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Marky B
is off line for a while,as I get my new computer
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Billingham,Cleveland
Posts: 4,000
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Richard Brooks once said of the Hollywood moguls:"They were monsters and pirates and b*****ds right down to the bottom of their feet,but they loved movies. Some of the jerks running the business today don't even have faces." A sentmiment appropiate for the time maybe (pre 1978,the publication of my edition of Halliwell's Filmgoer's Book of 'Quotes'),but could it be apt for today's television.
Yes,there are some good television on now (Dr Who,Life On Mars,The Street,Planet Earthetc),but are they enough to restore our faith in British television.
Sir Lew Grade was a visionary,who brought us such great television as the ITC adventure series The Saint,Danger Man,The Man In A Suitcase,The Persuaders and who also had faith in bankrolling Gerry Anderson's puppetoons (in which I believe Thunderbirds was the most expensive British programme at the time). Sunday Night at The London Palladium was perhaps and still is the greatest weekly variety show in British television,which in our household,my late mother used to tick off each artist in the TV Times as they appeared.
In the seventies,he brought British television to a new dimension with Moses:The Lawgiver starring Burt Lancaster and the sublime Jesus of Nazareth with our very own Robert Powell. His rival for Star Trek,Space 1999 is perhaps not remembered with such affection as Captain Kirk's crew,but yet I preferred it,still insisting the acting was less wooden in Thunderbirds than it was on the Starship Enterprise.
His foray into films was perhaps not that successful,but his company did come out with such gems as The Boys From Brazil,On Golden Pondand Sophie's Choice.
Of course let us not forget,he brought to the unsuspecting British public,The Muppet Show.
Sir Lew Grade was a man who believed in British television and we had the resources to make it the best in the world. He once put an advert in a newspaper,telling businessman of his pride in his adopted country (he was born Lewis Winogradsky in Russia) and to go out and invade the world.
So could we do with a Lew Grade today? His nephew,Sir Michael Grade is Chairman of the BBC and was once a successful Director of BBC Television,but should he be the Director-General?
Like Richard Brooks said,those running it today don't have faces,but at least with Lew Grade,his brother Bernard Delfont,they dragged British television from the cosiness of the fifties into a major worldwide force in the sixties and into the seventies.
Alas,a boardroom coup put paid to Lew Grade's dominance of British showbusiness by an Australian businessman,which was well documented in a book written by one of Lew Grade's henchmen,Jack Gill. Until his dying day aged 92,he still remained a busy,working man,seven days a week,fifty two weeks a year.
Ta Ta
Marky B
I once shot an elephant in my pyjamas - how he got in my pyjamas,I'll never know
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