Sidney Cole

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Sidney Henry Cole (31 October 1908 25 January 1998) was a British film and television producer and editor.

Cole was educated at the LSE, and entered the film industry as a scenario reader for Stoll Picture Productions,[1] a company founded by Sir Oswald Stoll.[2] A longstanding friend of director Thorold Dickinson, he edited Dickinson's The High Command (1936) and Gaslight (1940) and Alberto Cavalcanti's Went the Day Well? (1942). Cavalcanti was "a joy" to work with and later in his life he remained pleased with his work on the film, stating that it was "very tightly edited by me".[3]

The longest portion of Cole's career though was as a producer, initially credited as an associate producer, for Ealing Studios (where he was employed for eleven years)[3] and the television production company ITC. For ITC he produced Danger Man (1964–67) and Man in a Suitcase (1967–68). Later he supervised The Adventures of Black Beauty (1972–74) and Dick Turpin (1979–82) for London Weekend Television, the latter via the Gatetarn company he founded with Richard Carpenter and Paul Knight.[4]

Sidney Cole was politically engaged through much of his career. He was involved in making documentaries on the Spanish Civil War with Dickinson[5] and employed blacklisted American writers on The Adventures of Robin Hood, a series whose executive producer Hannah Weinstein had herself chosen exile in London because of McCarthyism. With Peter Proud, Cole founded the ACTT union.[5]

Selected filmography

References

  1. Brian McFarlane (ed.) The Encyclopedia of British Film, London: BFI/Methuen, 2003, p.129
  2. Brian McFarlane (ed.) The Encyclopedia of British Film, London: BFI/Methuen, 2003, p.641
  3. 3.0 3.1 BECTU interview of Cole conducted by Alan Lawson (1987) as reproduced on the BFI screenonline website
  4. Alistair McGown "Carpenter, Richard (1933-2012)", BFI screenonline website
  5. 5.0 5.1 Ann Ogidi Cole, Sidney (1908-1998), BFI scereenonline page

External links


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