
Born in Liverpool in 1940, Neville Smith, a one time collaborator of director Ken Loach, is one of a number of working-class actors and writers to have transformed the subject-matter and tone of television drama in the 1960s and 1970s. He was responsible for two of Loach's finest television films - 'The Golden Vision' (The Wednesday Play, BBC, tx. 17/4/1968) and After a Lifetime (ITV, tx. 18/7/1971) - but also developed a partnership with the director Stephen Frears, for whom he wrote the cult British detective film, Gumshoe (UK/US, 1971).

Match of the Day
1974 | 0h 30m | RATING: 0.0/10

Sling Your Hook
1969 | 0h 0m | RATING: 8.0/10
Wear a Very Big Hat
1965 | 1h 15m | RATING: 0.0/10

Wish You Were Here
1987 | 1h 32m | RATING: 6.5/10

Me! I'm Afraid of Virginia Woolf
1978 | 1h 6m | RATING: 10.0/10