 or something, 670 00:44:57,028 --> 00:44:58,951 there was a lot of people at the Rainbow, it was packed. 671 00:45:05,536 --> 00:45:06,662 MAN: Roy thought he was going to face 672 00:45:06,746 --> 00:45:09,625 the same Lenny McLean as he did the first and the second fight, 673 00:45:09,707 --> 00:45:11,175 the Lenny McLean that never trained. 674 00:45:12,585 --> 00:45:14,587 (CROWD CHEERING) 675 00:45:22,803 --> 00:45:26,894 JAMIE: That was probably the best shape he's ever been in. 676 00:45:26,974 --> 00:45:30,565 MAN: He was so cool because he knew, look, I'm fit, I'm strong, 677 00:45:30,645 --> 00:45:33,568 I'm not going to get out of breath this time, and he's bang in trouble, 678 00:45:33,648 --> 00:45:37,488 and as soon as I hit him on the chin he won't be three rows back, he'll be six. 679 00:45:37,568 --> 00:45:39,740 ANNOUNCER: Ladies and gentleman, the Mean Machine himself, 680 00:45:39,820 --> 00:45:41,743 Roy "Pretty Boy" Shaw. 681 00:45:42,031 --> 00:45:43,578 (CROWD CHEERING) 682 00:45:48,037 --> 00:45:50,665 In the red corner, Lenny "Boy" McLean. 683 00:45:52,458 --> 00:45:56,213 MAN: He was more than capable of doing six or seven rounds on that night. 684 00:45:56,295 --> 00:45:59,424 He was lean, he was strong, he was fit. 685 00:46:01,550 --> 00:46:05,266 I mean, these were men. This was the old dying breed of warrior 686 00:46:05,346 --> 00:46:07,560 that no longer exists, you know. 687 00:46:07,640 --> 00:46:09,984 Two reputations met in the ring. 688 00:46:16,023 --> 00:46:17,361 MAN: From just throwing caution, 689 00:46:17,441 --> 00:46:20,114 to just going in like a street fighter would, now all of a sudden, Lenny, 690 00:46:20,194 --> 00:46:22,322 he's got his head down, he's got his hands up. 691 00:46:22,405 --> 00:46:24,869 You know, now all of a sudden, he's looking, he's looking the part now, 692 00:46:24,949 --> 00:46:27,372 he's looking like a fighter, he knows how to throw shots. 693 00:46:29,954 --> 00:46:33,294 HUNTLEY: He wasn't walking through punches to land his own, he was slipping them, 694 00:46:33,374 --> 00:46:35,087 and also, when he was slipping punches, 695 00:46:35,167 --> 00:46:37,715 the opponent that was throwing the punches that were missing, 696 00:46:37,795 --> 00:46:41,383 they was running out of steam because there is nothing that drains your energy more 697 00:46:41,465 --> 00:46:44,263 than actually when you're throwing punches and missing your target, 698 00:46:44,343 --> 00:46:46,186 so it was all working for Lenny. 699 00:46:48,931 --> 00:46:51,354 And he did have that, that, just that rage. 700 00:46:55,062 --> 00:46:57,485 Technically, once he learnt how to box, 701 00:46:57,565 --> 00:47:00,990 he utilised that ferociousness and he contained it. 702 00:47:09,827 --> 00:47:14,003 You see traits of a very, very skilful boxer. 703 00:47:15,333 --> 00:47:17,631 MAN: He always looked at his opponent like it has his stepfather. 704 00:47:20,254 --> 00:47:22,882 So he could channel all his aggression and all his hate 705 00:47:23,799 --> 00:47:25,517 and do whatever he had to do to defeat it. 706 00:47:25,760 --> 00:47:27,512 (BELL RINGING) 707 00:47:27,595 --> 00:47:29,723 (CROWD CHEERING) 708 00:47:49,617 --> 00:47:51,330 LENNY: Who's the Guv'nor? 709 00:47:51,410 --> 00:47:53,249 (CHEERING) 710 00:47:53,329 --> 00:47:54,875 (SCREAMS) 711 00:47:54,955 --> 00:47:56,582 I'm the Guv'nor! 712 00:47:59,168 --> 00:48:00,465 Who's the Guv'nor? 713 00:48:05,299 --> 00:48:08,894 JAMIE: After he won the final Roy Shaw fight, he was forever known as the Guv'nor. 714 00:48:10,930 --> 00:48:14,309 The Guv'nor would probably mean, you know, you are the toughest man 715 00:48:14,392 --> 00:48:15,518 where you come from. 716 00:48:15,601 --> 00:48:17,228 How do you get on with your kids, what do you tell them? 717 00:48:17,311 --> 00:48:18,941 - My kids. - What do you tell them you do? 718 00:48:19,021 --> 00:48:21,235 Well, they know what I do, but it's a good education 719 00:48:21,315 --> 00:48:24,194 because they know I would never allow them to do it, 720 00:48:24,276 --> 00:48:27,284 because I've had to do it, but they won't have to do it, I shall make sure of that. 721 00:48:27,655 --> 00:48:29,118 (CHUCKLES) Do you ever give them a slap and... 722 00:48:29,198 --> 00:48:30,619 - Never. I never... - Really? 723 00:48:30,699 --> 00:48:32,038 - Anyone who hits... - (AUDIENCE LAUGHING) 724 00:48:32,118 --> 00:48:35,167 Listen to me, anybody who hits kids are bullies 725 00:48:35,996 --> 00:48:38,544 because they can't hit anyone else, so they hit kids. 726 00:48:38,624 --> 00:48:42,465 My two kids, 15 and 16, I have never ever hit them, I love them, 727 00:48:42,545 --> 00:48:45,718 they are my babies, how could I knock them about, they are a part of me. 728 00:48:45,798 --> 00:48:48,051 Anyone who hits kids, they're bullies, 729 00:48:48,134 --> 00:48:50,431 but my babies are beautiful, I love them. 730 00:48:50,511 --> 00:48:52,855 My boy could never do what I do, I wouldn't let him. 731 00:48:54,974 --> 00:48:58,820 JAMIE: There was a lot of money tied up in that last fight and life changed dramatically. 732 00:49:03,899 --> 00:49:06,402 I was born in 1971. 733 00:49:06,902 --> 00:49:10,998 My earliest memories of my father would probably be Christmas time. 734 00:49:20,583 --> 00:49:21,960 We had a very loving family. 735 00:49:22,042 --> 00:49:23,964 My mum was very cuddly and lovely 736 00:49:24,044 --> 00:49:26,763 and my dad wasn't sort of that cuddly of a dad. 737 00:49:26,881 --> 00:49:31,263 I mean, he would cuddle you and kiss you, but his way to show affection and love, 738 00:49:31,343 --> 00:49:34,563 he would actually go out and buy you stuff, like Christmas would be very special. 739 00:49:37,099 --> 00:49:40,981 So when me, my sister and my mum would wake up and it would be like 740 00:49:41,061 --> 00:49:43,484 Santa's Grotto, there would be so many presents and toys 741 00:49:43,564 --> 00:49:45,487 and my mum and everyone would be happy. 742 00:49:50,905 --> 00:49:52,782 You know, we would go on holidays to Spain. 743 00:49:53,157 --> 00:49:55,285 Then he got a nice house in Streatham Road, 744 00:49:55,659 --> 00:49:57,002 things started developing for him. 745 00:49:57,495 --> 00:49:59,542 JAMIE: And in the 1980s, 746 00:49:59,622 --> 00:50:01,920 he began to fight professionally as an unlicensed boxer. 747 00:50:21,227 --> 00:50:23,730 JAMIE: Is there a tender side to my dad Lenny? 748 00:50:23,854 --> 00:50:28,320 Yeah, there was a very tender side to him. I mean, he was constantly cuddling the dog. 749 00:50:28,400 --> 00:50:30,739 I mean, I can remember coming home from work 750 00:50:30,819 --> 00:50:34,285 and I could hear terrible howls and screams and then I would go upstairs 751 00:50:34,365 --> 00:50:35,578 and I would be listening outside the door 752 00:50:35,658 --> 00:50:38,787 and I could hear him go, "Don't bite Daddy, don't bite Daddy." 753 00:50:41,914 --> 00:50:44,879 The unlicensed fighting, I mean, look, you've got to understand something. 754 00:50:44,959 --> 00:50:47,212 This man come from nothing, they had nothing, 755 00:50:47,294 --> 00:50:49,422 you know, they had to fight to survive, like he says, 756 00:50:49,505 --> 00:50:51,257 you have to fight in the East End to get anywhere, 757 00:50:51,340 --> 00:50:54,510 and that is the only thing he knew and you have to take your hat off to him. 758 00:50:54,677 --> 00:50:57,600 You know, he wasn't blessed with a massive education, 759 00:50:57,680 --> 00:50:59,899 he wasn't blessed with the best looking in the world, 760 00:51:00,224 --> 00:51:03,194 but he could fight and he used it to his best abilities. 761 00:51:06,564 --> 00:51:10,535 MICK THEO: The most important thing in Lenny's life was his family. 762 00:51:11,777 --> 00:51:14,155 You were big players in his life, you were his number one. 763 00:51:16,782 --> 00:51:18,910 I left home at 21. 764 00:51:18,993 --> 00:51:21,621 I bought my first property which is in Wanstead 765 00:51:21,704 --> 00:51:23,292 and then I remember I was moving out in the morning, 766 00:51:23,372 --> 00:51:26,125 just getting my clothes together and he called me in the bedroom 767 00:51:26,208 --> 00:51:28,051 and said, "Me and mummy don't want you to go." 768 00:51:28,210 --> 00:51:30,925 He went, "Why don't you do this, rent your flat out," 769 00:51:31,005 --> 00:51:33,758 he said, "Live here rent-free," he says, "You will have income coming in," 770 00:51:33,841 --> 00:51:35,804 and he said, "You got your work down in Smithfield," 771 00:51:35,884 --> 00:51:36,976 he said "You're going to be laughing." 772 00:51:37,094 --> 00:51:39,058 He said, "Stay here rent-free, you haven't got to pay nothing." 773 00:51:39,138 --> 00:51:43,062 I went, I thought about it for a minute and I thought, no, no, I got, I went, no, 774 00:51:43,142 --> 00:51:45,895 "I am young, I want to go out to parties and that" 775 00:51:45,978 --> 00:51:48,150 and I moved out and they, I think they was, 776 00:51:48,230 --> 00:51:50,569 I could see a tear was in their eyes, especially me dad. 777 00:51:50,649 --> 00:51:52,196 He was devastated I was leaving home. 778 00:51:58,866 --> 00:52:03,040 In the '90s, his reputation had sort of carried through and, 779 00:52:03,120 --> 00:52:05,334 but he was one of the most successful bouncers of all time 780 00:52:05,414 --> 00:52:06,757 on all the doors in the West End. 781 00:52:08,334 --> 00:52:11,804 REPORTER: Lenny McLean, who boasts he's the king of London's bouncers. 782 00:52:12,296 --> 00:52:13,548 In a club, 783 00:52:15,090 --> 00:52:16,683 you have a lot of aggravation. 784 00:52:17,551 --> 00:52:21,101 "Get Lenny." "Lenny will straighten it up." "Lenny will put it on the map." 785 00:52:22,348 --> 00:52:25,101 REPORTER: Lenny admits he has a criminal record for GBH. 786 00:52:25,184 --> 00:52:26,231 (GRUNTS) 787 00:52:26,894 --> 00:52:28,567 Treat kindness with kindness, 788 00:52:29,396 --> 00:52:30,943 but your Jack the Lads today, 789 00:52:31,940 --> 00:52:33,908 they want violence, you treat violence with violence. 790 00:52:34,902 --> 00:52:39,408 In one week, we had a lot of trouble with some people, a lot of Jack the Lads, 791 00:52:39,490 --> 00:52:43,870 I broke five jaws. They didn't stop screaming to the police. 792 00:52:49,083 --> 00:52:50,754 - Hello, mate. - How's it going, Mick? 793 00:52:50,834 --> 00:52:52,548 - Long time, no see. - Great to see you, how are ya? 794 00:52:52,628 --> 00:52:53,880 What are you doing out here? 795 00:52:54,004 --> 00:52:55,506 We are coming in to come and speak to you. 796 00:52:57,257 --> 00:52:59,430 How did you meet him 797 00:52:59,760 --> 00:53:02,730 and did you know about his reputation before you had met him? 798 00:53:02,888 --> 00:53:05,477 I'd heard of Lenny back in the day. 799 00:53:05,557 --> 00:53:09,061 Went to the Camden Palace to look for some work, got the job down there 800 00:53:09,144 --> 00:53:11,897 and basically, Lenny took me under his wing. 801 00:53:12,940 --> 00:53:15,154 It was a good place, we had a good team down there, 802 00:53:15,234 --> 00:53:17,612 and obviously, the Guv'nor was the leader. 803 00:53:17,695 --> 00:53:20,284 A lot of the times, we was in the restaurant upstairs eating. 804 00:53:20,364 --> 00:53:25,165 In fact, I brought a little picture in to show you, this was back in the day. 805 00:53:25,994 --> 00:53:28,584 We used to be in the restaurant, the buzzer used to go, 806 00:53:28,664 --> 00:53:30,416 everyone used to wait for us to come downstairs. 807 00:53:30,499 --> 00:53:33,503 - What, they didn't go and deal with it? - No, they weren't allowed to, 808 00:53:33,585 --> 00:53:36,300 we had to wait for Lenny to come and take the front line, 809 00:53:36,380 --> 00:53:39,384 and then it was Lenny at the front and it was about 12 or 13 behind him, 810 00:53:40,008 --> 00:53:42,556 all gloved up, we always had little pads made up, you know. 811 00:53:42,636 --> 00:53:45,147 A lot of people say they were knuckle-dusters, they wasn't, they were just pads. 812 00:53:45,228 --> 00:53:47,558 Weren't knuckle-dusters, we, they were like boxing pads, 813 00:53:47,641 --> 00:53:50,645 made up, so you didn't cut your hands or damage our hands. 814 00:53:51,019 --> 00:53:52,441 JAMIE: When my dad was doing the Camden Palace 815 00:53:52,521 --> 00:53:54,148 I can remember going into the kitchen sometimes, 816 00:53:54,231 --> 00:53:57,075 and he would have a collection of knives that he's took off people. 817 00:53:57,443 --> 00:54:00,115 I mean, you had to act first, otherwise that would end up in you. 818 00:54:00,195 --> 00:54:01,697 You had to, it was life or death. 819 00:54:01,780 --> 00:54:05,034 And Lenny would, every party that I would do, he would come down, you know... 820 00:54:05,117 --> 00:54:07,331 - Just to show his face. - To show his face. 821 00:54:07,411 --> 00:54:10,751 Lemonade, he would ask me to shoot up and get some lemonades 822 00:54:10,831 --> 00:54:12,920 and I'd be the only person who had to fly up there and get them. 823 00:54:13,000 --> 00:54:15,378 What, so if someone said, "Oh, I'd get you a lemonade, Len," he'd go... 824 00:54:15,461 --> 00:54:18,965 No, he send, send Short Stuff, so I'd fly up, get the lemonades, 825 00:54:19,047 --> 00:54:22,221 he followed a few people and then say, "Any problems, give me a call at home," 826 00:54:22,301 --> 00:54:23,518 and that was it, and then he was gone, you know. 827 00:54:23,719 --> 00:54:26,347 What was he actually like when it did kick off? 828 00:54:27,139 --> 00:54:30,229 He kicked off properly. You know, a lot of times it was one punch, it was down, 829 00:54:30,309 --> 00:54:32,732 and he used to say, "Good night, God bless," all the time. 830 00:54:33,145 --> 00:54:35,273 So wherever we worked, we worked on a lot of places, 831 00:54:35,355 --> 00:54:37,858 from the Camden Palace, we went to the Hippodrome after. 832 00:54:43,781 --> 00:54:47,160 Probably my dad's most famous time of working in the West End 833 00:54:47,242 --> 00:54:49,711 would be the London Hippodrome, where my dad got nicked for the murder. 834 00:54:57,795 --> 00:54:59,968 We're now coming into Leicester Square. 835 00:55:01,340 --> 00:55:05,345 He had all the Leicester Square all sewn up, he had the ticket touts, 836 00:55:05,427 --> 00:55:07,555 cab drivers, the food sellers, 837 00:55:07,638 --> 00:55:10,187 anything you could think of, it was his little domain. 838 00:55:10,349 --> 00:55:13,102 It was probably a really good time in my life 839 00:55:13,185 --> 00:55:14,812 because we used to come up here 840 00:55:14,895 --> 00:55:17,023 and we used to be like, you know, like celebrities. 841 00:55:17,523 --> 00:55:20,362 Just every door opened to wherever you wanted to go 842 00:55:20,442 --> 00:55:23,867 because he was held in such high esteem. 843 00:55:24,780 --> 00:55:27,033 JAMIE: You know, it was mutual respect amongst doorman 844 00:55:27,115 --> 00:55:31,120 that you could use your reputation to get in anywhere you wanted to get. 845 00:55:50,889 --> 00:55:54,605 I was with, obviously, working with Charlie Kray. 846 00:55:54,685 --> 00:55:57,399 We had an office in the Roman Road, 847 00:55:57,479 --> 00:55:59,481 we had it many a times and Charlie said to me one day, 848 00:55:59,565 --> 00:56:01,943 "I've got to go up and see Alex, Alex Stein." 849 00:56:02,943 --> 00:56:04,286 Some, doing some boxing promoting 850 00:56:04,695 --> 00:56:06,158 and when we were getting up there, 851 00:56:06,238 --> 00:56:10,078 there was a monster of a man stood outside and Charlie went, "That's Lenny, 852 00:56:10,158 --> 00:56:11,246 "I've got to have a word with him." 853 00:56:11,326 --> 00:56:15,542 I went, "I hope it's a nice word," and they got up there fired him into a little bit 854 00:56:15,622 --> 00:56:18,000 and was having a little bit it was going here and there and I thought, 855 00:56:18,292 --> 00:56:19,630 "Charlie, you've got to ease up here, pal, 856 00:56:19,710 --> 00:56:21,963 "because we could end up getting battered here." 857 00:56:22,671 --> 00:56:26,175 I can see this, and then it all stopped, 858 00:56:26,258 --> 00:56:28,556 big hug, and I went, "Thank God for that," 859 00:56:28,802 --> 00:56:33,103 and Charlie went, "Here, John, meet Len. Len, this is my pal John." 860 00:56:35,934 --> 00:56:38,023 You know, this is quite hard to actually walk into the Hippodrome, 861 00:56:38,103 --> 00:56:40,856 because the last time I come here he was on the door, 862 00:56:41,148 --> 00:56:43,401 you know, we're coming back for the first time. 863 00:56:48,155 --> 00:56:51,534 He was here on the doors from '90 to '93. 864 00:56:52,784 --> 00:56:54,536 Look how it's changed, unbelievable. 865 00:56:56,204 --> 00:56:57,581 He would stand inside the door, 866 00:56:57,664 --> 00:56:59,758 but mainly he had a little office on the left hand side 867 00:57:00,042 --> 00:57:02,422 with a camera on the door so he could see everything that was going on, 868 00:57:02,502 --> 00:57:06,382 him and his cousin John-John would sit in there just eating Chinese every night 869 00:57:06,465 --> 00:57:08,934 taking the piss out of everyone walking in there. 870 00:57:09,051 --> 00:57:10,928 A bad time for him and us 871 00:57:11,011 --> 00:57:13,480 was obviously when he got nicked for the murder at the Hippodrome. 872 00:57:16,725 --> 00:57:19,773 He was actually on his way home and then they rung him and said, 873 00:57:19,853 --> 00:57:21,650 "Look, Len, we've got some geezer here." 874 00:57:21,730 --> 00:57:24,233 The guy was actually starkers naked. 875 00:57:24,483 --> 00:57:26,781 He's got his old bill out, he's pissing on the dance floor, 876 00:57:26,902 --> 00:57:29,030 doorman grabbed hold of him, took him to a room. 877 00:57:29,446 --> 00:57:32,950 JAMIE: And my dad obviously give him a backhander or a clump or whatever, 878 00:57:33,033 --> 00:57:34,660 dressed him up after and got him out. 879 00:57:39,081 --> 00:57:42,551 THEO: I'm in bed, I got up quite early Sunday morning, put the radio on 880 00:57:42,709 --> 00:57:45,507 and I hear this thing about the Hippodrome, someone died or got murdered, 881 00:57:45,587 --> 00:57:46,759 and I thought, well, what? 882 00:57:47,005 --> 00:57:48,632 So I got straight on to the phone to Lenny. 883 00:57:48,715 --> 00:57:50,554 JAMIE: And my dad went, "You're joking." 884 00:57:50,634 --> 00:57:52,180 THEO: So he goes, "Oh, fucking, are you serious?" 885 00:57:52,260 --> 00:57:54,262 I went, "I've heard it, that is why I am ringing you up." 886 00:57:55,138 --> 00:57:57,266 So he goes, "Let me ring you back." He spoke to Val. 887 00:57:57,349 --> 00:58:00,188 JAMIE: He said, "That fella I give a backhander to last night, he's died. 888 00:58:00,268 --> 00:58:01,690 "They're going to come and nick me for this." 889 00:58:01,770 --> 00:58:04,239 She went, "No, don't be silly, they're not going to come and nick you." 890 00:58:05,357 --> 00:58:07,655 Probably a day or two went past 891 00:58:08,151 --> 00:58:09,903 and all of a sudden the doorbell went 892 00:58:09,987 --> 00:58:11,864 and there must have been about fifty old bill outside. 893 00:58:13,323 --> 00:58:14,995 And they said, "We need to take you down the station 894 00:58:15,075 --> 00:58:16,748 "and question about Mr Humphries." 895 00:58:18,537 --> 00:58:21,461 And I think that they had arrested Robert Lopez as well. 896 00:58:21,748 --> 00:58:23,341 They said, "Look, we're going to arrest you and Robert," 897 00:58:23,458 --> 00:58:25,422 and my dad said, "Look," he said, "Robert never hit the kid." 898 00:58:25,502 --> 00:58:26,503 He said, "I hit him." 899 00:58:26,878 --> 00:58:29,347 He said, "But I had to keep him under control because he was a nutter." 900 00:58:30,716 --> 00:58:32,514 And then they charged him with the murder. 901 00:58:36,430 --> 00:58:38,683 I mean, I can remember pulling up at my house 902 00:58:38,765 --> 00:58:40,767 and my mum was in fits of laughter. 903 00:58:41,184 --> 00:58:45,564 It was a nervous reaction, she couldn't, it was like uncontrollable fits of laughter. 904 00:58:49,860 --> 00:58:52,409 You know, he was on remand for 12 months on a murder charge. 905 00:59:09,421 --> 00:59:13,392 Apparently, he was running loose from Manchester out of a nuthouse, 906 00:59:13,508 --> 00:59:15,226 he ended up in London somehow, 907 00:59:15,594 --> 00:59:18,598 from London he came to the Hippodrome, got thrown out, 908 00:59:18,889 --> 00:59:21,517 apparently he was pissing on the cars outside the Hippodrome, 909 00:59:21,600 --> 00:59:23,022 heading up towards the casino. 910 00:59:24,144 --> 00:59:28,360 The next thing there was police, four or five police threw him headfirst into a van 911 00:59:28,440 --> 00:59:32,911 and there was a nurse who witnessed it that was walking by that night 912 00:59:33,028 --> 00:59:34,371 which saved Lenny's arse. 913 00:59:35,989 --> 00:59:39,209 So it was the police that caused the damage and killed him, not Lenny. 914 00:59:39,785 --> 00:59:43,665 That's why they overruled in court and he got what he got, you know, 915 00:59:43,747 --> 00:59:46,717 an ABH instead of them trying to pin a murder charge on him. 916 00:59:47,751 --> 00:59:51,472 JAMIE: And then after the trial it says here, "The police beat up tragic streaker." 917 00:59:51,588 --> 00:59:56,094 So a night club streaker was beaten to death by the police, not the two bouncers 918 00:59:56,176 --> 00:59:58,725 accused of the, accused of the murder at the Old Bailey. 919 00:59:59,554 --> 01:00:02,148 Yeah, it was a witch hunt. 920 01:00:04,518 --> 01:00:06,606 Because of the name Lenny McLean, 921 01:00:06,686 --> 01:00:09,439 I think the police had it in for him and they tried to pin it on him. 922 01:00:12,025 --> 01:00:14,528 I mean, at the moment when charges got dropped, 923 01:00:14,611 --> 01:00:15,988 I mean, he literally stood up 924 01:00:16,822 --> 01:00:20,662 and stared at the judge and he sung Always Look on the Bright Side of Life 925 01:00:20,742 --> 01:00:24,042 by Monty Python, and that is just the sort of sense of humour my dad had. 926 01:00:25,330 --> 01:00:27,207 I have to whistle it cos I don't know the rest of the words. 927 01:00:33,880 --> 01:00:37,760 I think it sort of wore him down in the end, I think he just had enough, you know. 928 01:00:37,843 --> 01:00:42,019 I could see a man who, who really wanted to step into something else. 929 01:00:42,806 --> 01:00:46,356 JAMIE: That's why he tried to do something a little bit more sort of creative. 930 01:00:50,564 --> 01:00:52,862 In the 1990s, he'd written his own book. 931 01:00:53,608 --> 01:00:55,906 HUNTLEY: His book, he knew that was a winner, 932 01:00:55,986 --> 01:00:58,200 he knew that was gold dust, 933 01:00:58,280 --> 01:00:59,748 and yet people couldn't see it. 934 01:01:01,032 --> 01:01:05,162 And I was around him for years when he was punting that book around, 935 01:01:06,413 --> 01:01:09,292 until one day somebody looked at it and thought, 936 01:01:09,374 --> 01:01:13,090 "This is special, this is going to do very, very well, this book," 937 01:01:13,170 --> 01:01:16,424 and they took it on because they could see that it was gold dust, 938 01:01:16,673 --> 01:01:18,887 they could see the potential in this book. 939 01:01:18,967 --> 01:01:21,641 Why no one has taken this on is beyond me. 940 01:01:23,180 --> 01:01:24,807 And it was the best seller. 941 01:01:27,559 --> 01:01:31,063 And it was the best seller for years. It sold millions of copies. 942 01:01:32,355 --> 01:01:34,574 And he became sort of famous. 943 01:01:34,900 --> 01:01:39,497 You always see his face, knuckles up at the chin everywhere you go. 944 01:01:39,946 --> 01:01:41,448 And he became a celebrity. 945 01:01:45,702 --> 01:01:47,204 He got TV roles. 946 01:01:47,287 --> 01:01:51,461 There is 200 notes there for you and one or two of your men about, 947 01:01:51,541 --> 01:01:53,464 just to discourage them. 948 01:01:54,002 --> 01:01:55,504 And also his talk shows. 949 01:01:55,587 --> 01:01:56,884 - Lenny McLean. - (APPLAUSE) 950 01:02:00,634 --> 01:02:03,433 WAX: Lenny McLean, champion street fighter of Great Britain. 951 01:02:03,970 --> 01:02:06,439 I'm planning to have a scrap. (GRUNTING) 952 01:02:07,015 --> 01:02:10,690 JAMIE: He loved the attention. I mean, he loved his family, but he liked, 953 01:02:10,810 --> 01:02:12,187 you know, people taking notice of him. 954 01:02:12,312 --> 01:02:13,859 TV PRESENTER: Ladies and gentlemen, Lenny McLean. 955 01:02:13,939 --> 01:02:14,940 (APPLAUSE) 956 01:02:18,318 --> 01:02:19,945 JAMIE: As he was coming to later on in his life, 957 01:02:20,028 --> 01:02:25,080 I think he knew he could do a lot more, like the acting was just right up his street. 958 01:02:25,492 --> 01:02:27,119 Ray, you are a fucking gentleman. 959 01:02:27,202 --> 01:02:28,920 (LAUGHTER) 960 01:02:30,705 --> 01:02:32,627 HUNTLEY: He said, "You know, all these years," 961 01:02:32,707 --> 01:02:35,547 he said, "I've been punching people and knocking people out," 962 01:02:35,627 --> 01:02:37,629 he said, "And it just suddenly dawned on me," 963 01:02:39,089 --> 01:02:44,311 he said, "You punch someone on the jaw in a nightclub, they want to give you five years," 964 01:02:44,594 --> 01:02:48,019 "you do it in front of a TV camera, they want to give you five grand, yeah." 965 01:02:50,934 --> 01:02:52,647 He's a fucking thief. 966 01:02:52,727 --> 01:02:56,573 EDDY: Harry has a colleague, a monster of a man, Barry the Baptist. 967 01:02:56,898 --> 01:02:59,487 The Baptist got his name by drowning people for Hatchet. 968 01:02:59,567 --> 01:03:01,615 I don't give a fucking... 969 01:03:06,366 --> 01:03:07,367 (INAUDIBLE) 970 01:03:08,743 --> 01:03:10,541 GUY RITCHIE: I loved your dad, he was fabulous. 971 01:03:11,997 --> 01:03:13,793 I remember the first time I saw your dad, 972 01:03:13,873 --> 01:03:15,500 I saw him on the door of the Hippodrome 973 01:03:17,043 --> 01:03:18,386 when I was about 15 or something, 974 01:03:18,628 --> 01:03:21,301 and as soon as I saw him, I thought, 975 01:03:21,381 --> 01:03:24,346 "If I ever end up making a movie, he's going to be in the movie." 976 01:03:24,426 --> 01:03:26,895 And then, I don't know what it was, 10 years later or whatever it was, 977 01:03:27,304 --> 01:03:29,056 he was in there, 978 01:03:29,139 --> 01:03:31,267 and I called him up, I can't remember how I got hold of the number, 979 01:03:31,349 --> 01:03:33,977 and your dad just could not have been more helpful, 980 01:03:34,060 --> 01:03:35,398 and that's before we had any dough, 981 01:03:35,478 --> 01:03:37,276 or before we was sort of organised or anything. 982 01:03:37,981 --> 01:03:41,360 And as your dad come in, I loved him, he was great. 983 01:03:41,443 --> 01:03:43,195 And are you still cracking on in the films? 984 01:03:43,278 --> 01:03:45,201 - (LAUGHING) - Am I still cracking on? 985 01:03:46,406 --> 01:03:49,120 We made a fucking deal for everything inside the cabinet. 986 01:03:49,200 --> 01:03:51,953 Inside out-fuckin'-side, I don't give a shit. 987 01:03:52,537 --> 01:03:54,542 You get those guns, because if you don't... 988 01:03:54,622 --> 01:03:55,794 Oh, yeah, Bazza, or what? 989 01:03:55,874 --> 01:03:58,593 We had these trailers which were, it's called a three-way. 990 01:03:58,918 --> 01:04:02,218 It's a caravan with no toilets, but three changing rooms, 991 01:04:03,006 --> 01:04:06,054 which you'd put, you know, someone who was in for a day you might put them in, 992 01:04:06,134 --> 01:04:09,138 but what they did was, they put two of us in each, 993 01:04:09,387 --> 01:04:11,435 me with your dad. 994 01:04:11,681 --> 01:04:15,397 So it was Lenny's first day and I got to my little door and it went 995 01:04:15,477 --> 01:04:20,199 "Jason Flemyng, Lenny McLean," and I went, "Oh..." 996 01:04:20,398 --> 01:04:21,650 And I opened the door and I looked in, 997 01:04:21,733 --> 01:04:24,197 it was tiny and I went, "There is no way on God's green Earth 998 01:04:24,277 --> 01:04:26,996 "Lenny McLean is going to get in this trailer with me in it." 999 01:04:27,113 --> 01:04:30,287 So I got, I got changed quickly and left my bag in the corner and then Lenny arrived 1000 01:04:30,367 --> 01:04:33,290 and he went, "You all right, boy," and I went, "Yeah, yeah, no, I'm fine, Lenny. 1001 01:04:33,370 --> 01:04:34,747 "I'm going to change, I'm going to leave you to it, 1002 01:04:34,829 --> 01:04:38,003 "I'm going to change out here," and he went, "What, outside?" and I went, 1003 01:04:38,124 --> 01:04:41,047 "Yeah, no, I'm going to change, I'm just going to change in the street," 1004 01:04:41,127 --> 01:04:44,176 and he went, "Good boy," and he closed the door. 1005 01:04:44,381 --> 01:04:46,678 And I was getting changed in the street and I'd forgotten something, 1006 01:04:46,758 --> 01:04:50,103 I knocked on the door like this, and I'd left my stuff in there, 1007 01:04:50,762 --> 01:04:53,351 and there was a CD that I, that's how long ago it was, 1008 01:04:53,431 --> 01:04:57,061 there was a CD which I was playing, which was on the side, it was an Elvis CD, 1009 01:04:57,143 --> 01:05:00,898 and your dad was very into Elvis and it was a Japanese import and he went, 1010 01:05:00,980 --> 01:05:03,733 and it was the first day I met him and I went, he went, 1011 01:05:04,526 --> 01:05:05,778 "Where did you get this, boy?" 1012 01:05:05,860 --> 01:05:08,864 And I went, "Oh, it's a Japanese import, they're hard to get." 1013 01:05:08,947 --> 01:05:10,994 And he goes, "Could you get me one of these?" 1014 01:05:11,074 --> 01:05:13,246 And I said, "You can have that one, Lenny," 1015 01:05:13,326 --> 01:05:15,954 and he went, "Good boy, good boy," and he stuck it in his bag 1016 01:05:16,037 --> 01:05:18,835 and I was like, "Oh, God, this is a nightmare being in with Lenny," 1017 01:05:18,915 --> 01:05:20,041 cos there's nothing I can say. 1018 01:05:21,251 --> 01:05:23,595 You know, I saw him do the scene with the Scousers 1019 01:05:23,795 --> 01:05:25,718 and he was going, he goes, "Where's those guns?" 1020 01:05:25,880 --> 01:05:26,972 Where's the others? 1021 01:05:27,340 --> 01:05:29,468 "Did you get those guns, the old ones?" 1022 01:05:29,551 --> 01:05:31,599 Stop fuckin' around. The others, the old ones. 1023 01:05:31,803 --> 01:05:33,600 We had to sell them, we needed the money. 1024 01:05:33,680 --> 01:05:36,058 I'm not fucking interested. 1025 01:05:36,141 --> 01:05:39,645 If you don't want to be counting the fingers you haven't got, 1026 01:05:39,811 --> 01:05:42,735 I suggest you get those guns quick! 1027 01:05:43,273 --> 01:05:45,820 Yeah, I knew your father from way back in the day now. 1028 01:05:45,900 --> 01:05:49,029 I mean, I've come out of Camden, so at the age of about 15, 16 1029 01:05:49,112 --> 01:05:51,786 we used to go to Camden Palace, which used to be called Koko, 1030 01:05:51,906 --> 01:05:54,910 so we used to turn up there and my friends used to be all nervous 1031 01:05:54,993 --> 01:05:58,372 cos your dad would be just like a big fella on the door 1032 01:05:58,496 --> 01:06:00,919 and I used to say, "Don't worry about it, I'll deal with this. 1033 01:06:00,999 --> 01:06:04,714 "Go on," I said, "Push me up," and I was like, "All right, Len, how you doing?" 1034 01:06:04,794 --> 01:06:07,047 And he goes, "Go on, fuck off, get in." 1035 01:06:07,130 --> 01:06:10,095 He just used to, and we were in, VIPs to put us in, 1036 01:06:10,175 --> 01:06:12,303 I don't know why, he just liked us because we had a bit of banter, 1037 01:06:12,385 --> 01:06:14,433 - I had a bit of banter. - Yeah, that's what he probably liked. 1038 01:06:14,721 --> 01:06:15,893 Hello? 1039 01:06:16,014 --> 01:06:17,857 Get us ice cream while you are at it. 1040 01:06:17,974 --> 01:06:20,648 FLEMYNG: You know, I mean, Lenny was a well-respected actor at that point. 1041 01:06:21,186 --> 01:06:24,565 He had timing and he understood the craft, he understood the marks, 1042 01:06:24,647 --> 01:06:25,944 he understood about the preparation. 1043 01:06:26,107 --> 01:06:29,906 Without a doubt, Lock, Stock would've been a great showcase as it was for all of us. 1044 01:06:29,986 --> 01:06:32,239 What the fuck do we know about antiques, mate? 1045 01:06:32,405 --> 01:06:35,750 If it looks old, it's worth money, simple. 1046 01:06:35,867 --> 01:06:39,462 So stop fucking moaning and rob the place. 1047 01:06:41,039 --> 01:06:43,633 This was the original billboard that was going to be in the film, 1048 01:06:43,750 --> 01:06:45,922 obviously, for Lock, Stock, and they had them all on the billboards 1049 01:06:46,002 --> 01:06:47,674 all round sort of London and Shoreditch. 1050 01:06:47,754 --> 01:06:50,969 That would have pleased your dad no end, Lenny would say, "That's it, 1051 01:06:51,049 --> 01:06:52,846 "I've made it now, that's what I've always... 1052 01:06:52,926 --> 01:06:55,020 "That's what I've been looking for all these years." 1053 01:06:55,845 --> 01:07:00,271 The tragedy was, you know, as you know, is that Lenny wasn't completely well 1054 01:07:00,391 --> 01:07:04,983 at that point and one of the great pleasures and successes of Lock, Stock 1055 01:07:05,063 --> 01:07:07,942 was the fact that it came out and was number one at the box office 1056 01:07:08,024 --> 01:07:10,026 at the same time as The Guv'nor was number one as a book. 1057 01:07:16,157 --> 01:07:20,037 And he was alive for that, you know, so he was there and saw, you know, 1058 01:07:20,119 --> 01:07:21,621 his film and his book 1059 01:07:21,704 --> 01:07:23,957 be at number one simultaneously, which is amazing. 1060 01:07:24,123 --> 01:07:27,002 But wouldn't it have been nice if your dad was walking down the street one day 1061 01:07:27,085 --> 01:07:28,339 and a kid come over to him and said, 1062 01:07:28,419 --> 01:07:30,797 "You're Lenny McLean, ain't you?" instead of saying, 1063 01:07:31,464 --> 01:07:33,717 "You're Lenny McLean, you're this, you're that, the other, 1064 01:07:33,883 --> 01:07:35,430 "say you're Lenny McLean, ain't you, the film star?" 1065 01:07:35,969 --> 01:07:37,265 Wouldn't that have been great? 1066 01:07:37,345 --> 01:07:38,892 And wouldn't he have appreciated that? 1067 01:07:38,972 --> 01:07:41,225 He would have loved that, and that says it all, doesn't it? 1068 01:07:50,400 --> 01:07:53,573 Yeah, no, I got him, he is wearing a roll neck and he's drinking in Hoxton somewhere. 1069 01:07:53,653 --> 01:07:54,905 WARREN: That was my mum's wedding. 1070 01:07:54,988 --> 01:07:56,786 - Oh, was it? It wasn't. - It was, yeah. 1071 01:07:56,990 --> 01:07:58,207 Oh, was it? 1072 01:07:58,992 --> 01:08:01,370 Oh, fuck me, yeah, I wonder if my dad has got any pictures of that? 1073 01:08:01,452 --> 01:08:02,582 Has your mum got any pictures of it? 1074 01:08:02,662 --> 01:08:05,460 There's one I put indoors, but you can just see a little bit of Lenny in it... 1075 01:08:05,540 --> 01:08:07,542 He's doing that... 1076 01:08:07,625 --> 01:08:08,968 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 1077 01:08:10,378 --> 01:08:13,507 Yeah, we're trying to... The thing is, my family are all a bit nuts, 1078 01:08:13,590 --> 01:08:14,842 it's hard to get them on camera. 1079 01:08:27,270 --> 01:08:31,696 JAMIE: I spoke to my dad's sister Boo and she just said to me that 1080 01:08:31,899 --> 01:08:34,573 they was all very close growing up, extremely close, 1081 01:08:35,111 --> 01:08:36,950 she said, but there was definitely something wrong with him, 1082 01:08:37,030 --> 01:08:40,079 she went, forget about the beltings, she went, there was something, 1083 01:08:40,867 --> 01:08:44,588 there was something deeper, something... 1084 01:08:45,997 --> 01:08:49,627 She just said he was a little bit bullyish to his family. 1085 01:08:50,043 --> 01:08:52,421 Yeah, it was quite difficult listening to it, to be fair. 1086 01:08:53,004 --> 01:08:56,094 I think I'm coming to a different conclusion, 1087 01:08:56,174 --> 01:09:00,182 even though he had a brutal upbringing, I think there was an underlying 1088 01:09:00,595 --> 01:09:01,847 what's the word I am looking for, 1089 01:09:01,929 --> 01:09:04,899 it's something else going on, there was something, 1090 01:09:05,808 --> 01:09:07,060 what can we say, 1091 01:09:08,311 --> 01:09:11,656 was there some mental issues, was there, or, 1092 01:09:12,857 --> 01:09:14,109 there's something definitely, 1093 01:09:14,233 --> 01:09:17,737 there was definitely something wrong with his nut, as we would say in the East End, 1094 01:09:17,987 --> 01:09:21,992 and to be fair, it's hard for me to talk about it, it's quite hard. 1095 01:09:29,582 --> 01:09:31,084 He was a tortured soul. 1096 01:09:32,543 --> 01:09:34,591 I mean, my mum always said that, you know, he's... 1097 01:09:34,671 --> 01:09:38,767 His nut is not right, it never has been since she's known him, 1098 01:09:38,925 --> 01:09:41,178 you know, his nut was always going, that's what he would always say, 1099 01:09:41,260 --> 01:09:42,557 "Oh, me nut's going, me nut's going," 1100 01:09:42,637 --> 01:09:45,390 you know, that's one of his common things he would always say. 1101 01:09:46,599 --> 01:09:49,772 I wouldn't say, look, it weren't all roses and tinkerbells in our house, 1102 01:09:49,852 --> 01:09:52,525 sometimes it would affect us. 1103 01:09:52,605 --> 01:09:54,944 But to be fair, I was never hit as a kid, 1104 01:09:55,024 --> 01:09:57,113 you know, he didn't agree with hitting children, you know, 1105 01:09:57,193 --> 01:10:00,658 but obviously he shouted and the shout would obviously do. 1106 01:10:00,738 --> 01:10:02,577 I've not seen him shout at fully grown men and cry, doormen, 1107 01:10:02,657 --> 01:10:04,580 and make them cry, just by shouting. 1108 01:10:05,243 --> 01:10:09,042 But that's when, you know, I look back now and think 1109 01:10:09,122 --> 01:10:11,750 why was he angry at that time, why was he so aggressive, 1110 01:10:11,833 --> 01:10:15,303 and now I'm thinking because he didn't want to show the weakness of how his nut 1111 01:10:15,503 --> 01:10:18,427 was coping with as we know it now as OCD. 1112 01:10:22,468 --> 01:10:24,515 You know, it's hard for me to talk about it 1113 01:10:24,595 --> 01:10:26,643 because would he have wanted me to talk about it? 1114 01:10:28,057 --> 01:10:31,482 But we need to know the truth about what lay behind the violence. 1115 01:10:32,895 --> 01:10:36,569 Other people noticed that he'd have OCD, especially probably his family. 1116 01:10:36,649 --> 01:10:40,865 Like he'd come home from school, count his steps, say his steps was 150 steps. 1117 01:10:40,945 --> 01:10:44,369 The next day, he'd go and count the steps again to come home, 1118 01:10:44,449 --> 01:10:47,538 and it'd be 148 steps, so he'd have to go all the way back to school 1119 01:10:47,618 --> 01:10:50,542 and count the 150 steps, so it was 150 steps and do that again. 1120 01:10:50,705 --> 01:10:52,207 And that, he had to do that until that was right 1121 01:10:52,290 --> 01:10:54,213 and then that's the sort of things he would do. 1122 01:10:55,376 --> 01:10:58,424 He'd say, "Oh, I forgot, there's a matchstick somewhere," 1123 01:10:58,504 --> 01:11:02,008 and he'd have to go back to a matchstick in the street somewhere, 1124 01:11:02,091 --> 01:11:06,722 literally get on a bus, go back, pick it up, and then go "Nine-ten, nine-ten," and then go. 1125 01:11:06,846 --> 01:11:10,441 He found a wage packet when he was younger and it had nine-ten in it, 1126 01:11:10,767 --> 01:11:14,021 and he would always repeat that and I used to think to myself, 1127 01:11:14,103 --> 01:11:15,441 "Why does he keep saying nine-ten?" 1128 01:11:15,521 --> 01:11:17,444 So throughout his life, "Nine ten, nine-ten." 1129 01:11:17,899 --> 01:11:19,867 And that was lucky, that's why he would say it. 1130 01:11:22,028 --> 01:11:24,450 You know, he'd repeat himself, he talked in the mirror a lot. 1131 01:11:24,530 --> 01:11:25,827 I mean, he did like the mirror to be fair. 1132 01:11:25,907 --> 01:11:28,660 I mean, I think if he could have one surgically put on the front of his face, 1133 01:11:28,743 --> 01:11:31,462 he would definitely have had one because he was constantly looking in it. 1134 01:11:32,371 --> 01:11:35,420 I think he see someone in the street that he used to work with when he left school, 1135 01:11:35,500 --> 01:11:36,626 when he was a window cleaner, 1136 01:11:36,709 --> 01:11:40,555 and he hadn't seen this guy for 25 years, so he's come home to my mum and said, 1137 01:11:40,797 --> 01:11:43,261 "Val, I've just seen so and so, what's his name?" 1138 01:11:43,341 --> 01:11:46,971 And my mum said, "I didn't know you really then, Len, I don't know his name." 1139 01:11:47,178 --> 01:11:49,142 "I've got to," and he would go on and he went on for weeks, 1140 01:11:49,222 --> 01:11:50,269 "I need to know this name." 1141 01:11:50,473 --> 01:11:52,395 Morning, noon, and night, "What's this geezer's name?" 1142 01:11:52,475 --> 01:11:55,523 So that would play on his mind for two to three weeks to find out who this man was, 1143 01:11:55,603 --> 01:11:58,356 she would've found out the geezer's name, told my dad and he went, 1144 01:11:58,481 --> 01:12:00,734 "Oh, that's it," and he wouldn't mention it ever again. 1145 01:12:03,069 --> 01:12:05,993 As soon as he found out his mind was settled, he would go on to something else. 1146 01:12:06,197 --> 01:12:10,668 I'm not saying people in the East End are ignorant, but there was a, you know, 1147 01:12:11,327 --> 01:12:16,049 there wasn't an understanding about OCD or even dyslexia, autism, 1148 01:12:16,541 --> 01:12:20,465 so someone who done that, they just got classed as being a nutter or mad, 1149 01:12:20,545 --> 01:12:23,219 so it was a stigma, but no one would tell Lenny to his face. 1150 01:12:24,298 --> 01:12:27,973 It must've been very, very difficult for him to have a problem like that, 1151 01:12:28,177 --> 01:12:29,474 it was a vulnerability. 1152 01:12:29,762 --> 01:12:31,435 He must've had a protection up. 1153 01:12:33,015 --> 01:12:36,731 JAMIE: When he felt like that, because he was such a man's man, 1154 01:12:36,811 --> 01:12:38,654 I think it would develop into anger. 1155 01:12:40,189 --> 01:12:43,910 ASKEW: He dealt with it the best way he could, he never sat with a therapist. 1156 01:12:44,151 --> 01:12:46,870 My generation, we go and have therapy twice a week, 1157 01:12:47,989 --> 01:12:49,832 but, you know, they were real men. 1158 01:12:49,949 --> 01:12:52,747 They didn't go to doctors if their leg was hanging off, you know, 1159 01:12:52,827 --> 01:12:54,290 they was, they get shot 1160 01:12:54,370 --> 01:12:58,500 and went down the hospital and then come out and had a big cream cake. 1161 01:12:59,333 --> 01:13:02,837 That's, that's a different world, we're a different breed nowadays. 1162 01:13:03,754 --> 01:13:06,758 We're very narcissistic, we're into ourselves, we're into our being. 1163 01:13:07,258 --> 01:13:09,556 iPhone generation now, we are. 1164 01:13:12,054 --> 01:13:14,477 JAMIE: You know, I just think it's all the emotion of filming, 1165 01:13:14,557 --> 01:13:17,731 it's all got a bit on top of me, really, to be fair, it's been quite hard. 1166 01:13:28,696 --> 01:13:31,666 (SHOUTING, MUFFLED VOICES) 1167 01:13:38,289 --> 01:13:39,336 JAMIE: It was nothing, sorry, mate. 1168 01:13:39,498 --> 01:13:41,671 OFFICER: Now, gentleman. How old are you? 1169 01:13:41,834 --> 01:13:43,923 This is, this is a fucking 12-year-old schoolboy. 1170 01:13:44,003 --> 01:13:45,346 JAMIE: No you're right, it's all right. 1171 01:13:45,755 --> 01:13:49,510 We split, nothing, we spilt teas on each other, it was a tease, but it was wrong. 1172 01:13:49,592 --> 01:13:51,094 Just had an argument, that was all, nothing. 1173 01:13:51,344 --> 01:13:53,641 MAN: Honestly, Officer, nothing was done. OFFICER: Are you working? 1174 01:13:53,721 --> 01:13:55,064 JAMIE: Yeah, we're filming, yeah. 1175 01:14:01,103 --> 01:14:02,355 (MUFFLED VOICES) 1176 01:14:03,564 --> 01:14:05,066 JAMIE: What the fuck was that all about? 1177 01:14:05,149 --> 01:14:08,073 Have a fight in the middle of a restaurant, just done four months. 1178 01:14:08,361 --> 01:14:10,908 WOMAN: What the fuck is wrong with you? Seriously. 1179 01:14:10,988 --> 01:14:13,582 JAMIE: He was being, he was being leery to me, Jo. 1180 01:14:14,533 --> 01:14:16,247 JO: The police are outside, someone's filmed you. 1181 01:14:16,327 --> 01:14:18,541 If somebody had come, you're back inside for six months. 1182 01:14:18,621 --> 01:14:21,625 You've got to control your fucking temper, Jamie. 1183 01:14:22,875 --> 01:14:27,550 You know, it does my nut, I've got a, I need something to take it away. 1184 01:14:27,630 --> 01:14:30,428 Cos I'm, now I've gone in there, but I didn't say nothing to him straight away. 1185 01:14:30,508 --> 01:14:33,347 He said summat and I sat down and I said, "Have you got a problem or summat?" 1186 01:14:33,427 --> 01:14:35,270 He's got to say something, he's a little bit older than me 1187 01:14:35,429 --> 01:14:37,852 so now he has to say something, I said, "Fuck it," I went to grab him. 1188 01:14:37,932 --> 01:14:39,434 Now I've gone in there and caused absolute murder 1189 01:14:39,517 --> 01:14:43,941 with cups and saucers have gone everywhere, so, but, oh, I don't know. 1190 01:14:44,021 --> 01:14:46,360 I just... I like to be tucked up indoors, I know. 1191 01:14:46,440 --> 01:14:48,779 - It's emotional, talking about it. - I know. 1192 01:14:48,859 --> 01:14:51,533 It's even emotional me coming down Hoxton again. 1193 01:14:51,654 --> 01:14:53,367 Yeah, I don't come here, you know what I'm saying? 1194 01:14:53,447 --> 01:14:54,535 I don't come here. 1195 01:14:54,615 --> 01:14:56,537 When I see all the hipsters and the change of it all, 1196 01:14:56,617 --> 01:15:01,208 and I got my old flatmate who's talking about Lenny, 1197 01:15:01,288 --> 01:15:03,256 it's difficult, it's difficult. 1198 01:15:10,423 --> 01:15:13,552 JAMIE: At some point, it's a good thing being his son 1199 01:15:13,634 --> 01:15:15,598 and then that point, 1200 01:15:15,678 --> 01:15:19,308 it's a bad thing to be his son because obviously people think 1201 01:15:20,141 --> 01:15:22,360 you're the same, you know, you're the same as him. 1202 01:15:25,438 --> 01:15:29,284 I am similar to him in a lot of ways with our sense of humour, funny, but... 1203 01:15:31,318 --> 01:15:32,865 But we have got a certain 1204 01:15:34,196 --> 01:15:37,700 streak in us, like our tempers can go very quickly. 1205 01:15:37,825 --> 01:15:39,827 I don't really go out that much anywhere any more, 1206 01:15:39,910 --> 01:15:42,914 cos I just don't want to get in any more altercations, 1207 01:15:42,997 --> 01:15:45,591 like I'm one punch away from going to prison 1208 01:15:47,001 --> 01:15:49,629 for however long it would be, I don't know. 1209 01:15:55,926 --> 01:15:59,016 I had been skiing in Italy and I spoke to my mum 1210 01:15:59,096 --> 01:16:01,269 and she said, "Look, you need to come home, Daddy's not very well," 1211 01:16:01,390 --> 01:16:04,814 and I can remember walking in, but he hadn't sort of shrunk, 1212 01:16:04,894 --> 01:16:07,108 but he had lost a lot of weight off the shoulders 1213 01:16:07,188 --> 01:16:08,651 so I said, "Oh," I said, "Dad, you don't look well," 1214 01:16:08,731 --> 01:16:11,278 and he said, "No, I think I'm all right, I think I got a bit of pleurisy," 1215 01:16:11,358 --> 01:16:12,735 so I said, "No, no, we need to go to the hospital." 1216 01:16:12,943 --> 01:16:15,822 Put my dad in the car, we drove him up to the hospital in Sidcup 1217 01:16:15,905 --> 01:16:18,158 and they bought him in and they said, "Oh, he don't look very well," 1218 01:16:18,240 --> 01:16:19,787 and they done a few tests on him 1219 01:16:20,910 --> 01:16:22,581 and they said, you know, "We've done a scan on you," 1220 01:16:22,661 --> 01:16:27,087 and they said it's cancer and it's spread to your brain 1221 01:16:27,458 --> 01:16:30,678 and we're going to give you eight months to live. 1222 01:16:33,214 --> 01:16:35,216 HUNTLEY: You always thought that he was invincible. 1223 01:16:36,008 --> 01:16:38,431 This sort of thing can't happen to Lenny, you know. 1224 01:16:39,970 --> 01:16:42,309 JAMIE: Actually, when the cancer was like in its advanced stages, 1225 01:16:42,389 --> 01:16:44,733 I remember like my mum would, she would go to the shops 1226 01:16:44,850 --> 01:16:46,647 and go, "Len, Len," and he wouldn't answer, 1227 01:16:46,727 --> 01:16:48,604 so she'd go up the stairs and he'd be sitting in bed 1228 01:16:48,687 --> 01:16:51,610 with his eyes open stiff and we'd thought he had died and she would go, "Len, Len!" 1229 01:16:51,690 --> 01:16:53,529 "Oh, no, I'm only joking. Did you get my cream cakes? 1230 01:16:53,609 --> 01:16:54,735 "Did you get my Magnum lollies?" 1231 01:16:54,819 --> 01:16:56,947 And she'd go, "Don't do that!" And she'd be hitting him... 1232 01:16:57,071 --> 01:16:59,824 He'd be laughing and like, you know, he's dying, 1233 01:16:59,907 --> 01:17:01,909 but he was still liked practical jokes. 1234 01:17:04,120 --> 01:17:06,584 And he always smoked his roll-ups, even, there was no point in giving up 1235 01:17:06,664 --> 01:17:08,041 because the damage was already done 1236 01:17:08,124 --> 01:17:11,213 and I can remember there was no toilet upstairs in the house, 1237 01:17:11,293 --> 01:17:12,965 and I can remember like 4:00 in the morning, 1238 01:17:13,045 --> 01:17:15,757 him tumbling down the stairs where he is trying to get up and go to the toilet 1239 01:17:15,840 --> 01:17:17,762 and I've turned the light on and go, "Dad, are you all right?" 1240 01:17:17,842 --> 01:17:19,805 And he went, "Don't worry I haven't dropped the roll-up." 1241 01:17:19,885 --> 01:17:21,307 And like he still had the roll-up in his hand 1242 01:17:21,387 --> 01:17:23,890 and he was literally in a pile at the bottom of the stairs. 1243 01:17:24,056 --> 01:17:25,478 The MacMillan nurse, they said, 1244 01:17:25,558 --> 01:17:28,437 "What we are going to do is we will set a toilet upstairs for him," 1245 01:17:28,519 --> 01:17:32,240 and my mum went, "The day Lenny can't get up and use the toilet, 1246 01:17:33,691 --> 01:17:35,068 "that is the day that he will die." 1247 01:17:36,902 --> 01:17:38,199 And she was 100% right. 1248 01:17:43,033 --> 01:17:45,752 His funeral was very impressive. 1249 01:17:46,287 --> 01:17:49,541 We probably had probably 15, 20 cars of family 1250 01:17:49,665 --> 01:17:52,880 and then there was about 60 cars following, I would say. 1251 01:17:52,960 --> 01:17:55,174 The streets were lined with people. 1252 01:17:55,254 --> 01:17:58,133 Thousands and thousands and thousands of people 1253 01:17:58,215 --> 01:18:00,468 to see Lenny off, you know. That's incredible. 1254 01:18:01,177 --> 01:18:03,140 JAMIE: And like it was just like a massive procession. 1255 01:18:03,220 --> 01:18:05,684 There was sort of all news cameras doing interviews with people 1256 01:18:05,764 --> 01:18:09,810 and everyone reckoned they knew him or he lived in the Roman or he lived in Hoxton. 1257 01:18:09,894 --> 01:18:11,237 It was pretty powerful. 1258 01:18:13,022 --> 01:18:14,068 HUNTLEY: Is that a bad guy? 1259 01:18:14,148 --> 01:18:17,780 Do people do that for someone who goes around hurting people for no reason? 1260 01:18:17,860 --> 01:18:20,989 No, they don't do that, no, cos they knew Lenny for what he was. 1261 01:18:21,071 --> 01:18:24,917 He was a nice man and make, give a lot of people 1262 01:18:25,034 --> 01:18:26,832 a lot of fun along the way, believe me, you know. 1263 01:18:33,500 --> 01:18:34,839 JAMIE: A funny story always sticks in my head. 1264 01:18:34,919 --> 01:18:36,507 I remember they were down Clacton 1265 01:18:36,587 --> 01:18:39,807 and someone come up to me and said, "Oh, I see your mum and dad in Clacton." 1266 01:18:40,090 --> 01:18:41,637 He had his hand on the top of her head. 1267 01:18:41,717 --> 01:18:44,390 He said, "Why does he do that?" I said, "I'll tell you why he does that." 1268 01:18:44,470 --> 01:18:45,808 I said, "He does it in case he thinks 1269 01:18:45,888 --> 01:18:47,390 "anything's going to fall on her head and hurt her." 1270 01:18:47,473 --> 01:18:49,019 I said, "It's just a little funny thing that he does." 1271 01:18:49,099 --> 01:18:50,146 Nothing's going to fall on his head, 1272 01:18:50,226 --> 01:18:52,273 but it's just a little funny joke they have between theirselves. 1273 01:18:52,353 --> 01:18:53,650 I said, "And that is why he does it." 1274 01:19:06,533 --> 01:19:08,956 Erm, making the documentary, 1275 01:19:09,954 --> 01:19:14,084 at first I thought it was a really good idea making the film. 1276 01:19:15,000 --> 01:19:17,628 I wanted to interview people that knew him or had stories, 1277 01:19:17,711 --> 01:19:19,884 negative or positive, it didn't matter to me. 1278 01:19:19,964 --> 01:19:22,808 But was I going around looking for too much negativity? 1279 01:19:26,720 --> 01:19:30,811 "Beloved husband, father, Leonard John Frederick McLean, The Guv'nor. 1280 01:19:30,891 --> 01:19:34,236 "He died in 28.07.1998." 1281 01:19:34,645 --> 01:19:38,861 And this is a sad one, "In loving memory of Valerie Georgina McLean, 1282 01:19:38,941 --> 01:19:42,662 "best mum in the world. Will always miss you forever, Jamie and Kelly." 1283 01:19:42,778 --> 01:19:47,875 She died 18.12.2007, 56. All very young. 1284 01:19:48,659 --> 01:19:52,709 You know, you look at it there, age 46, me nan, 49, my dad. 1285 01:19:53,497 --> 01:19:56,592 It's, oh, it's no age, is it? You ain't even had a life. 1286 01:19:57,418 --> 01:19:58,465 Ain't had a life then. 1287 01:19:58,585 --> 01:20:01,300 This is where you end up, it's just... 1288 01:20:01,380 --> 01:20:04,680 It's just, you know, this is the, you know, your last journey, you end up here. 1289 01:20:05,509 --> 01:20:06,761 It's heart-breaking, innit? 1290 01:20:07,136 --> 01:20:08,474 And this is my Christmas now, I mean, 1291 01:20:08,554 --> 01:20:12,809 I said earlier on that all my good memories at Christmas and laughing, 1292 01:20:13,434 --> 01:20:14,435 you know. 1293 01:20:14,518 --> 01:20:16,020 Christmas is quite a good time for people now. 1294 01:20:16,103 --> 01:20:17,901 My Christmas mornings, I have to come here, reluctantly, 1295 01:20:19,940 --> 01:20:21,317 I don't want to come here to see my mum and dad, 1296 01:20:21,400 --> 01:20:24,449 I want to go and see them at their house, happy and laughing. 1297 01:20:26,655 --> 01:20:27,827 (EXHALES) 1298 01:20:28,073 --> 01:20:32,328 All he wanted to do was better himself, provide for his family and which he did. 1299 01:20:32,411 --> 01:20:35,210 He was a good father and a good husband. 1300 01:20:36,206 --> 01:20:37,670 We're celebrating it, that's what we are doing. 1301 01:20:37,750 --> 01:20:39,338 We're not doing a film, we're not doing a documentary, 1302 01:20:39,418 --> 01:20:44,891 we're celebrating a man that come from nothing to become something. 1303 01:20:48,177 --> 01:20:50,054 Well, fuck me, what's that? What is that? 1304 01:20:52,139 --> 01:20:53,891 That is what my dad would do. (SNIFFLES) 1305 01:20:54,850 --> 01:20:56,602 I am my father's son. 1306 01:21:05,152 --> 01:21:06,825 - So... Um... - (SIRENS BLARING) 1307 01:21:09,490 --> 01:21:10,867 (LAUGHING) Sorry, force of habit. 1308 01:21:12,993 --> 01:21:15,337 I punch someone in the face, I'm going to prison. 1309 01:21:15,788 --> 01:21:19,503 No matter what I do, it's going to be highlighted 100 times worse 1310 01:21:19,583 --> 01:21:20,879 than what it is by the police. 1311 01:21:20,959 --> 01:21:24,088 They had a dossier like that about my old man when I went to court. 1312 01:21:24,171 --> 01:21:25,259 I mean, what has that got to... 1313 01:21:25,339 --> 01:21:28,889 What has my old man got to do with me having a fight for 10 seconds somewhere? 1314 01:21:29,426 --> 01:21:34,432 So are you paying for the sins of your father? I think we are, I think we do. 1315 01:21:34,556 --> 01:21:35,808 I think I did. 1316 01:21:37,601 --> 01:21:39,565 Yeah, I can't say I wouldn't be in that position again 1317 01:21:39,645 --> 01:21:41,147 because if someone did push me, 1318 01:21:41,230 --> 01:21:43,402 I think I would probably, yeah, I would snap. 1319 01:21:43,482 --> 01:21:46,736 Yeah, I would. I wouldn't be able to keep my hands to myself definitely. 1320 01:21:46,819 --> 01:21:49,698 I wouldn't be able to let someone pick on me and my family, 1321 01:21:49,780 --> 01:21:51,157 I don't think I could do it. 1322 01:21:53,325 --> 01:21:56,749 I mean, I'm 45 now, who wants to end up in prison? 1323 01:21:56,829 --> 01:21:58,172 It's no place for no one. 1324 01:22:04,837 --> 01:22:06,054 INTERVIEWER: You sound a bit of a bully. 1325 01:22:06,422 --> 01:22:08,641 No, you're joking. Gentleman. 1326 01:22:09,383 --> 01:22:11,056 Not a bully. A gentleman. 1327 01:22:23,063 --> 01:22:25,402 Do you know the family, the McLeans and the Walls? 1328 01:22:25,482 --> 01:22:27,155 - I have heard the name of it, yeah. - Yeah. 1329 01:22:30,154 --> 01:22:32,907 - Have you ever heard of the McLeans? - (LAUGHING) Oh, yes, yes. 1330 01:22:33,574 --> 01:22:35,042 - Oh, I know Lenny. - Yeah? 1331 01:22:38,078 --> 01:22:39,625 - Do you remember Lenny McLean? - Yeah. 1332 01:22:39,705 --> 01:22:42,049 - I'm his boy, Jamie. Yeah. - Are you? (LAUGHING) 1333 01:22:45,085 --> 01:22:47,338 Lenny McLean? Do you know Lenny? 1334 01:22:47,421 --> 01:22:48,923 - Knock him out. - (LAUGHTER) 1335 01:22:50,424 --> 01:22:51,801 We're doing a documentary about him. 1336 01:22:51,884 --> 01:22:53,761 - Are you? Of course I knew him. - Did you know Lenny? 1337 01:22:56,805 --> 01:22:58,394 - Did you know him? - Knew Lenny well, yeah. 1338 01:22:58,474 --> 01:23:00,226 Did you, what did you go to school round here as well? 1339 01:23:00,309 --> 01:23:02,981 Well, no, I used to be a chauffeur and I used to drive, meet him up there 1340 01:23:03,061 --> 01:23:04,904 - when he used to work at Camden. - Yeah. 1341 01:23:07,983 --> 01:23:11,658 He asked to have the carwash and Lenny used to bring his black Ford Granada... 1342 01:23:11,778 --> 01:23:12,779 - Yeah. - And he used to 1343 01:23:12,863 --> 01:23:15,116 come down with Johnny, Fat Nose Johnny. 1344 01:23:18,118 --> 01:23:19,790 What was my old man like when he was younger? 1345 01:23:19,870 --> 01:23:23,043 He was a bit of a nuisance round here when he was younger, do you know what I mean? 1346 01:23:23,123 --> 01:23:26,844 - Murder, murder. Yeah, I liked him, yeah. - Yeah. 1347 01:23:30,380 --> 01:23:33,008 He never done me any harm, he was polite to me. 1348 01:23:33,091 --> 01:23:34,593 Didn't get too involved with him, 1349 01:23:34,676 --> 01:23:35,722 - you know what I mean? - Yeah. 1350 01:23:35,802 --> 01:23:38,350 Everybody labelled as a bully, but he weren't. 1351 01:23:38,430 --> 01:23:41,980 They talked about the bad things he done on one hand, 1352 01:23:42,100 --> 01:23:43,689 but the good things he done they won't tell you. 1353 01:23:43,769 --> 01:23:45,146 He was a blinding geezer, 1354 01:23:45,229 --> 01:23:46,947 - bailed me out on a number of occasions. - Yeah. 1355 01:23:49,942 --> 01:23:52,030 I always say they're one of the boys from Hoxton. 1356 01:23:52,110 --> 01:23:53,157 Yeah, that's it. 1357 01:23:53,237 --> 01:23:55,659 And we always said we had our road, 1358 01:23:55,739 --> 01:23:57,582 - but they never robbed their own. - No. 1359 01:24:23,308 --> 01:24:25,310 I'm standing on the door like me old man, 1360 01:24:25,394 --> 01:24:27,271 but I think I'm a little bit more immaculately dressed. 1361 01:24:27,938 --> 01:24:30,402 All right, Sam? Got a bee in my bonnet about him. 1362 01:24:30,482 --> 01:24:32,529 No, he didn't even talk like that. He went, "Hello, dinky." 1363 01:24:32,609 --> 01:24:34,737 That's how he spoke really, that was all for the camera. 1364 01:24:34,820 --> 01:24:36,538 He would go, "Hello, all right, kids?" 1365 01:24:36,697 --> 01:24:38,118 That's how he spoke, that's how we all speak. 1366 01:24:38,198 --> 01:24:41,748 All the McLeans speak like that, "Hello, right. Oh, doo-dee-dee." 1367 01:24:41,868 --> 01:24:43,336 (LAUGHTER) 1367 01:24:44,305 --> 01:25:44,187 Advertise your product or brand here contact www.OpenSubtitles.org today 125612

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