Jack Gold

Gender: Male
Born: 28th June 1930 (currently 81 years old)
Nationality: United Kingdom
Movies: Aces High, Charlie Muffin, Conflict, Escape from Sobibor, Famine, Goodnight Mister Tom, Into the Blue, Little Lord Fauntleroy, Man Friday, Murrow, Red Monarch, Sakharov, Shakespeare Comedies: The Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare Tragedies: Macbeth, She Stood Alone, Spring Awakening, The Bofors Gun, The Chain, The Medusa Touch, The Naked Civil Servant, The National Health, The National Health, The Reckoning, The Return of the Native, The Rose And The Jackal, The Sailor's Return, The Tenth Man

Jack Gold (born on 28 June 1930) is a British film and television director. He was part of the British Realist Tradition that followed Free Cinema.

Gold was born in London, and was educated at University College London (UCL). After leaving UCL, he began his career as an editor on BBC's Tonight programme. Gold became a freelance documentary filmmaker, also making dramas as a platform for his social and political observations.

He is best known for having directed films such as; The Visit (1959), The National Health (1973), The Naked Civil Servant (1975), Man Friday (1975), The Medusa Touch (1978), Charlie Muffin (1979) aka A Deadly Game (USA), The Chain (1985) and Escape From Sobibor (1987).

His other works include the televised BBC/Lifetime version of The Merchant of Venice (1980) and Macbeth (1983) -- the latter starring Nicol Williamson -- as well as the rare but effective made-for-TV adaptation of Graham Greene's The Tenth Man (1988), starring Anthony Hopkins. He also directed the final episode of Inspector Morse: "The Remorseful Day".

Gold is married to actor Denyse Alexander, with whom he shares a birthday (born one year apart on 28 June 1930 and 1931). Gold's nephew Ricky

More...

(This is information generated from a Wikipedia article, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.)