
Born in Liverpool in 1940, Neville Smith, a one time collaborator of director Ken Loach, is one of a number of working-class actors and writers to have transformed the subject-matter and tone of television drama in the 1960s and 1970s. He was responsible for two of Loach's finest television films - 'The Golden Vision' (The Wednesday Play, BBC, tx. 17/4/1968) and After a Lifetime (ITV, tx. 18/7/1971) - but also developed a partnership with the director Stephen Frears, for whom he wrote the cult British detective film, Gumshoe (UK/US, 1971).

Bad News

Doctor Who

The Comic Strip Presents...

Billy Liar

Prick Up Your Ears

Wish You Were Here

Gumshoe

In Two Minds

Doctor Who: The Reign of Terror

Coast to Coast

The Big Flame

The Rank and File

The Golden Vision

BBC Play of the Month

The End of Arthur's Marriage

The Wednesday Play

Praise Marx and Pass the Ammunition

Match of the Day

Sling Your Hook

Me! I'm Afraid of Virginia Woolf

Afternoon Off

Long Distance Information

Long Shot

Bag of Yeast

The Lump

Completely Bad News

There Is Also Tomorrow