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- 1936 -
Born in Birmingham, West Midlands, England, 3 April.
Attended local primary and grammar schools.
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"I was born and bought up in Birmingham. My parents were born in Aston and
lived in the Black Country. As a boy I explored the region on my bike: scrumping
apples in Eversham, racing over Cannock chase, and bathing in the River Severn.
My
Uncle Fred had a milk round in the City Centre. I
helped him on Saturday and spent my wages on all
the Shakespeare productions at Stratford."
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- 1954 -
Studied psychology at the University of London.
- 1963 -
Following a brief career as an actor, (Incident
at Echo Six, Z Cars) his career began
to take shape when he was recruited by Sidney Newman,
Head of BBC drama, as a script editor for a new BBC
drama series The Wednesday Play.
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British television drama in the 1950s had been dominated
by classic theatrical texts done in the studio, normally
live, with occasional 35mm film inserts. The coming of
videotape meant only that these productions were done
live-to-tape.
The
Wednesday Play, with a commitment to new talent
and new techniques, changed all that.
Ken
Loach said "At the time, you were allowed about
four days filming (with cumbersome 35mm equipment) just
to show a car pulling up or driving away. So we used
those four days to whizz round and shoot half the script
with a hand-held 16mm camera ø about 35 to 40 minutes
screen time."
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- 1964 -
Producer of The Wednesday Play. Meets longtime
collaborator Ken Loach.
- 1966 -
First collaboration as producer with Loach, on Cathy
Come Home.
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In a Britain complacent that its welfare system was among
the best in the world, this documentary-style film of
the devastating effects of homelessness on one young
family had enormous impact. Never before or since has
one single piece of drama had such an effect on an entire
nation.
The
stark realism of Cathy Come Home led to angry
calls for action to prevent such circumstances from happening.
The changes in social attitudes and awareness were significant,
and the issues addressed were discussed in Parliament.
As a direct result of the play the homeless charity,
Shelter, was founded a week later as a national campaign
for the homeless, and quickly became an important voice
in housing matters.
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- 1967
to 1969 - Garnett was in charge of
11 productions ranging in subject from the plight
of contemporary casualised building workers (The
Lump by Jim Allen, directed by Ken Loach)
to aristocratic corruption in Nazi-era Germany
(The Parachute by David Mercer, directed
by Anthony Page).
- 1969 -
After the filming of Kes, produced by Garnett
and directed by Ken Loach, they co-founded Kestrel
Films.
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Kes is the
unsentimental story of a working-class boy who manages to
find a rare release from his drab life training and caring
for a kestrel. The film is regarded as a classic of its time,
with Loach commenting poignantly on the lack of opportunities
for the working classes. It is based on Barry Hines's novel, A
Kestrel for a Knave. It was recently voted No.7 in the
top ten British films of all time.
In
the 1970s the pace slowed somewhat but not the combative
quality of the work.
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- 1975 - Days
of Hope, a Jim Allen mini-series, rewrote the
history of the decade before the 1926 General Strike
as a betrayal of the working class by its own leaders.
- 1978 -
another Allen mini-series, Law and Order,
caused an uproar by treating professional criminals
as just another group of capitalist entrepreneurs
trying to turn a profit.
- 1980 -
Directorial debut with Prostitute.
- 1980 to 1990 -
Left for America due to feeling ÔArtistically and
politically out of place in BritainÕ. Produced amongst
others Earth Girls are Easy, Follow that
Bird and Shadow Makers. He also produced,
wrote and directed Handgun.
- 1990 -
Returned to England and set up Island World Productions
with John Heyman. Their brief was to create a production
company making dramatic fiction for the screen, and
mainly for television.
- 1992 -
Collaboration with writer John Wilsher on Between
the Lines, an award winning police corruption
series. This was followed by Cardiac Arrest,
a bitter examination of the state of Britain's socialized
medical system, but in the form of a black situation
comedy series.
- 1996 - This
Life, an aspirational, non-political drama
series about twenty-somethings which had the nation
hooked by the end of its second and final series.
This was also the year Ballykissangel began
its long run.
- 1998 -
Tony produced the hard hitting police drama The
Cops, which has continued into a third
and final series.
- 2000 to 2001 - Attachments.
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"If I were 30 years younger, I would probably on be working on the Web now.
It has the excitement to me that going to the BBC had in 1963 ø the feeling that
we donÕt know whatÕs possible, but anything might be."
Tony
holds a Professorship in the Development of Media Arts
at Royal Holloway College, University of London and is
co founder of the producing film and television M.A.
Course. He was also recently made a Doctor of Letters
at Reading University.
A
second series of Attachments is due for broadcast
in Autumn 2001
He
remains an avid supporter of Aston Villa Football Club
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