Philip Jenkinson

Philip Jenkinson
Born 17 August 1935 (1935-08-17) (age 76)
Sale, Cheshire, England
Occupation Journalist
Spouse(s) Sally Jay

Philip Jenkinson (born 17 August 1935, Sale, Cheshire) is a British cinema specialist, journalist, BBC television presenter and film collector.[1] His collection was known as Filmfinders.

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Early life

When Jenkinson was a child in Sale, his family went on holiday to Butlins and won a talent competition doing George Formby imitations. A talent scout noticed him and arranged an audition with BBC Children's Hour. That incident led to much radio work from Leeds. His parents were not interested at all. The money he earned he spent on elocution lessons to get rid of his Manchester accent. In those days no successful actor would have a regional accent.

He was a very asthmatic child and consequently missed a lot of school, so the milkman gave his mother a 9.5mm projector to keep him amused, and by that means he started watching films. His mother used to give him money to go swimming to build up his strength, but he used to spend it on going to the cinema instead. His mother disapproved because she thought this was a means of picking up germs, but he would put his swimming trunks under the tap before returning home so that his mother would not discover what he had been doing.

When he left school he started work as a projectionist, then worked in the theatre, in stage management mainly and acting.

Career

Philip Jenkinson said in an interview in 2003: "One day when I was giving a lecture at St Martin’s School of Art, a BBC producer, Mike Appleton, was waiting at the back to pick up his girlfriend and he caught the last 10 minutes. He came over and said it was very interesting. ‘I am a producer of a programme called Late Night Line-Up. Would you like to come along and do something similar on the programme?’ They liked it and asked me to come back next week and do another one. I initially signed a contract for six months, which grew and grew. I ended up staying with Late Night Line Up for five years. The talk and emphasis was always about old movies. Film Night came out of Late Night Line Up. It started with me and Tony Bilbow. Tony reviewed the new films whilst I related the new films to ones that were made earlier, linking them with either a director or a star or the style; something they had in common."

During the 1970s, Jenkinson also contributed a weekly column for the television listings magazine Radio Times and edited films for music show the Old Grey Whistle Test.[2] He was frantically busy during that period. He received up to 50 letters a week asking him to show certain film clips and was satirised by Monty Python in their sketch Sam Peckinpah's "Salad Days". During the sketch, a series of superimposed captions read, "Philip Jenkinson again," "Get on with it," "And stop sniffing," and "Will you stop sniffing." At the end, a caption reading "Tee hee" is displayed as he is machine-gunned to death.

In 1971 he started a series of 13 week lectures at London’s National Film Theatre on the history of the musical. At this time Jenkinson started building up Filmfinders, as a stock shot library as opposed to being a personal collection. He acquired many Mack Sennett and Laurel and Hardy films from other collectors. It was a group which included Leslie Halliwell (who wrote The Filmgoers' Companion), author William K. Everson, Kevin Brownlow (authority on silent cinema), John Huntley (then at the British Film Institute) and a couple of friends in Hollywood.

Jenkinson appeared as a guest on the Morecambe and Wise show.[3]

Personal life

He is widowed to Sally Jay, the sister of Sir Antony Jay. He has two sons, Lee William Jenkinson, who went on to play bass guitar for softcell singer Marc Almond, and Ben Jenkinson who is autistic. He has one granddaughter, Ruby Angelina Sarah Campbell, who studies design in the UK.

References

  1. ^ Brown, Barry (2009). Stars in My Eyes: A Movie & Media Memoir. AuthorHouse. pp. 141–146. ISBN 9781449056964. 
  2. ^ Murray, Charles Shaar (17 September 2001). "Mmmm... nice". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2001/sep/17/features11.g2. Retrieved 10 May 2011. 
  3. ^ ""The Morecambe & Wise Show" 1977 Christmas Show (1977)". www.imdb.com. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0894463/. Retrieved 25 May 2010.