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Brenda Blethyn's films include Secrets & Lies (1996), Saving Grace (2000) and Pride and Prejudice (2005). She's also had a glittering TV career with gritty dramas like Vera, in which she starred as a detective in the title role. In her personal life, Brenda Blethyn has been married twice and has no children.
At heart, Vera is a loner, the daughter of a bird taxidermist who provided a bleak, unloving childhood, but left her with a cozy house on a hill outside of town. Loneliness is an ongoing theme  Vera recognizes it well in the people she interviews and has an uncanny knack for getting them to confide in her.
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  • Hokey pokey is a flavour of ice cream in New Zealand consisting of plain vanilla ice cream with small, solid ♠ lumps of honeycomb toffee. Hokey pokey is the New Zealand term for honeycomb toffee.[2][3][4][5] The original recipe until around 1980 ♠ consisted of solid toffee, but in a marketing change, Tip Top decided to use small balls of honeycomb toffee instead.

    It ♠ is the second-most popular ice cream flavour behind vanilla in New Zealand,[6] and is a frequently cited example of Kiwiana.[7] ♠ It is also exported to Japan, Australia, and the Pacific Islands.[8]

    Origins and etymology [ edit ]

    The term hokey pokey has ♠ been used in reference to honeycomb toffee in New Zealand since the late 19th century. The origin of this term, ♠ in reference to honeycomb specifically, is not known with certainty, and it is not until the mid-20th century that hokey ♠ pokey ice cream was created.[citation needed]

    Coincidentally, "hokey pokey" was a slang term for ice cream in general in the 19th ♠ and early 20th centuries in several areas — including New York City[9] and parts of Great Britain — specifically for ♠ the ice cream sold by street vendors or "hokey pokey men". The vendors, said to be mostly of Italian descent, ♠ supposedly used a sales pitch or song involving the phrase "hokey pokey", for which several origins have been suggested. One ♠ such song in use in 1930s Liverpool was "Hokey pokey penny a lump, that's the stuff to make ye jump".[10]

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