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Philip Jenkinson
Philip Jenkinson
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Philip Jenkinson (17 August 1935 – 11 March 2012)[1] was an English cinema specialist, journalist, BBC television presenter, and film collector.[2] His collection was known as Filmfinders. During the 1970s, Jenkinson contributed a weekly column for the television listings magazine Radio Times and edited films for the BBC Two music show The Old Grey Whistle Test.

Key Information

Early life

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Jenkinson was born in Sale. When he was a child he won a holiday talent contest by performing George Formby imitations[3] at a Butlins holiday camp. 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 had severe asthma as a child and consequently missed much 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 spent it at the cinema instead. His mother disapproved, believing he'd pick up too many germs, but he would put his swimming trunks under the tap before returning home so that she would not discover the deception.

When he left school he started work as a projectionist, then worked in the theatre, in stage management and acting. At one theatre he met the set designer Sally Jay, later his wife. The couple decided to move to London where they gained work with the distributors Contemporary Films.[3]

Career

[edit]

Philip Jenkinson said in a 2003 interview: "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." He was later asked by Late Night Live producer Rowan Ayers to help him launch The Beatles Abbey Road album.

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.[4] 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 weekly 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. Bilbow and Jenkinson were dropped in 1975 by the BBC, who had been lobbied by the film industry for a less critical approach.[3] Jenkinson would later go on to serve on the Board of Governors of the British Film Institute.[1]

Jenkinson appeared as a guest on the Morecambe and Wise Christmas Show in 1977.[5]

Personal life

[edit]

His wife Sally Jay, the sister of Sir Antony Jay, pre-deceased him. The couple had two sons, Lee William Jenkinson, who played bass guitar for Soft Cell singer Marc Almond, and Ben Jenkinson.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Philip Jenkinson was a British film historian, broadcaster, journalist, and film collector known for his enthusiastic television presentations of classic and rare cinema clips, most notably on the BBC's Late Night Line-Up, and for his extensive personal archive that aided in film preservation and education. Born on 17 August 1935 in Sale, Cheshire, England, Jenkinson cultivated a lifelong passion for cinema that led him to amass a vast collection of 16mm prints, including many rare titles from early Hollywood sound films, Mack Sennett silents, and Laurel and Hardy works. This archive not only fueled his own lectures and screenings but also supported his company Filmfinders, which supplied archival footage to television productions, documentaries, and advertisements. He rose to prominence as a resident film expert on BBC2's Late Night Line-Up from 1967 to 1972, where he screened viewer-requested clips from vintage films, introducing audiences to overlooked works and building a large following through his knowledgeable and engaging style. He later co-presented Film Night on the same channel, focusing on classic cinema, and appeared in other programs including The Great Trailer Show. Jenkinson contributed to film scholarship through a popular 13-week lecture series on the history of the film musical at the National Film Theatre in 1971, as well as consultancy roles on productions such as Ken Russell's The Boy Friend (1971), where he advised on Busby Berkeley-style sequences. He also wrote a regular column for Radio Times commenting on the week's film broadcasts. Philip Jenkinson died on 11 March 2012.

Early life

Childhood in Cheshire

Philip Jenkinson was born on 17 August 1935 in Sale, Cheshire, England. He was prone to asthma as a child, which frequently kept him home from school and limited his formal education. A sympathetic family milkman gave him a 9.5mm projector during periods of illness, which sparked his initial interest in film projection and provided entertainment while confined at home. His mother gave him money intended for swimming to build up his strength, but he often spent it attending cinema screenings instead. As a child, Jenkinson won a talent competition by impersonating George Formby, which led to early radio work in Manchester. He used the earnings from this radio work to fund elocution lessons, as regional accents were considered a handicap at the time. Due to his asthma-related absences from school and the resources from these early earnings, Jenkinson developed a largely self-directed education centered on film rather than traditional schooling. With his boyhood friend Alan Howden, he began screening films for classmates using their projectors.

Discovery of cinema

Philip Jenkinson developed an early passion for cinema during his teenage years in Sale, Cheshire, often prioritizing filmgoing over other activities despite health challenges. His frequent absences from school due to asthma provided opportunities to immerse himself in movies. A sympathetic local milkman gifted him a 9.5mm projector, which sparked his enthusiasm for home film screenings and collecting. Given pocket money by his mother for swimming lessons, Jenkinson would instead spend it on cinema tickets, reflecting his growing obsession with the medium. He collaborated with his boyhood friend Alan Howden—later head of film purchasing at the BBC—to organize screenings for school friends using personal projectors. Among these amateur events was a showing of a 90-minute version of Metropolis to half their school class, marking an early hands-on engagement with classic films. Through repeated viewings of Hollywood classics, Jenkinson cultivated an encyclopedic knowledge of cinema during this formative period. These pre-professional experiences laid the foundation for his lifelong dedication to film scholarship and advocacy.

Early career

Theatre work in Manchester

After leaving school, Philip Jenkinson initially worked as a projectionist. He later left this role to join the Library Theatre in Manchester, aspiring to pursue acting. However, he primarily served as a stage manager rather than achieving success on stage. During his time at the Library Theatre, Jenkinson met scenic designer Sally Jay, whom he later married. His early professional experience in Manchester thus focused on backstage responsibilities in theatre, building foundational industry connections despite his original acting ambitions.

Move to London and film distribution

Jenkinson moved to London after his theatre work in Manchester and joined Contemporary Films, a distributor specialising in foreign-language, independent, and classic cinema. He began in a general assistant role but was successful there. In 1967, while lecturing on the history of vintage cinema at St Martin's School of Art, Jenkinson was spotted by BBC producer Mike Appleton. This encounter led directly to his recruitment by the BBC.

Television career

Joining BBC and Late Night Line-Up

In 1967, while delivering a lecture on vintage cinema at St Martin's School of Art in London, Philip Jenkinson was spotted by BBC producer Mike Appleton, who invited him to join BBC2's Late Night Line-Up as the resident film expert. He initially signed a six-month contract that was repeatedly extended, resulting in a five-year tenure on the programme from 1967 to 1972. Late Night Line-Up was a pioneering open-ended nightly magazine programme on BBC2, scheduled at the end of transmission to allow flexible duration and in-depth discussion of contemporary arts and culture. Jenkinson presented the dedicated film segments, where he introduced and screened viewers' requested clips from old movies drawn from archives, often showcasing his enthusiasm for early sound cinema in Hollywood and Britain, including works by directors and performers such as Busby Berkeley. His engaging, knowledgeable contributions helped make the programme a notable platform for film appreciation during late-night broadcasting. The Late Night Line-Up format later evolved into the more specialised Film Night, which continued Jenkinson's focus on cinema but shifted to a dedicated weekly programme.

Co-presenting Film Night

Philip Jenkinson co-presented the BBC2 film review programme Film Night alongside Tony Bilbow from 1968 to 1975. Bilbow typically covered contemporary releases and new films, while Jenkinson specialised in connecting these to earlier works by drawing parallels through directors, stars, stylistic elements, or historical precedents, often using clips from his personal collection. Having originated as a segment within Late Night Line-Up, Film Night evolved into a standalone weekly series that featured reviews, discussions, and interviews, with Jenkinson also credited for narrative scripts on four episodes between 1968 and 1974. He contributed narrative scripts to several related BBC film programmes during this period, including 65 episodes of Film Preview (1966–1967), 17 episodes of Film Review (1967–1968), and nine episodes of World Cinema (1972–1973). Jenkinson wrote a regular weekly column for the Radio Times previewing the week's film schedules, sometimes composed in rhyming couplets. The programme's critical approach drew pressure from film distributors who had supplied clips on the understanding that coverage would remain non-critical; when criticism increased, permission to use certain clips was withdrawn. In 1975, the BBC2 controller decided that a change of presenters would improve ratings amid industry dissatisfaction, leading to the non-renewal of contracts for Jenkinson and Bilbow; they were replaced by younger critics, but the revamped format proved unsuccessful and Film Night concluded in 1976.

Other television work and appearances

Philip Jenkinson contributed to a range of television programmes as a writer, researcher, consultant, and supplier of archive material outside his primary presenting duties on Late Night Line-Up and Film Night. He wrote for the comedy series Horne A'Plenty from 1968 to 1969 and provided additional material for the 1968 series Marty. He later served as film consultant on eight episodes of The Kenny Everett Video Show in 1978 and as film compiler on twelve episodes of Make 'Em Laugh between 1982 and 1984. He supplied archive film footage for several music and entertainment programmes, including The Old Grey Whistle Test in 1971 and Disco 2 in 1970. He also acted as researcher on Ken Russell's feature film Valentino in 1977. Jenkinson's enthusiastic and distinctive style of presenting film clips led to a parody by Eric Idle in Monty Python's Flying Circus, where a character resembling him was depicted as a machine-gunned victim in a spoof of Sam Peckinpah's violent editing techniques. In 1977, he made a guest appearance on The Morecambe & Wise Show Christmas special, joining other television presenters dressed in sailor suits to perform the musical number "There Is Nothing Like a Dame." In 1987, Jenkinson compiled and presented The Great Trailer Show for Tyne Tees Television, writing narrative scripts for six planned episodes that showcased film trailers drawn from his personal collection. Only four episodes were broadcast, as he withdrew the final two after receiving threats of a massive lawsuit from distributors over the unauthorized use of promotional clips, underscoring ongoing copyright challenges associated with trailer material.

Film scholarship and advocacy

Lectures and NFT presentations

Jenkinson delivered an acclaimed series of 13 weekly talks at the National Film Theatre in 1971, exploring the history of the film musical and illustrated with myriad extracts from notable examples. These presentations proved highly successful and represented a significant educational contribution to film scholarship at the time. He was particularly passionate about the work of Busby Berkeley, whose wildly imaginative musical routines in films such as 42nd Street, Dames, and Footlight Parade he championed with great enthusiasm. Jenkinson insisted on pronouncing the director's name as "Barkley" and brought Berkeley's breathtaking choreography to a new generation of audiences through his lectures and broader advocacy. Jenkinson also served for a period as a governor of the British Film Institute, supporting its mission to preserve and promote cinema.

Interviews and consultancy roles

Jenkinson conducted a number of significant television interviews with major figures from film history during his time at the BBC. He interviewed director John Ford in June 1968 in an extensive session at Ford's Hollywood home. Ford, who was known for his strong dislike of interviews, deliberately seated Jenkinson on his deaf side throughout the conversation. The resulting interview, which ran for over an hour and captured Ford's views on his career and filmmaking approach, was later broadcast with some film extracts. He also interviewed silent-era stars Ramon Novarro and Gloria Swanson for television, contributing to documentaries and discussion programs that highlighted their contributions to early Hollywood. In addition to his interviewing work, Jenkinson served as a consultant to director Ken Russell on the 1971 film The Boy Friend, where he advised on the production's pastiche sequences emulating Busby Berkeley's elaborate musical numbers. Jenkinson was part of an informal circle of film preservationists and historians, including Kevin Brownlow and William K. Everson, who shared a commitment to safeguarding and promoting cinema's heritage through scholarship and advocacy.

Film collecting and archiving

Building the personal collection

Jenkinson amassed an extensive personal archive of 16mm prints over many years, which had grown to approximately 2,500 titles by the 1970s and was celebrated not only for its scale but especially for the exceptional quality and rarity of its holdings. The collection encompassed a broad range of classic American cinema, including virtually complete outputs from major directors such as John Ford, Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitchcock, and Billy Wilder, alongside full sets of Marx Brothers films, Val Lewton productions, screwball comedies, gangster pictures, and other genres from Hollywood's golden age, with notable rarities such as mint-condition Technicolor VistaVision prints of Vertigo and Rear Window. As the archive expanded, it required additional storage space beyond his home; he rented garages to house the large cans of film, which he would haul up stairs for screenings in his purpose-built projection room in Blackheath, south London. He also built one of the largest private collections of film trailers and ephemera, reflecting his deep interest in cinema history and promotional materials. Jenkinson was renowned for his generosity within film enthusiast circles, frequently sharing rare material from his private archive by hosting long screening sessions for friends and colleagues, lending prints to celebrities including Ringo Starr and Bob Monkhouse, and providing unique footage to performers such as Sid Caesar. This willingness to provide access to otherwise unavailable items made his collection an invaluable resource among peers in the preservation and appreciation community.

Filmfinders company and clip supply

Philip Jenkinson founded Filmfinders in the 1970s as a company dedicated to researching and supplying film clips for documentaries, advertisements, and television programmes. The business drew extensively from his personal collection of 16mm prints to locate and provide rare footage to producers. He served as a researcher and consultant on various projects, including as film researcher: U.K. on The Making of a Legend: Gone with the Wind (1988). In later years, Filmfinders suffered from the increasingly strict enforcement of copyright laws, which restricted the unauthorised use of archival material and reduced opportunities for clip supply. This shift contributed to a decline in the company's activity, as distributors became more protective of their rights and threatened legal action over unlicensed excerpts. Jenkinson was also credited in connection with the 1992 Omnibus episode on John Ford, where he was listed as interviewer: John Ford, reflecting his provision of archival interview material.

Personal life

Family and marriage

Philip Jenkinson married scenic designer Sally Jay in 1956, having met her while working at the Library Theatre in Manchester. Sally Jay died on 30 July 2003. The couple had two sons, Lee William and Ben. Colleagues described Jenkinson as generous but temperamental.

Death and legacy

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