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Robin Bextor
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Robin J. Bextor (born 11 October 1953) is an English film and television producer and director. He is the father of the dance-pop singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor.[2]
Key Information
Early life and education
[edit]After his education at Shene Grammar School in Richmond, and at the University of Reading, Bextor worked at the Dimbleby-owned Richmond and Twickenham Times before joining Thames Television and then the BBC, where he produced and directed documentaries, including an RTS award-winning film on blind parents and entertainment programmes including That's Life!. During this time, he also made pop promotion videos for such bands as Bad Manners,[2] Bow Wow Wow, Adam Ant and Bucks Fizz.
Career
[edit]Bextor directed Edward on Edward, a documentary in which Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh discussed King Edward VIII. Bextor then worked as director of programmes for Ardent, but left to pursue other projects.
Bextor has since made programmes with the French duo Air;[3] The Damned;[2] The Stranglers; and UB40.[3] He directed the cult short film Norfolk Coast,[4] featuring Susannah York and Jean Jacques Burnel. He is a majority shareholder of the Soho post production business Vivid, responsible for programmes on the England football team, Test cricket and Fulham FC, as well as many arts subjects.
He has won the Columbus ("Chris") award for The British Schindler,[5] shown on ITV in 2005, and a BAFTA.
Bextor also directed his daughter's DVD Watch My Lips. He has been director of the Chichester Festival for five years and a trustee of the Brighton theatre company Dream, Think, Speak.
Bextor has also had a successful career as a writer, writing for newspapers and magazines and the book to accompany the TV series Crown and Country. The relationships built working with Paul McCartney and Eric Clapton over many years led to the publication of Paul McCartney Now & Then in 2004,[2] and Eric Clapton Now & Then in 2006.[6] Bextor is also a director of Glyndebourne Productions in East Sussex.
In 2013, he directed a six-part TV series on London, with specials on the London Underground, Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace. He also wrote The Story of the London Underground, published that same year. The following year, he produced and directed Glyndebourne: the Untold History for the BBC. He also wrote and directed a four-part music series, The Sound of the 60s, and a book of the series, published the same year. A second series, The Sound of the 70s, followed, as well as the series Historic Hauntings. He has made films on 10cc (Clever Clogs), Squeeze, Cara Dillon, the French band Air, and The Feeling, with Kiefer Sutherland. Bextor was one of the founders, alongside his daughter Sophie and son-in-law Richard Jones, of the Meribel Music Festival in the French Alps, called The Little World Festival.
Political activity
[edit]In the 2019 European Parliament Election in May 2019, Bextor stood as a candidate for Change UK in the South East England constituency of the United Kingdom.[7] The party received 105,832 votes (4.2%), finishing in sixth place of twelve candidates.
References
[edit]- ^ "Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Janet Ellis: 'Having a famous mum was high value currency when I was little'". The Guardian. 25 September 2021.
- ^ a b c d Bextor, Robin; Barrow, Tony; McCartney, Paul (2004). Newby, Julian (ed.). Paul McCartney Now & Then. Milwaukee, NY: Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-634-06919-2. LCCN 2004100968. (Short biography of Robin Bextor on p.9)
- ^ a b "Peter – A Study for a Portrait of a Serial Killer". Retrieved 5 May 2011. (See: Cast and Crew: Sanjay Kumar)
- ^ "Norfolk coast". Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
- ^ "The Arts". p. 12. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
- ^ Bextor, Robin (1 January 2006). Eric Clapton Now & Then. UK: Carlton Books Ltd. p. 144. ISBN 978-1-84442-531-0.
- ^ "Change UK MEP candidates: Who's standing in the 2019 European elections, from Rachel Johnson to Gavin Esler". 24 April 2019.
External links
[edit]- Robin Bextor at IMDb
Robin Bextor
View on GrokipediaPersonal Background
Early Life and Education
Robin Bextor was born on 11 October 1953 in London, England.[4][5] He received his secondary education at Shene Grammar School in Richmond, Surrey.[6][7] Bextor later attended the University of Reading, where he is listed among notable alumni, though specific details of his degree or field of study are not publicly documented in available records.[8][9]Family and Personal Life
Robin Bextor was married to television presenter Janet Ellis from 1977 to 1984.[10] [11] The couple had one daughter, Sophie Ellis-Bextor, born on 10 April 1979.[12] Following their divorce, Ellis remarried and Bextor wed Polly Mockford.[11] Bextor and Mockford resided at Berwick House, a Victorian property near Lewes in East Sussex, which they purchased around 2008 and owned for over a decade.[13] [14] The five-bedroom home, featuring a guest cottage and outdoor heated swimming pool, was listed for sale in 2018 at £1.7 million.[15] Bextor has maintained a base in East Sussex for many years.[2]Professional Career
Early Career in Media
Bextor commenced his career in British television during the early 1970s, securing credits on the BBC's That's Life!, a consumer advocacy series that premiered on 26 May 1973 and ran until 1994. His initial roles involved directing episodes centered on investigative reporting, public complaints, and light-hearted factual segments, which demanded rigorous fact-checking and on-the-ground production amid tight broadcast schedules. This entry-level work at the BBC provided essential training in handling real-world evidence and viewer-driven narratives, distinct from scripted entertainment prevalent in contemporary media.[1][16] In the early 1980s, while continuing contributions to That's Life!, Bextor branched into music video direction, producing promotional content for emerging acts in the post-punk and pop scenes, including Bad Manners, Bow Wow Wow, Adam Ant, and Bucks Fizz. These short-form projects, often under 5 minutes, emphasized authentic performance footage and minimalistic editing to capture live energy, aligning with the era's demand for unpolished visuals over polished fiction. By 1983, his production oversight on That's Life! extended to featuring family members, underscoring his embedded role in the program's operational rhythm. Such diverse assignments built proficiency in rapid turnaround factual content, countering the growing sensationalism in rival commercial broadcasting.[1][6] This phase marked a shift from general television segments to structured documentary formats, exemplified by directing contributions to The Day the Universe Changed (1985), a Channel 4 series tracing paradigm shifts in science and technology through archival evidence and expert testimony. Similarly, his work on Dispatches (1987), an ITV investigative strand, involved probing socio-political issues with primary sourcing, reflecting market pressures for verifiable depth over anecdotal reporting in an age of expanding cable alternatives. These efforts solidified hands-on expertise in evidence-based storytelling, prioritizing causal chains over narrative embellishment.[1][17]Documentary Productions
Robin Bextor's documentary work centers on feature-length explorations of pivotal figures and events, utilizing archival footage, contemporary interviews, and historical records to reconstruct narratives grounded in primary evidence rather than dramatized interpretations. His productions, often released under the "The Real Story" banner, prioritize chronological sequencing of facts and direct testimony to delineate causal sequences, such as scientific breakthroughs or cultural phenomena, over speculative embellishments. These films typically run 80-100 minutes and involve collaborations with Reel 2 Reels Films for distribution across digital platforms, DVD, and Blu-ray.[18] In 2021, Bextor directed Eric Clapton: Standing at the Crossroads, a 92-minute examination of the guitarist's career trajectory from Cream to solo endeavors, incorporating interviews with Clapton himself alongside contemporaries like Sting and Keith Richards to trace influences from blues origins to personal setbacks via performance clips and studio sessions.[19] That same year, he produced McCartney: Now and Then, an authorized 60-minute documentary featuring Paul McCartney discussing his Beatles tenure, Lennon collaborations, and post-group innovations, supplemented by inputs from George Martin and Donovan, with emphasis on songwriting processes evidenced through demo tapes and session logs; a Blu-ray edition followed in 2025.[20] Bextor's 2023 release, Oppenheimer: The Real Story, a 96-minute film, details J. Robert Oppenheimer's academic rise at the University of California, Berkeley, and oversight of the Los Alamos Laboratory during the Manhattan Project, drawing on declassified documents, physicist testimonies, and footage of early nuclear tests to outline the technical and ethical milestones in atomic development.[21] This was distributed digitally via Reel 2 Reels starting July 17, 2023.[18] Extending to natural phenomena, Twisters: The Real Story (2024) deploys 85 minutes of storm-chaser footage and interviews with meteorologists like Rich Cline to map the evolution of tornado research since the 1996 film Twister, highlighting empirical data collection methods—such as Doppler radar deployments and proximity deployments—undertaken by teams risking exposure to F-scale winds exceeding 200 mph.[22] Bextor's most recent effort, Nosferatu: The Real Story (2024), clocks in at approximately 80 minutes and chronicles the 1922 silent film's production as an unpermitted Dracula adaptation by F.W. Murnau, using restored prints, legal archives from the Stoker estate lawsuit, and film historian analysis to reconstruct location shoots in Slovakia and effects techniques involving double exposures for the vampire's shadow effects; it launched digitally in December 2024 with a Blu-ray slated for November 2025.[23]Notable Collaborations and Awards
Bextor developed long-term professional relationships with Paul McCartney and Eric Clapton, leveraging his expertise in biographical documentaries to produce authorized works featuring their direct input. His collaboration with McCartney culminated in the 2004 book Paul McCartney: Now and Then, co-authored with music publicist Tony Barrow, which incorporated McCartney's firsthand accounts of his post-Beatles career, Wings, and solo endeavors.[24] This partnership extended to the 2021 documentary McCartney: Now and Then, directed by Bextor, where McCartney discussed his Beatles contributions, relationship with John Lennon, and ongoing creative process, with appearances by figures like George Martin.[20] Similarly, Bextor's association with Clapton informed the book Eric Clapton: Now and Then and the 2021 documentary Eric Clapton: Standing at the Crossroads, both emphasizing Clapton's career trajectory, personal struggles, and musical evolution through archival footage and interviews.[1] These projects, spanning books and films, relied on Bextor's access to the artists' archives and perspectives, enabling detailed, insider-driven narratives distinct from mainstream biographies. In terms of awards, Bextor earned the Columbus International Film & Video Festival's "Chris" Award for his 2005 ITV documentary The British Schindler, which chronicled Nicholas Winton's efforts to rescue Jewish children from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia.[15] This recognition highlighted his skill in historical factual filmmaking, based on empirical survivor testimonies and declassified records rather than speculative accounts.Political Involvement
Campaign for Change UK
In the 2019 European Parliament election held on 23 May, Robin Bextor served as the fifth candidate on the Change UK – The Independent Group list for the South East England constituency, which encompassed Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, East Sussex, Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Kent, Oxfordshire, Surrey, and West Sussex, electing 10 members.[25][26] The party, rebranded from The Independent Group earlier that year, fielded candidates across multiple regions to contest the delayed vote triggered by the UK's failure to depart the European Union by the original deadline.[2] Bextor's campaign aligned with Change UK's core platform of seeking a second public referendum on Brexit, framed as a "People's Vote" to ratify any negotiated withdrawal agreement or remaining in the EU, positioning the party as a pro-second-referendum alternative amid polarized Leave-Remain divides.[2] Party materials and Bextor's public statements emphasized remain-oriented policies, including protections for creative industries potentially harmed by Brexit-related trade barriers, as highlighted in campaign videos warning of disruptions to sectors like music production.[27] The effort drew on broader polling data indicating majority public support for revisiting the 2016 referendum outcome, though specific endorsements of figures like 61% Remain preference were not uniquely tied to Bextor's regional messaging in available records. Change UK achieved minimal electoral success, securing no seats nationwide despite contesting all regions outside Northern Ireland; the party garnered 571,846 votes, equivalent to 3.3% of the total UK vote share.[28] In the South East, the list topped by Richard Ashworth received approximately 170,000 votes, or 4.9% regionally, insufficient under the d'Hondt method to allocate any of the 10 seats, which went primarily to Liberal Democrats (4), Brexit Party (3), Greens (2), and Conservatives (1).[28] This outcome reflected the party's rapid formation and lack of established voter base, contributing to its post-election turmoil: multiple MPs defected by June 2019, leading to rebranding as The Independent Group for Change and eventual dissolution without contesting the 2024 European elections.[29] The empirical shortfall underscored challenges for newly formed centrist groupings in first-past-the-post-derived proportional systems, with Change UK's vote share falling short of the effective threshold for representation in most regions.[28]Positions on Brexit and European Integration
Bextor campaigned as a candidate for Change UK in the 2019 European Parliament elections for South East England, advocating for a People's Vote—a second referendum—on any final Brexit deal and explicitly supporting the UK's continued membership in the European Union.[2] He aligned with the party's policy to revoke Article 50 if necessary to halt Brexit proceedings, framing departure from the EU as divisive and economically damaging.[30] In public statements, Bextor highlighted risks to the creative sector, asserting that "Brexit threatens to hit hard one of our most inventive and profitable industries" and that voters had not endorsed such consequences.[27] His pro-remain position emphasized preventing trade barriers and regulatory disruptions, consistent with Change UK's centrist critique of both major parties' handling of the 2016 referendum outcome. Bextor criticized pro-Brexit figures, such as Conservative MP Maria Caulfield, for advancing withdrawal despite public divisions, positioning EU retention as essential for stability.[31] However, Change UK's electoral collapse—garnering just 3.3% of the national vote (571,846 ballots) and no seats in the May 2019 elections—underscored a misalignment with prevailing sentiment favoring Brexit implementation, as evidenced by the subsequent Conservative landslide in December 2019 on a "Get Brexit Done" platform. The party dissolved shortly thereafter in June 2019, reflecting limited traction for anti-Brexit reversal efforts.[26] Post-Brexit outcomes diverged from the catastrophic forecasts advanced by remain proponents like Bextor and Change UK, which had predicted immediate GDP contraction of 5-10% and trade collapse. The UK formally exited the EU on 31 January 2020, followed by the Trade and Cooperation Agreement on 24 December 2020, enabling tariff-free goods trade albeit with new non-tariff barriers. Office for National Statistics data indicate UK real GDP grew 1.8% in 2021, 4.3% in 2022, and 0.1% in 2023, rebounding from COVID-19 impacts without the forecasted Armageddon; EU-UK goods trade volumes fell 13.2% in 2021 but stabilized by 2023 at levels supporting adaptation via diversified non-EU partnerships. Regulatory sovereignty gains included divergences from EU rules, such as streamlined chemicals approvals under UK REACH (retaining 4 million substances registered by 2025 versus EU's ongoing burdens) and financial services innovations unbound by single market constraints. These developments affirm causal factors like global supply chain shifts and domestic policy flexibility mitigating remain-side predictions, prioritizing national control over supranational integration despite initial frictions. No public statements from Bextor on European integration post-2019 elections have been documented, limiting insights into evolved views amid sovereignty-focused critiques of EU overreach, such as fiscal transfers and migration policies that Brexit alleviated for the UK.[32]Legacy and Reception
Impact on Factual Filmmaking
Bextor's documentary oeuvre has advanced factual filmmaking by systematically integrating primary archival footage with testimonies from historians and contemporaries, thereby constructing narratives rooted in verifiable historical sequences rather than interpretive embellishments. This methodology, refined from his early BBC factual programs in the 1990s—such as Edward on Edward (1996), which drew on royal family insights and documents to examine King Edward VIII's abdication—to his later independent productions, underscores a commitment to empirical reconstruction over speculative drama.[33] His "The Real Story" series, launched prominently with titles like Oppenheimer: The Real Story (2023), exemplifies this by relying on expert analyses of declassified materials and eyewitness accounts to delineate causal chains in pivotal events, such as the Manhattan Project's development.[18] Reception of Bextor's works highlights their role in elevating documentary standards through authenticity and accessibility, with critics praising the balance of scholarly depth and engaging pacing that distinguishes factual content from sensationalized alternatives. For instance, The Exorcist: Untold (2023) has been lauded as an "excellent primer" for its fast-paced elucidation of cultural phenomena via original production records and participant recollections, while Nosferatu: The Real Story (2024) earned commendations for its insightful probing of cinematic origins using thematic and archival veins.[34][35] In music-focused documentaries like Eric Clapton: Standing at the Crossroads (2021) and McCartney: Now and Then (2021), this approach yields unvarnished biographical portraits, appealing to audiences in a landscape where biographical films increasingly incorporate contemporary ideological overlays, thus sustaining demand for evidence-based alternatives.[1] Over time, Bextor's consistent application of these principles has modeled an empirical production paradigm, influencing niche documentary markets by demonstrating how targeted deconstructions—evident in releases up to Nosferatu: The Real Story—can illuminate foundational truths amid proliferating dramatized retellings. Reviewers note the immersive educational impact, as in Twisters: The Real Story (2024), which leverages meteorological data and researcher motivations for predictive accuracy discussions, encouraging broader discourse on historical fidelity in media.[36][37] This legacy persists in fostering viewer discernment, with his films cited for prioritizing source-driven causality in an industry often critiqued for narrative distortions.[38]Criticisms and Controversies
Bextor's candidacy for Change UK in the 2019 European Parliament elections for South East England elicited backlash from Brexit advocates, who derided the party as an elitist venture out of touch with voters prioritizing national sovereignty and immigration controls following the 2016 referendum.[39] The party's campaign, which sought to block Brexit and advocate for a second referendum, resonated poorly with Leave voters, contributing to Change UK's collapse: it garnered just 571,846 votes nationally (3.3% share) and zero seats, with South East results showing approximately 4.7% in sampled locales like Runnymede, forfeiting deposits amid a member exodus and internal defections by late 2019.[40] Analysts linked this electoral failure to the party's perceived disconnect from empirical public sentiment on EU integration, as evidenced by the Brexit Party's dominance in capturing sovereignty-focused support.[40] In his documentary work, Bextor has faced limited critique, primarily on stylistic grounds rather than substantive bias or factual errors. For instance, a review of Nosferatu: The Real Story (2024) faulted his intermittent voiceover narration for disrupting the film's atmospheric immersion, though it praised the historical exploration.[38] Similarly, viewer feedback on Oppenheimer: The Real Story (2023) noted missed opportunities to delve deeper into the subject's psychological complexities despite verifiable biographical details.[41] No widespread accusations of ideological slant have emerged, and his "real story" series—challenging popularized narratives through archival evidence—has avoided major scandals, though its niche distribution has constrained broader scrutiny or impact. Bextor maintains a low-profile personal life, with no verifiable familial or ethical controversies beyond routine career transitions, such as the 2018 sale of his Lewes-area home.[15]References
- https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q7352252
