Lew Grade
From Freepedia
Lew Grade, Baron Grade (birth name Louis Winogradsky) (December 25, 1906 - December 13, 1998) was an influential showbusiness impresario and television company executive in the United Kingdom. His interests included Pye Records and ATV.
He was born in Tokmak, Ukraine, to parents Olga and Isaac. In 1912 the Jewish family fled the Russian pogroms to a new life in the East End of London. Isaac managed a cinema, while his three sons attended the Rochelle Street School in Shoreditch. At 15 Louis became an agent for a clothing firm, and shortly afterwards started his own business. But after he won a Charleston competition at the Albert Hall in 1926, he became a professional dancer under the name Lew Grade. In 1933 founded a talent agency. His two brothers, Leslie Grade and Bernard Delfont, were also show business impresarios, and his nephew, Michael Grade (currently the Chairman of the BBC Board of Governors), carried on the tradition. Lew Grade is best known by viewing audiences as the man responsible for a number of cult British TV series, including The Saint and The Prisoner, through his ITC Entertainment production company. In 1962 he purchased independent production house AP Films, co-founded by Gerry Anderson, which produced a string of popular children's marionette adventure series including Supercar, Stingray, Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, Joe 90, three feature films, and the live-action sci-fi series UFO and Space: 1999.
Grade was was instrumental in bringing The Muppet Show to the screen and was immortalized by Jim Henson, who made a Muppet in his image -- Dr Bunsen Honeydew -- which had a very different personality and profession: He was the epitome of a Mad Scientist. Henson also based the character of movie mogul Lew Lord (played by Orson Welles) in The Muppet Movie, after Grade.
His other successes as a producer included the award-winning Jesus of Nazareth (1977), starring Robert Powell - ironically, as Grade was Jewish. Grade had unique success in selling to the American market. The "Jesus of Nazareth" mini-series secured a record breaking $12m. He also promoted extravagant 'quality' productions on ATV to prove its equal to BBC TV, for instance giving over a whole evening schedule to a live broadcast of "Tosca" from La Scala starring Maria Callas.
In 1978 Grade backed an expensive 'all-star' film version of Clive Cussler's best seller "Raise the Titanic". Released a year after "Star Wars" audience taste had moved on and the film was a major flop - Grade remarked "It would have been cheaper to lower the Atlantic". Along with a number of other flops the film marked the end of Grades involvement with major motion picture production.
He was made a life peer in 1976, having been knighted in 1969.
Quotes
- Commenting on his expensive flop, Raise the Titanic: "It would have been cheaper to lower the Atlantic."
- "Marriage was the best business deal I ever made. After that, Jesus of Nazareth and the Muppets."
Categories: 1906 births | 1998 deaths | Life peers | British television executives | British business people



