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David Rose (producer)

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David Rose
Born(1924-11-22)22 November 1924
Swanage, Dorset, England
Died26 January 2017(2017-01-26) (aged 92)[1]
Occupation(s)TV and film producer

David Edward Rose (22 November 1924 – 26 January 2017) was a British television producer and commissioning editor.

At the BBC

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Following war service flying on 34 missions in Lancaster bombers,[2] he trained as an actor[3] at the Guildhall School of Drama,[4] but following graduation pursued a career in stage management. He became an Assistant Floor Manager for BBC television in London[5] in 1954,[4] working on the television adaptation of Nineteen Eighty-Four in his first week,[6] but by the end of the 1950s he was a director of dramatised documentaries for the BBC, including Black Furrow (1958) about open cast mining in South Wales.[4]

It is as a producer and production executive though, that he had the greatest prominence. Rose was the original producer of Z-Cars (1962–65).[7] Broadcast live at Rose's insistence[8] thinking the excitement generated by avoiding pre-recording was integral to the production. Rose was responsible for ending its original run thinking the format had become exhausted.[9] Softly, Softly (1966–69) was a spin-off series also produced by Rose.[7]

Appointed by David Attenborough in 1971[2] to be head of the newly established autonomous English Regional Drama department at BBC Pebble Mill in Birmingham, Rose produced work by established dramatists like Alan Plater and encouraged new creative talent such as Alan Bleasdale, David Rudkin, and David Hare.[7] Some of Rose's work in Birmingham appeared in the Play for Today or Second City Firsts anthology series.[7]

Film on Four

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In 1981, Rose left the BBC for Channel 4 where he was appointed the Commissioning Editor for Fiction by Jeremy Isaacs, the channel's founding Chief Executive. Issacs wrote in 2017, that Rose's first suggestion to him was to commission a soap from Phil Redmond, the result Brookside ran for 21 years until ending in 2003.[7] However, Rose was mostly identified with the Film on Four strand. With an initial overall budget of £6million a year, Rose invested £300,000 in twenty films annually.[10] Originally, the project's films were intended for television screenings alone; the "holdback" system prevented investment in theatrical films by television companies because of the length of time (then three years) before broadcasters could screen them. An agreement soon concluded with the Cinema Exhibitors Association though, allowed a brief period of cinema exhibition if the budget of the films was below £1.25 million.[11]

During his time at Channel 4, Rose approved the making of 136 films, half of which received cinema screenings,[12] investing in a third of the feature films made in the UK during 1984.[13] By 1987, Channel 4 had an interest in half the films being made in the United Kingdom.[14] Rose remained in his post as Commissioning Editor until March 1990.[15] Rose is credited by many as being a significant figure in the regeneration of British cinema and particularly remembered for films such as My Beautiful Laundrette, Wish You Were Here, Dance With a Stranger, Mona Lisa, and Letter to Brezhnev. Mike Leigh told writer Hannah Rothschild around 2008 that Film on Four had saved the British film industry: "This is a non-negotiable, historical fact of life and anybody who suggests that this isn’t the case is simply either suffering from some kind of ignorance or has got some terrible chip."[10] Of the 150 films Rose backed, 20 were from overseas sources, including work by directors Theo Angelopoulos, Andrei Tarkovsky and Wim Wenders.[7]

David Rose was awarded a special prize for services to the cinema at Cannes in 1987.[16] This was followed by the gold medal of the Royal Television Society in 1988[7] and, in April 2010, the BFI Fellowship, whose other recipients include Martin Scorsese and Orson Welles.[17]

References

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  1. ^ "David Rose, influential TV producer and Film Four founder, dies age 92". British Film Institute. 27 January 2017. Retrieved 27 January 2017.
  2. ^ a b Young, Graham (23 September 2009). "David Rose talks of his time with BBC Birmingham at Pebble Mill". Birmingham Post.
  3. ^ Interview, Theatre Archive Project, British Library, 21 October 2005, p.1
  4. ^ a b c Cooke, Lez (2003–14). "Rose, David (1924-)". BFI screenonline. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  5. ^ Interview, Theatre Archive Project, British Library, 21 October 2005, p.5
  6. ^ Interview, Theatre Archive Project, British Library, 21 October 2005, p.6
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Purser, Philip; Isaacs, Jeremy (15 February 2017). "David Rose obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  8. ^ "Live TV Drama", BFI screenonline
  9. ^ "David Rose in conversation" BFI website (video)
  10. ^ a b Rothschild, Hannah (2008). Labour of Love, C4 at 25. Archived from the original on 3 July 2009.
  11. ^ Michael Brooke "Channel 4 and Film", BFI screenonline website
  12. ^ Jeremy Isaacs "Happy Birthday to the leader with the golden touch", The Independent, 8 November 2004
  13. ^ Susan Emanuel "Channel Four - British Programming Service" Archived 4 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Museum of Broadcast Communications website; Susan Emmanuel "Channel Four — British Programming Service", in Horace Newcomb (ed) Encyclopedia of Television: Volume 1, A-C, New York: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2004, p487
  14. ^ David Rose quoted by Dorothy Hobson in Channel 4: The Early Years and the Jeremy Isaacs Legacy, London: I.B Tauris, 2008, p.64
  15. ^ Jason Deans "Timeline: FilmFour - where did it all go wrong?" The Guardian, 8 July 2002
  16. ^ Nicola Foster "Film on Four - British Film Series", Museum of Broadcast Communications
  17. ^ "David Rose to receive BFI Fellowship" Archived 2010-05-02 at the Wayback Machine, BFI website, 9 April 2010
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