
1940-01-01 ( 85 years old ) in Liverpool, England, UK
Born in Liverpool in 1940, Neville Smith, a one time collaborator of director Ken Loach, is one of a number of working-class actors and writers to have transformed the subject-matter and tone of television drama in the 1960s and 1970s. He was responsible for two of Loach's finest television films - 'The Golden Vision' (The Wednesday Play, BBC, tx. 17/4/1968) and After a Lifetime (ITV, tx. 18/7/1971) - but also developed a partnership with the director Stephen Frears, for whom he wrote the cult British detective film, Gumshoe (UK/US, 1971).
Movies
Completely Bad News
2019-11-29
Wish You Were Here
1987-07-24
Prick Up Your Ears
1987-04-17
Coast to Coast
1987-01-04
Bad News
1983-01-24
Long Distance Information
1979-10-11
Afternoon Off
1979-02-03
Me! I'm Afraid of Virginia Woolf
1978-12-02
Long Shot
1978-11-17
Bag of Yeast
1976-02-22
Match of the Day
1974-03-18
Gumshoe
1971-12-01
After a Lifetime
1971-07-18
The Rank and File
1971-05-20
Praise Marx and Pass the Ammunition
1970-01-01
There Is Also Tomorrow
1969-11-19
Sling Your Hook
1969-04-02
The Big Flame
1969-02-19
The Golden Vision
1968-04-17
In Two Minds
1967-03-01
The Lump
1967-02-01
The End of Arthur's Marriage
1965-11-17
Wear a Very Big Hat
1965-02-17
Doctor Who: The Reign of Terror
1964-09-12
Billy Liar
1963-08-15
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