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Sixty Minutes is a defunct news and current affairs programme which ran each weekday at 5:40 pm from 24 October 1983 to 27 July 1984 on BBC1.It replaced Nationwide, and integrated the BBC's main regional news magazines into a single programme, as per its predecessor.
Bert Coules is an English writer, mainly for the BBC, who has produced a number of dramatisations and original works. He works mainly in radio drama but also writes for TV and the stage. He works mainly in radio drama but also writes for TV and the stage.
The Six O'Clock News, as the bulletin was originally titled, was part of the second revamp of BBC1's early evening news and current affairs lineup in as many years.In October 1983, the BBC had replaced the long-running 5:40 pm BBC Evening News, as well as current affairs and regional news programme Nationwide, with Sixty Minutes, an attempt to integrate regional and national news and current ...
Sir Basil Hardington Bartlett, 2nd Baronet (15 September 1905 – 2 January 1985 [1]) was an actor, screenwriter and writer, and in the 1950s the head of the BBC's script department. [ 2 ] Life
Tina Daheley (born 1980 or 1981) is an English journalist, newsreader and presenter who works for the BBC, both on television and radio.She currently reads the news on The Radio 2 Breakfast Show with Scott Mills,often contributing to discussions during the show.
A Deafening Silence: Forgotten British Murders in 2024 reflected on a decade of writing about and explored some of the stories he had heard along the way which had made a particular impact on him. [6] "As well as a desire for remembrance, I was struck by the revelatory nature of each of them, what truths they held about our understanding of ...
His animated film of The Canterbury Tales was nominated for an Oscar (as animated short film) in 1999 and won the BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film [6] in addition to four Primetime Emmys. [ 7 ] He has also written scripts for several British television drama series including The Bill , Holby City , EastEnders , Jupiter Moon and The Legend of ...
Bray became a script editor in 1953 for the BBC Third Programme, commissioning and translating European 20th-century avant-garde writing for the network. Harold Pinter wrote some of his earliest work at Bray's insistence. From about 1961, Bray lived in Paris and established a career as a translator and critic.