Harry Pringle (producer)

Harry Pringle (1903 in Australia  after 1959) was a radio and television producer who worked on light entertainment programmes in England and Australia.

Harry Pringle
Harry Pringle in 1954, on board Stratheden
Born1903
Australia
DiedAfter 1959
NationalityAustralian
OccupationRadio and television producer (light entertainment)
Years active1937–59

Biography

He was the son of Harry Lempriere Pringle (c.1870, Hobart, Tasmania  1914, London, England; an operatic bass who sang at (among other houses) Covent Garden, London and the Metropolitan Opera, New York).[1] He worked in music hall, until in 1937 he became one of the first producers on BBC Television.[Note 1][3]:88–89 Between February 1937 and August 1939, he was credited 112 times as TV producer (nearly six programmes a month), three times as director, and once as editor; he was at the same time producing radio programmes.[4]

On 1 September 1939, BBC Television broadcasting was suspended because of the outbreak of World War II, and only resumed in June 1946. In 1940, Pringle relocated to Australia, where he was appointed to take charge of radio light entertainment for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).[5] He created Out of the Bag (first broadcast, 31 August 1940), a radio series described by the editor of Wireless Weekly as "the best variety show yet heard here". In June 1941, he moved to 3DB, a commercial radio station in Melbourne. In 1944, he returned to ABC as federal director of light entertainment. In 1946, he resigned to return to the BBC. In 1947, he was reappointed by ABC to his former position. In 1949, he spent six months on leave in England; while there, he produced several more programmes for the BBC. He resigned from ABC in 1954.[3]:89, 179

In 195759, he produced several programmes for ABC television on a contract basis.[3]:205–206

Selected productions

The listings include the network for which the programme was made; the years in which Pringle was involved; and (where known) the number of episodes (in parentheses).

Notes

  1. BBC Television began regular scheduled broadcasts on 2 November 1936. Pringle's first credit as producer is on 6 February 1937.[2]
gollark: I'm not convinced you understand what I'm talking about here. 018249 kOffense.
gollark: I see. What of it? That doesn't mean you can get data out, just that you can see roughly where the code for that is.
gollark: Do you mean that decryption code probably has XORs in it, or what?
gollark: What? I mean you can do asymmetric crypto or something.
gollark: With cryptography™, you can make it so that even reverse engineering will not let you get your data back.

References

  1. Brownrigg, Jeff. "The Companion to Tasmanian History: Harry Lempriere Pringle". University of Tasmania. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  2. Variety, Episode dated 6 February 1937 on IMDb
  3. Inglis, K. S. (30 November 1983). "This is the ABC: Australian Broadcasting Commission, 1932–83". Carlton, Victoria: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 978-0522842586. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  4. Harry Pringle on IMDb
  5. A London Staff Correspondent (14 August 1947). "Television Is Expanding". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
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