
Tributes pour in for Edinburgh University alumnus and first female chief of MI5
Stella Rimington, the first female chief of Britain's MI5 intelligence agency and later a successful thriller writer, has died at the age of 90.
The first woman to head a U.K. intelligence agency, Rimington was the inspiration for Judi Dench's portrayal of MI6 chief M in seven James Bond films. Her family said in a statement that Rimington died on Sunday "surrounded by her beloved family and dogs and determinedly held on to the life she loved until her last breath."
MI5's current director-general, Ken McCallum, said that "as the first avowed female head of any intelligence agency in the world, Dame Stella broke through long-standing barriers and was a visible example of the importance of diversity in leadership."
Born in London in 1935, Rimington studied English at Edinburgh University and later worked as an archivist. She was living in India with her diplomat husband in the mid-1960s when she was recruited by MI5, Britain's domestic security service, as a part-time clerk and typist in its New Delhi office.
She joined the agency full-time after moving back to London in 1969 and rose through the ranks, overcoming rules that kept the most prestigious roles, such as recruiting and running agents, for men only. She worked in each of MI5's operational branches - counterespionage, counterterrorism and counter-subversion - at a time when MI5's work included sniffing out Soviet spies, infiltrating Northern Ireland militant groups and, controversially, spying on leftists, trade union leaders and other alleged subversives.
Sign up for Edinburgh Live newsletters for more headlines straight to your inbox
Rimington acknowledged in 2001 that the organization "may have been a bit over-enthusiastic" in some of its snooping on domestic targets during the Cold War. Rimington was appointed MI5 director-general in 1992, the first head of the organization to be named in public, and her tenure saw the secretive organization become slightly more open.
Dench's first appearance as M, a role formerly played by men, was in "GoldenEye" in 1995. The film's producers said the casting was inspired by Rimington's appointment. After stepping down in 1996, Rimington was made a dame, the female equivalent of a knight, by Queen Elizabeth II.
Rimington later published a memoir, "Open Secret" - to the displeasure of the government - and a series of spy thrillers featuring fictional MI5 officer Liz Carlyle. "The Devil's Bargain," published in 2022, introduced a new heroine, CIA officer Manon Tyler.
.Join Edinburgh Live's Whatsapp Community here and get the latest news sent straight to your messages.
Other women followed her top intelligence jobs. Eliza Manningham-Buller led MI5 between 2002 and 2007. Anne Keast-Butler became head of electronic and cyber-intelligence agency GCHQ in 2023.Blaise Metreweli was named in June as the first female head of the overseas intelligence agency, MI6.
Rimington and her husband, John Rimington, separated in the 1980s, but moved back in together during the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020.
"It's a good recipe for marriage, I'd say," she said. "Split up, live separately, and return to it later."
She is survived by her husband, two daughters and five grandchildren.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Wales Online
3 hours ago
- Wales Online
Outlander star Mark Lewis Jones transforms for new role in Welsh mystery thriller
Outlander star Mark Lewis Jones transforms for new role in Welsh mystery thriller Mark Lewis Jones played antagonist Tom Christie in Starz's Outlander An Outlander cast member has undergone a complete transformation for their new role in a mystery thriller, reports the Daily Record. The actor, whose character in TV drama Outlander stirred up much drama at Fraser's Ridge and beyond, will be part of an ensemble cast in the upcoming drama. Welsh actor Mark Lewis Jones, known for his role as Tom Christie in season six of Starz's epic historical series, will star as Rhys Owen in the drama Y Golau: Dŵr, also known as The Light in the Hall: Still Waters in its English-language version. The show makes a triumphant return three years after its debut, The Light in the Hall, back in 2022. Season two of the acclaimed Welsh anthology series follows young journalist Caryl Huws (played by Siân Reese-Williams), who finds herself entangled in a complex web of personal betrayal, family secrets, and dark mysteries after she begins investigating a controversial redevelopment plan to expand a local reservoir. Jamie Fraser and Tom Christie were at odds in Outlander (Image: STARZ) Star Wars star explains one thing he got wrong about being a Welshman READ MORE: As Caryl delves deeper, long-buried tensions are reignited and doubt is cast on the imprisonment of Rhys for the murder of his cousin during protests against the expansion 30 years ago. Alongside Jones and Reese-Williams, The Light in the Hall: Still Waters/Y Golau: Dŵr also stars Steeltown Murders' Nia Roberts as Eve Davies, and Robert Glenister from The Night Caller and Sherwood as Robert Davies. Additional cast members feature Netflix's White Lines star Tom Rhys Harries portraying Hari Breckon, The Red King's Maeve Courtier-Lilley returning as Mabli Davies Owen, Dal Y Mellt's Wyn Bowen Harries taking on Bryn Owen, Mali Tudno Jones from Bariau as Megan Breckon, Broadchurch's Matthew Gravelle playing Gareth Breckon, and 35 Awr's Gillian Elisa as Eunice. The fresh series will once more unfold in the imaginary Welsh community of Llanemlyn, with creator Regina Moriarty collaborating with Siân Naiomi, Anwen Huws, Catherine Linstrum, and Angharad Elen on the screenwriting. Mark Lewis Jones stars in The Light in the Hall: Still Waters (Image: S4C) The Light in the Hall: Still Waters/Y Golau: Dŵr will debut initially in Wales this September in Welsh with subtitles. The show will broadcast subsequently across the remainder of the UK on Channel 4. The first season garnered favourable critical reception, with viewers expressing their appreciation on IMDb. One viewer described it as "mesmerising" and remarked: "Wow this was good. Joanna Scanlon and Alexander Roach both starred in the brilliant No Offence and are both excellent here too." Meanwhile, a perfect 10/10 review declared: "Once you start watching it you can't stop, you're almost holding your breath! Actors are absolutely amazing, spot on!" One viewer commented: "You will not waste your time watching this, and I always love when they film absolutely beautiful, and I don't think I've ever seen a show with any one of these individual actors in it that I didn't like, they never let you down, their faces are what draw you in, because you know they're great actors but they're acting keeps you watching!". The Christie family caused much drama in Outlander (Image: STARZ) Get MGM+ free for a week This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more £5.99 £0 MGM+ Get MGM+ here Product Description Telly fans can get seven days of free access to binge top series like Outlander with a free trial of Amazon Prime's MGM+ channel. Another glowing review stated: "In a world where popular crime dramas fall into the same predictable formula, it's refreshing to see something brave enough to do things a bit differently. "The early episodes start at a slow pace, but there's a real effort to develop the central characters before it changes gear and becomes a highly engaging (and unpredictable) thriller. "The decision to set the show in the dramatic Welsh countryside was a triumph and a 6 episode British crime drama with very little police involvement is both refreshing and bold." The Light in the Hall: Still Waters/Y Golau: Dŵr will air on S4C on Sunday, September 14 at 9pm and later on Channel 4 and AMC+ Article continues below Outlander season 8 will air on Starz and MGM+ via Prime Video in early 2026


Times
4 hours ago
- Times
Feeling gloomy? Hollywood has a so bad-it's-good comedy for you!
S omething strange is happening in cinema. Have you noticed? It's Liam Neeson delivering one-liners, sight gags and a very effective diarrhoea routine in The Naked Gun. Or it's Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis camping it up together as hipster teenagers in Freakier Friday (released this week). Or it's Christopher Guest as the ageing rocker Nigel Tufnel, awkwardly shredding a guitar solo in a tiny English pub in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, out in September. Or it's Ariana Grande joining Robert De Niro for another Meet the Parents instalment, Focker In-Law. Or it's Bill Pullman in the Star Wars spoof Spaceballs 2, or Eddie Murphy in the new Pink Panther, or … OK, we get it. Comedies are back. And it's been a while. 'I'm Liam Neeson, and every passing year more and more comedies go unseen, unmade and unquoted.' That's how the 73-year-old Taken star began a recent faux public service announcement that begged potential audiences to buy a cinema ticket for The Naked Gun, 'so our children and hopefully their children too can one day enjoy watching a comedy in the theatre'. The clip was just part of the film's zany promotional machine but it addressed a glaring absence of comedies in the multiplex ecosystem. Box office analysts and culture watchers alike suggest that it's been more than a decade since comedies effectively disappeared from cinema screens, or at least since comedy impresarios such as Judd Apatow could turn everything from The 40-Year-Old Virgin to Knocked Up to Bridesmaids into box office gold. 'What we witnessed is a migration of audiences to the small screen to get their comedy,' says Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for the data firm Comscore. 'In order to spend their money, and take the time and effort to go out to the theatre, audiences wanted the larger-than-life experience of superhero movies, action movies and sci-fi movies.' • Read our film reviews, guides about what to watch and interviews In short, thanks to Iron Man and the rise of the streamers, a grand cinematic tradition that included the Marx Brothers, Woody Allen, Barbra Streisand, Monty Python, Airplane!, Austin Powers and Wedding Crashers had effectively been replaced by a faceless Netflix algorithm that was regularly pumping out joyless 'laugh fests' such as Mother of the Bride and Love & Gelato. The few comedies that did remain in cinemas, according to the Naked Gun producer (and Family Guy creator) Seth MacFarlane, weren't always recognisable as such. 'We've been giving people broccoli and telling them it's a candy bar for the last ten years, as a lot of things called comedies now are most definitely not comedies,' he said recently. 'We've been offered comedies that are a little up their own asses, maybe a little inflated with a sense of their own importance.' MacFarlane, at the time, declined to name the 'offenders' in question, but any search for key movie comedies of the past decade will throw up titles such as the social satire Triangle of Sadness, the love letter to creativity The Banshees of Inisherin and the environmental sermon Don't Look Up. All great movies, yes, but not exactly Neeson doing a diarrhoea gag. Christopher Guest, Harry Shearer, and Michael McKean in the upcoming Spinal Tap 2 SONY PICTURES And that's another thing. This new wave of comedies is being described as 'pure comedy', the films focused only on giggles and laughter, and notable for their delicate dance through the culture wars. There is not a single scene in either The Naked Gun or Freakier Friday that could aggravate either side of the foam-flecked clickerati. This is something that could not be said of the previous comedy wave: plenty of Apatow movies, even the best ones, involved whiny guys sitting around telling sexist jokes. 'Without getting into politics and stuff, we're all living in a culture, a society, where we're scared to speak and scared if we don't,' Neeson said recently, noting that movies such as The Naked Gun, like 'gargoyles in cathedrals', are here to remind us, 'Come on, don't take yourself too seriously. The film is a giggle and we need that.' • How Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson became the new late-life love story Neeson's point is underscored by the Freakier Friday director Nisha Ganatra, who sees this big-screen comedy resurgence as a reflection of wider collective yearnings. 'It's my hope that people are craving a communal experience again and that laughing together with a group of people at a theatre is what makes people feel good,' she tells me. 'Especially in this time of uncertainty, comedies can provide relief. Laughing out loud is an energising experience with your friends or with total strangers. Everyone ends up feeling better.' The crucial question, however, is whether enough cinemagoing audiences will turn up for comedy in a time of uncertainty. The box office figures are in and The Naked Gun made $28.3 million on its opening weekend. It has not, according to Dergarabedian, 'blown the doors off', but it is a solid beginning that, combined with positive scores and exit polls, suggests word-of-mouth may sustain a healthy commercial run. What it really means, Dergarabedian says, is that all attention now falls on Freakier Friday, which opens this weekend. If that's a hit, then the new multiplex comedy wave continues apace. If not, expect to be watching Murphy's Pink Panther on Netflix next year. 'If there's a crisis of confidence that's happening with movie comedy it's simply because putting a comedy into a movie theatre is more expensive than going to streaming,' Dergarabedian says. 'There's a worldwide marketing push involved with a theatrical release that's a whole different animal to just going into streaming.' Latest figures suggest that marketing a Hollywood film globally costs as 'little' as $35 million and as much as $200 million. • Ten of the silliest comedies to watch now It explains why Adam Sandler famously signed his first four-movie Netflix deal in 2014 and why his new film, Happy Gilmore 2, a sequel to the big-screen golf comedy from 1996, has been released on Netflix only. It also explains why Sandler's most recent four-movie deal with the streamer, signed last year, is alleged to have earned him $275 million — it's clearly cheaper than pushing his films into the multiplex. Adam Sandler and Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio in Happy Gilmore 2 NETFLIX 'And so, yes, it's a fragile market place but, thankfully, The Naked Gun did not bomb,' Dergarabedian continues. 'And if Freakier Friday makes $40 million-plus domestically [in the US], that could be one that emboldens studios to get on board and hopefully open the door to more comedies.' In the meantime, if you fancy some quality toilet humour or a sweetly moving film with Lohan and Curtis playing teenagers, you should rush out and buy a ticket to your local multiplex. Because, as the great Liam Neeson says, it means that your children and their children will one day get to watch a comedy movie too, where it was meant to be seen: at the cinema. The Naked Gun is in cinemas; Freakier Friday is in cinemas from Aug 8; Happy Gilmore 2 is on Netflix Times+ members can enjoy two-for-one cinema tickets at Everyman each Wednesday. Visit to find out more. Which films have you enjoyed at the cinema recently? Let us know in the comments and follow @timesculture to read the latest reviews


Metro
4 hours ago
- Metro
Anti-migrant mob accuse officer of calling them fascists
Police in Epping have had to set the record straight that they did not call the anti-immigration protesters 'fascists'. A misheard word has spiralled into outrage after YouTuber Wesley Winter – with a following of almost 180,000 – published a video from the disorder outside The Bell Hotel. The demonstration – one of many targeting hotels housing asylum seekers across England – drew in crowds from rival camps and resulted in as many as 15 people arrested. Essex Police was forced to issue a statement on X, following Winter's clip: 'Quite an important correction on this clip doing the rounds. 'The video shows officers policing recent protests in Epping. The officer actually says: 'If you see any FLASHES, left or right, you deal'. 'Officers often talk about being alert to 'flashes/flashpoints' at protests!' This was in response to the 29-year-old's post, which read: 'Police ordered to deal with 'FASCISTS'. 'Context: Stand Up To Racism protesters were getting their royal police escort back to Epping Station. Quite an important correction on this clip doing the video shows officers policing recent protests in officer actually says: 'If you see any FLASHES, left or right, you deal".Officers often talk about being alert to 'flashes/flashpoints' at protests! — Essex Police (@EssexPoliceUK) August 5, 2025 'Local protesters could have potentially ambushed them and come out from the trees as they're walking. Officer then gives his orders.' The clarification did not stop people online clambering on Winter's post and accusing the force of the 'outrageous' lack of impartiality and also calling for an official complaint. Others went as far as screengrabbing the badges of officers and posting them online. Far-right blogger Paul Weston was one of them. He also described the police attitude as a 'chilling example of Soviet-style politicised policing.' Border security minister Dame Angela Eagle stressed that the protests must not be used to 'have a pop at the police'. Asked on Sky News what her message was to protesters, Dame Angela said that 'anger doesn't get you anywhere' More Trending She added: 'What we have to do is recognise the values we have in this country, the rule of law we have in this country, the work we're doing with the police to protect people. 'We will close asylum hotels by the end of the Parliament. We'll do it faster if we can.' Dame Angela added: 'We are doing all we can to deal with the challenges that the police are facing on the streets to make sure that women and girls are safe, and in fact, that everybody is safe on our streets.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Touching moment black cabbie returns £100,000 Hermès handbag to rightful owner MORE: Search for missing 'body' in river turns up life-size sex doll MORE: Boxer who punched Princess Anne's kidnapper wishes he hit 'mollycoddled killer' harder