Charles Dance starred in "Out on a Limb" with Shirley MacLaine.
Shirley
MacLaine stars as herself in this TV movie, a powerfully candid
recreation of the passionate love affair and spiritual adventure that
took the actress to some of the world's most exotic locales--and to the
innermost reaches of her very being.
Shirley,
feeling something lacking in her life, finds herself increasingly drawn
toward the idea that there is more to living and the world around her
than what we generally acknowledge. Delving deeper into the study of
metaphysics and religion via books, various kindred spirits and
firsthand observations, Shirley, although an inveterate skeptic, becomes
more and more absorbed in the infinite possibilities open to humankind.
After visiting many of
the world's most exotic cities on her journey, Shirley finds herself in
Peru with a fellow seeker named David Manning. Manning shares some of
his knowledge with Shirley which aids in her search for cosmic
enlightenment which once again turns inward, leading her to a previously
unimaginable out-of-body experience. It's not long before her
extraordinary spiritual explorations foster a growing belief in
reincarnation, the possible existence of extraterrestrials and most
importantly, the immorality of the human soul.
The
composite character of David Manning in the movie and book is partially
based on Shirley MacLaine's meeting's in Switzerland with UFO Contactee
Billy Meier. Charles Silva has claimed that he is the main inspration
for the David character. Silva told his story in a book called "Date
with the Gods" in 1977. When he showed it to actress Shirley MacLaine,
she asked him to take her to Peru. Their adventures together lasted the
next five years, after which MacLaine wrote her famous best-seller, "Out
on a Limb." In that book, and in her 1987 ABC TV mini-series of the
same title, she says a character named "David" took her to Peru, taught
her about reincarnation and astral projection, and told her about his
friend from the Pleiades. Silva says MacLaine broke her promise to tell
what she really learned from him about coming events on earth, including
geological changes, political upheavals, and alien landings. He says
she was pressured to leave all that out of her book by powerful friends,
including Bella Abzug and David Rockefeller.
So
Silva decided to go on a lecture tour and tell his own story. In his
promotional material, he called himself "The Real David from 'Out on a
Limb'." Not surprisingly, his lectures and seminars drew large crowds.
It wasn't long, however, before Silva got a letter from Bantam Books,
the publisher of "Out on a Limb," warning him that he was illegally
using copyrighted material in his lectures. He shot back an angry reply,
asking if anyone at Bantam was aware that he had published all this
material himself in 1977. Going on the offensive, Silva hired a lawyer
and filed suit against Bantam, MacLaine and ABC Pictures. Silva claims
that Shirley MacLaine signed an affidavit which says that he is David.
Silva considers that affidavit a victory. But his legal struggle with
MacLaine, he thinks, may have caught the attention of other powerful
people who didn't want his story to be validated in so public a fashion.
He started lecturing
again. And then, in 1991, he found himself under suspicion of child
molestation. "I couldn't believe it," he says. "Somebody charged me with
first degree molestation of a six year old child." Silva says he thinks
the molestation charge against himself, and the similar charge against
well-known UFO researcher Wendelle Stevens, were both set-ups. "If you
rob a bank, some people might consider you a hero," Silva says. "But if
you molest a child, everybody sees you as the scum of the earth. It is
the lowest of the low. It totally discredits you." In Silva's case, it
got him deported.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Out_on_a_Limb
Charles Dance has a past life connection with Richard William Church.
Bella Abzug
Abzug
graduated from Walton High School in New York City, and went on to
Hunter College of the City University of New York, later earning a law
degree from Columbia University. She then went on to do further
post-graduate work at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America.
Abzug
was admitted to the New York Bar in 1947, and started practicing in New
York City, particularly in matters of labor law. She became an attorney
in the 1940s, a time when very few women did so, and took on civil
rights cases in the South. Abzug was an outspoken advocate of liberal
causes, including support for the Equal Rights Amendment, and opposition
to the Vietnam War. This placed her on the master list of Nixon
political opponents, and likewise Nixon was apparently on her list,
according to the following :
"...[F]ast forward to 1973-1974, to
the tumult surrounding President Richard Nixon once the Watergate
break-in came to light. James Cannon tells of a succession plot to end
all plots in his biography of President Ford, Time and Chance. In
October of 1973, Nixon's first vice president, Spiro Agnew, was forced
to resign in disgrace. The Republican Nixon would be nominating a
replacement who would have to be confirmed on Capitol Hill. But Congress
was led by Democrats. New York Congresswoman Bella Abzug hatched a
scheme to thwart Nixon and — worse — the plain intent of the
Constitution. She and several other Democrats floated the idea that the
Senate obstruct Nixon's VP nominee. In other words, they would insure
that there would be no vice president. Then, when the president resigned
because of public pressure from Watergate, succession would pass to the
other party, to the Democratic speaker of the House, Carl Albert (since
there would be no VP). When Congresswoman Abzug presented the scheme to
Speaker Albert, he refused to go along with the extra-constitutional
scheme. Some historians have argued that this is the closest to a coup
d'etat the U.S. has ever come."
She served the state of New York
in the United States House of Representatives, representing her district
of Manhattan, from 1971 to 1977. For part of her term, she also
represented part of The Bronx as well. She was one of the first members
of Congress to support gay rights, introducing in 1974, the first
federal gay rights bill, the Equality Act of 1974, with fellow
Democratic New York City Representative, Edward Koch, a future mayor of
New York City.
In 1976, Abzug ran for the U.S. Senate, but was
narrowly defeated in the Democratic primary by Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
She was also unsuccessful in a bid to be the Mayor of New York City in
1977, and in attempts to return to the U.S. House from the East Side of
Manhattan in 1978 and from Westchester County in 1986. Abzug remained
active in politics even after ceasing to be a candidate.
In
1990, she co-founded the Women's Environment & Development
Organization to mobilize women's participation in international
conferences, particularly those run by the United Nations.
She
was well-known for her habit of wearing noticeable hats. Abzug, who was
Jewish, appeared in the WLIW video A Laugh, A Tear, A Mitzvah. She was
also known in the Congress for being extremely outspoken. This became a
problem during her legislative career and led one of her fellow House
members to say that her support of any bill would cost it 20 to 30
votes.[citation needed]
After battling breast cancer for a number of years, she developed heart disease and died in 1998 at the age of 77.
Bella seems to have a connection with Elizabeth Fry.
Elizabeth Fry
Elizabeth Fry (née Gurney; 21 May 1780 – 12 October 1845) was an English prison reformer, social reformer and philanthropist.
Fry
was the driving force in legislation to make the treatment of prisoners
more humane, and she was supported in her efforts by a reigning
monarch. Since 2002, she has been depicted on the Bank of England £5
note.
Elizabeth Gurney was born in Gurney Court, off Magdalen
Street, Norwich, Norfolk, England to a Quaker family. Her family home as
a child was Earlham Hall, Norwich, which is now part of the University
of East Anglia. Her father, Joseph Gurney, was a partner in Gurney's
bank. Her mother, Catherine, was a part of the Barclay family, who were
among the founders of Barclays Bank. Elizabeth's mother died when she
was only twelve years old. As one of the oldest girls in the family, she
was partly responsible for the care and training of the younger
children, including her brother Joseph John Gurney.
At
eighteen years old, the young Elizabeth Gurney was deeply moved by the
preaching of William Savery, an American Quaker. Motivated by his words,
she took an interest in the poor, the sick, and the prisoners. She
collected old clothes for the poor, visited those who were sick in her
neighbourhood, and started a Sunday school in the summer house to teach
children to read. She met Joseph Fry (1777 –1861), a banker and also a
Quaker, when she was twenty years old. They married on 19 August 1800 at
the Norwich Goat Lane Friends Meeting House and moved to St. Mildred's
Court in the City of London. They had eleven children in all (Hatton,
2005, 13), born between 1801 and 1822, including Katherine Fry
(1801-1886), who wrote a History of the Parishes of East and West Ham
(1888). Elizabeth Fry was recorded as a Minister of the Religious
Society of Friends in 1811. Joseph and Elizabeth Fry lived in Plashet
House in East Ham between 1809 and 1829, moving then to Upton Lane in
Forest Gate tis
Prompted by a family friend, Stephen
Grellet, Fry visited Newgate prison. The conditions she saw there
horrified her. The women's section was overcrowded with women and
children, some of whom had not even received a trial. They slept on the
floor and did their own cooking and washing in the small cells in which
they slept.
She returned the following day with food and clothes
for some of the prisoners. She was unable to further her work for nearly
4 years because of difficulties within the Fry family, including
financial difficulties in the Fry bank. Fry returned in 1816 and was
eventually able to found a prison school for the children who were
imprisoned with their parents. She began a system of supervision and
required the women to sew and to read the Bible. In 1817 she helped
found the Association for the Improvement of the Female Prisoners in
Newgate.
Thomas Fowell Buxton, Fry's brother-in-law, was elected
to Parliament for Weymouth and began to promote her work among his
fellow MPs. In 1818 Fry gave evidence to a House of Commons committee on
the conditions prevalent in British prisons, becoming the first woman
to present evidence in Parliament.
Fry and her brother Joseph
John Gurney took up the cause of abolishing capital punishment. At that
time, people in England could be executed for over 200 crimes. Early
appeals to the Home Secretary were all rejected, until Sir Robert Peel
became the Home Secretary, they finally got a receptive audience. They
persuaded Peel to introduce a series of prison reforms that included the
Gaols Act 1823. Fry and Gurney went on a tour of the prisons in Great
Britain. They published their findings of inhumane conditions in a book
entitled Prisons in Scotland and the North of England.
Fry
also helped the homeless, establishing a "nightly shelter" in London
after seeing the body of a young boy in the winter of 1819/1820. In
1824, during a visit to Brighton, she instituted the Brighton District
Visiting Society. The society arranged for volunteers to visit the homes
of the poor and provide help and comfort to them. The plan was
successful and was duplicated in other districts and towns across
Britain.
After her husband went bankrupt in 1828, Fry's brother
became her business manager and benefactor. Thanks to him her work went
on and expanded.
In 1840 Fry opened a training school for nurses.
Her programme inspired Florence Nightingale who took a team of Fry's
nurses to assist wounded soldiers in the Crimean War.
Fry
became well known in society. Some people criticized her for having such
an influential role as a woman. Others alleged that she was neglecting
her duties as a wife and mother in order to conduct her humanitarian
work. One admirer was Queen Victoria, who granted her an audience a few
times and contributed money to her cause.
Fry died at
Ramsgate on 12 October 1845 and her remains were buried in the Friends'
burial ground at Barking. It is reported that over one thousand people
stood in silence as her body was buried.
Fry has two plaques
at her birthplace Gurney Court, off Magdalen Street, Norwich and one on
her childhood home, Earlham Hall, plus there is an Elizabeth Fry Road in
Earlham. There is also a plaque on St. Mildred's Court in the City of
London where she lived when she was first married, which in turn is
remembered in St. Mildred's Road in Earlham.
In 2002 she was
depicted on the Bank of England five pound note. Fry is also depicted on
two panels of the Quaker Tapestry—panels E5 and E6. In February 2007 a
new plaque was placed in her honour on the Friends Meeting House in
Upper Goat Lane, Norwich.
The Canadian Association of Elizabeth
Fry Societies honours her memory by advocating for women who are in the
criminal justice system. They also celebrate and promote a National
Elizabeth Fry Week in Canada each May.