on what that time meant to them. no one under 30 had known peace in northern ireland until the good friday agreements. the parties which signed it included sinn fein, which was linked to the ira. we often discussed the deal in class and debated it at the current affairs society. there were still this amazing optimism of everyone here that, yes, this can happen and we re not going to give up hope on it. in terms of teaching it, i sort of felt, there is something happening here. this is actually it s notjust history, this is now. we re going to start this report from bbc newsline on the 22 of may, 1998, right from the start, just to set the scene. archive: for one teenager, . it was an important day in more ways than one. it is my birthday for a start, so i m 18 on the very day of referendum which means that i can vote, it is my first vote and, as i say, ijust finished an a level today. you know, i d always been interested in politics in my life, but really, it had always felt like a
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thank you very much. the savage murder of an african american boy, emmett till, in mississippi in 1955 and his mother s subsequent fight forjustice has been made into a movie. till is the story of may mie till mobley, who insisted on having an open casket for her son s funeral, to show how badly his face had been disfigured when he was beaten by two white men. the film is produced by barbara broccoli who s behind the bond films and stars danielle dead wyler, as may mie. they ve been speaking to our culture editor, katie razzall. 14 year old emmett till. they have a different set of rules down there. his brutal murder in mississippi in 1955 galvanised the civil rights movement. the body of emmett louis till has been found dead. driven by his mother, mamie. be small down there, you have to be extra careful with white people, you can t risk looking at them the wrong way. i know! i wondered how much you felt the weight of responsibility, the weight of the civil rights movement on you,
and actress who star in the stage adaptation of kierra, i want to redo something you said in a speech delivered four years ago. i fear that the ways theater have harmony are winning out over the ways theater has nourished me. what was the harm and why come back from it? part of the harm is that our national institutions develop memory, just of their habits over the years. and latinos it did not evolve with regional theater, and the national theater landscape. and so writing out of may identity in the filler we can stories i inherited, and bringing those stories to spaces where actors are there are lighting actors performing category 4 on stage to essentially a starkly white institution. after a few years that
sometimes i ll maybe mush two words together. but as long as i have captioning, i m able to understand what s being asked. but even after the stroke, immediately after that, i was able to read everything and i haven t lost any memories or anything like that. it s just the lingering issue i have. i feel like we ve been transparent in a lot of different ways when our doctor has given a letter saying i m able to serve and to be running. respectfully, that letter from your physician, that was six months ago. don t voters deserve to know your status now? being in front of thousands and thousands of people and having interviews and getting around all across pennsylvania, that gives everybody and the voters decide if they think it s really the issue. reporter: again, that stroke happening right on the eve of may s primary here in the commonwealth of pennsylvania, john. and as we ve seen fetterman