Capt Tom’s cash-obsessed daughter demanded to know who’d play her in a FILM, pals say after shameless TV interview

CAPTAIN Tom's daughter has been accused by pals of being cash-obsessed and demanding to know who would play her in a film.
Hannah Ingram-Moore appeared on Good Morning Britain last week to defend herself against claims she and her partner had mismanaged funds from her dad's charity.
World War Two veteran Captain Tom inspired the nation by raising £38.9million for the NHS during the pandemic lockdown in 2020.
After his death in 2021, the Charity Commission found Hannah guilty of personally benefiting from her father's foundation - alongside husband Colin Ingram-Moore.
Now, a former pal has said the pair were always obsessed with money and fame.
They told : "They were always coming up with some way to make cash. It was definitely all about how they could use this to set themselves up.
"That was their mindset. They were financially obsessed. They talked about a Captain Tom movie and who would play them.
"They really thought they were the pride of Britain."
As part of its investigation into the pair, the watchdog found they had misled the public into thinking that proceeds from Captain Tom's autobiography Tomorrow Will Be A Good Day would be paid into the charity.
In the disastrous TV appearance last week, GMB host Rob Rinder grilled Hannah on the £1.5 million book deal.
She insisted it was "never said" that sales from the three-book deal would go to the charity, adding: "He [Captain Tom] signed that contract with Penguin Random House and I signed to say where the money was going on his behalf.
"He was alive and he decided. It never said anywhere that sales would go to the charity, not us.
"We agreed it would go to support the launch of the charity and money from the book revenue did support the charity."
The interview followed another TV appearance on the BBC - in which Hannah offered a half-hearted apology but reiterated that she had done nothing wrong.
She said: "I'm sorry they [the public] feel misled. I genuinely am.
"But there was never any attempt to mislead and if there was any misleading it wasn't our doing."
She added that there was "nothing dishonest about what happened".
In the same interview, Hannah admitted the family had taken £80,000 from the book sales - but claimed most of this was taken up by legal costs.
She added: "When I look back at the last five years, we know that we own the truth and what I can't do is sit here and persuade everyone to believe our reality."
Critics have suggested the real reason for Hannah's recent PR run is in fact her wish to plug her new book.
The 54-year-old published the 141-page Grief: Public Face, Private Loss, earlier this month - priced at £8.99.
In it, Hannah claims her public downfall was the result of lies spread in the wake of her dad's death.
She writes: "There was a palpable sense of the truth being manipulated for the benefit of others.
"This manipulation profoundly affected my family's grief and my own.
"Amid this turmoil, at my core, I remained simply a daughter grieving the loss of her father."
In another section, she recalls of Tom's passing: "The world was preparing to mourn Captain Sir Tom, a figure of hope and resilience, but I was losing my father.
"My grief was private, personal, and raw, yet it was on the verge of becoming public.
"Soon our intimate sorrow would intersect with a collective loss that would be shared by millions."