Eric Maschwitz

Eric Maschwitz (1901-1969) (sometimes credited as Holt Marvell) was a British entertainer, writer and broadcaster. He wrote the screenplays of several successful films in the 1930s and 40s, but is perhaps best remembered today for his lyrics to 1940s popular songs such as "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square". Maschwitz was educated at Repton and Cambridge. Maschwitz started his stage acting career in the early 1920s and joined the BBC in 1926. His first radio show was In Town Tonight and his first television show was The Black and White Minstrels. In 1939, he went to Hollywood under contract to MGM, where he worked on Goodbye, Mr. Chips (for which he shared an Academy Award nomination) and Queen of Song, among other successful films. During the Second World War, he served with the Intelligence Corps and became Chief Broadcasting Officer with the 21st Army Group. He left the army as a Lieutenant Colonel. In 1958, at the start of the BBC/ITV ratings wars, he rejoined the BBC as Head of TV Light Entertainment. About the job he said, "I don't think the BBC is a cultural organisation. We've got to please the people. The job of a man putting on a show is to get an audience." Maschwitz left to join the rival ITV in 1963. During the course of his varied entertainment career, Maschwitz adapted French comedies like Thirteen For Dinner; wrote the book and lyrics for numerous musicals, amongst them Balalaika, Summer Song and Zip Goes a Million; and created Café Collette. He also edited the Radio Times, turned The Ghost Train into a musical and wrote the words for "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" and "These Foolish Things". He even turned his hand to the detective novel: Death at Broadcasting House, co-written with Val Gielgud and published in 1931, revolves around a radio play disrupted by the murder of one of the cast (ironically, the play is a murder mystery and the deceased was cast as the murder victim). Eric Maschwitz was first married to Hermione Gingold, who was granted a divorce in 1945. He married Phyllis Gordon the same year. Maschwitz, Eric Maschwitz, Eric

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
bicycle playing cards
the straits times
chlamydia trachomatis
eastern phoebe
hurva synagogue
shikken
harold von braunhut
music history of the united states (1940s and 50s)
music history of the united states (1960s and 70s)
music history of the united states (1980s to the present)
east siberian cod
fort wayne
turner entertainment
gokenin
saffron cod
eit
elapidae
james caan
good charlotte (album)
pelagic cod
golden age of jewish culture in spain
georgi dimitrov
uss alexander hamilton
pelog
winny
the junction
sidney sonnino
nephelite
tigerente
coolangatta estate
order of british columbia
jim davis (politician)
serban cantacuzino
gheorghe ghica
trans siberian orchestra
adam putnam
galaxia
ghica family
samata party
michelle thomas
janata dal (united)
list of islands of china
ion ghica
rashtriya janata dal