Bruce Gyngell (8 July 1929 –
7 September 2000), born in Melbourne
, Victoria
was a leading Australian
television executive. He was the head of
many television networks in Australia,
including the Nine Network, the
Seven Network during the 1970s and
also as deputy chairman of Associated TeleVision in the United Kingdom
. He was also the first
Chief Executive of the
Special Broadcasting Service
(
SBS) in Australia
during the 1980s. Gyngell also created the
Australian
Broadcasting Tribunal, the forerunner of the
Australian Broadcasting
Authority, and was its first Chairman in 1977.
In the United Kingdom
, he was Managing Director at TV-am between 1984 and 1993, and Yorkshire Television (which by then had
become "Yorkshire-Tyne
Tees Television" after taking over Tyne Tees Television).
Gyngell's media career began in the record industry, in the
mid-1950s, when he was hired by Australian label
Festival Records.
He was soon poached by
Sir Frank Packer, who hired him to
assist in the establishment of TCN
-9, Australia's first commercial television station,
in 1956. Gyngell is often credited as being the first person
to ever appear on
Australian
television on 16 September 1956 when he spoke the words, 'Good
evening, and welcome to television'. However, many people had
already appeared in television test broadcasts in Australia prior
to Gyngell, including Alan Rowe, comedy duo "Ada & Elsie",
"Happy" Hammond, and Graham Kennedy.
Gyngell would repeat his "opening night" words upon the opening of
the
Special Broadcasting
Service in 1980, and again in 1995, when
cable television with (
Optus Television). He was the founder of
the Nine Network's most popular music-variety program, the
long-running
Bandstand, which Gyngell had adapted from the
American program of the same name.
Gyngell
died at the age of 71, on 7 September 2000 in Chelsea, London
from a cancer-related illness. Upon
Gyngell's death,
Australian Prime Minister John
Howard paid tribute to Gyngell saying, 'It's a big loss to the
Australian television industry. In a way,
he probably contributed more to the industry than just about any
other Australian.'
sunday.ninemsn.com.au.
He is the father of designer Briony Gyngell, restaurateur Skye
Gyngell and Nine Network CEO
David
Gyngell, who is married to
Leila
McKinnon
Filmography
External links
References