- Hughie Green
Infobox Person
name = Hughie Green
image_size = 200px
caption = Green presenting the first episode of "Double Your Money".
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birth_date = birth date|1920|02|02
birth_place =London ,England
death_date = death date and age|1997|5|3|1920|02|02
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known_for = "Double Your Money Opportunity Knocks "
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occupation = British television show host
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footnotes =Hughie Green (
February 2 ,1920 –May 3 ,1997 ), was the host of numerous British television shows.Biography
Born in
London , his Scottish father was a formerBritish Army Major who made his fortune supplying tinned fish to the Allied forces inWorld War One , while his mother Violet was theSurrey -born daughter of an Irish gardener. The family had a home inMeopham ,Kent where the children lived with their mother who took regular lovers, while his father did business from and often stayed in theSavoy Hotel .Child career
After the family business went
bankrupt , Green's father encouraged his stage-obsessed son into performance, and by age 14 had his ownBBC radio show, and created and toured with his own all-children cast concert party called "Hughie Green and his Gang". After an extensive tour ofCanada , Green appeared in his first film "Midshipman Easy" in 1935, then went toHollywood where he appeared in the film "Tom Brown's School Days" and at the Cocoanut Grove with his cabaret act.World War Two
Having already fathered his first illegitimate child with a Canadian usherette at the age of 17, and caught in
North America on the declaration of war, duringWorld War Two Green served as a pilot in theRoyal Canadian Air Force , ferrying aircraft across the Atlantic withRAF Ferry Command . After being declaredbankrupt following a failed legal action against the BBC, he marriedMontreal society beauty Claire Wilson and took Canadian citizenship, working in the aircraft industry as a ferry transport pilot, a stunt pilot and from 1947 on his return to London involved in business activities that included selling aircraft.Mainstream popularity
Green became a household name in 1955, with the
ITV quiz show , "Double Your Money " (which had actually originated some years earlier on Radio Luxembourg). Green brought his future co-hostMonica Rose to the screen. The chirpy 15 year-oldCockney junior accounts clerk won £8 answering questions on famous women, and was later invited back by Green to be a hostess.His most successful show format was his self-developed long-running talent show, "
Opportunity Knocks ." Started as a UK-wide touring show produced for the radio, one of his early finds was singerFrankie Vaughan , who came second as part of a duet. [citeweb|url=http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/britmusical/frankievaughanguardian.htm|title=Frankie Vaughan|publisher=The Guardian|date=September 18, 1999|accessdate=2008-04-02] When it transferred to television on the ITV network in the mid-1960s, it began the show business careers ofLes Dawson ,Lena Zavaroni ,Pam Ayres andMary Hopkin , among others. His 1971 short-lived game show "The Sky's the Limit" failed, and he returned to a revamped "Opportunity Knocks" produced by fellow performerJess Yates , until Yates's dismissal in 1974 following newspaper allegations of a extramarital affair with a young actress.Right up until its final shows, "Opportunity Knocks" was a ratings hit that attracted 18 million viewers weekly. But Green, known for his
right-wing politics , had decided he was bigger than the show format he devised and began politicising an apolitical family friendly format. In December 1976 Green sang a rant about the state of the United Kingdom called "Stand Up and Be Counted," with the words coming up in subtitles" "Stand up and be counted, where the managers manage and the workers don't go on strike;" - it later became a 1977 single. Partly seen as an open support of Conservative Party leaderMargaret Thatcher , he was disciplined byThames Television , but kept on making political comments. After numerous viewer complaints, Thames axed the show in March 1978, despite attracting high ratings, something Green mentioned in a bitter rant against Thames in his last show. Family friendly "Opportunity Knocks" was replaced by youth orientated comedy "The Kenny Everett Video Show" which attracted 10 million viewers. [citeweb|url=http://www.transdiffusion.org/tmc/itv50/trashed.php|title=The Network that Trashed itself|publisher=transdiffusion.org|accessdate=2008-04-02]After his rather slow paced and "
end of the pier " entertainment style shows were replaced with more active audience participation formats, Green tried presenting variants on the "Opportunity Knocks" theme in Ireland, Australia and one show in theUSSR , where a TV set was the top prize (no cash prizes were allowed). [citeweb|url=http://www.ukgameshows.com/page/index.php?title=Hughie_Green|title=Hughie Green|publisher=UK Game Shows|accessdate=2008-04-02]tyle
Green was often mocked for his permanent door-to-door salesman's smile and faux-American accent. It is an
urban myth that he ever actually used the catch phrase "I mean that most sincerely", which was part of an impersonation of him byMike Yarwood . [cite web|title = 'The Game Shows'|url=http://www.ukgameshows.com/page/index.php/Hughie_Green|accessdate=2008-02-03] He toldPhilip Schofield in a TV interview in 1996 that he came up with the catchphrase himself. [cite web|title = 'Television s Greatest Hits - 1966 - Game Shows'|url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPCc_UjqZxE]Personal life
Green met
Montreal society beauty Claire Wilson on a cruise liner in the mid-1930s when both were still teenagers. They married in 1942 and settled in Montreal, before moving to London in 1947. The couple had two children, son Christopher and daughter Linda (married name: Linda Plentl). The family lived in a fifth floor flat inBaker Street , London; although with Green's numerous affairs and self obsession, including taking luxury holidays and spendingChristmas often on his own, his children defined it as "highly-dysfunctional."citeweb|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/showbiz/showbiznews.html?in_article_id=548570&in_page_id=1773|title=As a new film exposes the truth behind TV legend Hughie Green, his son reveals the demons that led to his father's behaviour|publisher=Daily Mail|date=31st March, 2008|accessdate=2008-04-02]Claire and Green separated in 1961, and filed for divorce in March 1975 after Green started an affair with Gwen Claremont, the sister of an earlier lover, Pat. Later that year, Claire married "
Upstairs Downstairs " actorDavid Langton . After separation from Claire, Green's drinking became more obsessive, while his affairs continued even during the height of his fame presenting "Opportunity Knocks." JournalistNoel Botham approached Green to expose him, but Green countered with a lawsuit threat. Eventually the two became good friends.Botham then became key in two stories within Green's life. The replacement producer for "Opportunity Knocks" after the failure of "The Sky's the Limit" was
Jess Yates . Green grew frustrated by the lack of ITV's action to remove Yates when he requested, and (ironically) leaked to Botham the stories of Yates's affair with the young actressAnita Kay , whose story, published in "News of the World ", destroyed Yates's career. After Green's death fromlung cancer , Botham wrote the exposé story, also in the "News of the World", of Green being the father of TV PresenterPaula Yates , [cite web|title = 'I thought I was at the darkest point - now this', BBC news report on Paula Yates|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/39288.stm|accessdate = 2008-02-03] a fact Yates had first learned after the tabloids printed the story; Green had four granddaughters that he never knew: Fifi, Peaches, and Pixie Geldof, and their younger half sister Tiger Hutchence.Death
After a failed court case against the
New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation over a copyright case which cost him £250,000 in 1989, [citeweb|url=http://www.copyright.theft.btinternet.co.uk/green.html|title=(Hughie) Green v Broadcasting Corp of New Zealand|publisher=Copyright Theft|accessdate=2008-04-02] Green lived out his life away from the media in solitary confinement in his Baker Street flat, lacking many of the financial riches of his former fame. After a lifetime of smoking a pipe, heavy drinking and latterly taking recreationalbarbiturates Fact|date=April 2008, Green was diagnosed with and died fromlung cancer in theRoyal Marsden Hospital .The bulk of Hughie Green's estate was bequeathed to his partner at the time of his death, Christina Sharples, widow of Green's friend and Opportunity Knocks musical director Bob Sharples. [citeweb|url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/showbiz/showbiznews.html?in_article_id=558497&in_page_id=1773|title=How dare Hughie Green's son brand him a womanising bully, by his last lover
publisher=Daily Mail|accessdate=2008-04-21]Buried in
Golders Green Crematorium , hisepitaph reads: "You were the star that made opportunity knock. You will never be forgotten. Christina". [citeweb|url=http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=pis&GRid=6692&PIgrid=6692&PIcrid=658441&PIpi=84013&ShowCemPhotos=Y&|title=Hughie Green|publisher=Find A Grave|accessdate=2008-04-02]Retrospective media coverage
In light of the death in 2000 of his daughter Paula Yates, Canadian resident son Christopher Green wrote the autobiographical perspective "Hughie & Paula. The Tangled Lives Of Hughie Green and Paula Yates."
On
2 April 2008 a TV film about Green's life was broadcast onBBC Four . The film was entitled "Hughie Green, Most Sincerely ".Trevor Eve was cast in the lead role. [cite web|title = Hughie Green, Most Sincerely|url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/hughiegreenmostsincerely/|accessdate = 2008-03-31] In "The Sunday Telegraph " of3 February 2008 , Linda Plentl says the new BBC drama about her father would reopen intolerable wounds. She told of her struggle with his legacy, and her three meetings with half-sister Paula Yates. [cite web|title = The Life and Many Loves of Hughie Green, Sunday Telegraph|url =http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=LYC4KOG4H2IBLQFIQMGSFGGAVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2008/02/03/nrhughie103.xml|accessdate = 2008-02-03]References
*"Hughie & Paula. The Tangled Lives Of Hughie Green and Paula Yates", by Christopher Green ISBN 1-86105-609-5
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