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Anna Home Anna Margaret Home ( ) OBE (born 13 January 1938) is an English television producer and executive who worked for most of her career at the BBC. ==Early career== After graduating from Oxford University, where she read Modern History at St Anne's College from 1956,〔Anna Home ("Whatever happened to...?" ) , ''St.Anpoint: News from St Anne’s College, Oxford'', Autumn 2004, p.6〕 Home joined the BBC in 1960. Initially working as a studio manager in BBC Radio, Home joined BBC Television in 1964 as a researcher for ''Play School''.〔 "At the time it was quite an achievement (a woman ) to get into university, not just the BBC", observed Home in 2013.〔Jane Martinson ("Blue Peter's Biddy Baxter: 'I never wanted to do anything else'" ), ''The Guardian'', 24 November 2013〕 With Joy Whitby and Molly Cox, she developed ''Jackanory'', which began its long run in 1965. "At first people were unwilling to participate in this unknown programme", Home recalled in 1997. "But when actors realised it was the opportunity to have 15 minutes' solo experience on television, they began to queue up to get on it, and having done a ''Jackanory'' became a bit like having done your ''Desert Island Discs''."〔Diana Hinds ("Television age that led to literacy" ), ''Times Educational Supplement'', 24 January 1997, in a version posted on 11 May 2008〕 Comedy actor Kenneth Williams, one of the most frequent participants in the series, recalled Home telling him: "Never sound as if you're patronizing the young."〔Kenneth Williams ''Just Williams'', Fontana, 1985, p.232〕 Committed to children's drama output, Home revived domestically produced children's drama after a period in which the idiom had been dormant on the BBC's television channels. She was involved in the direction of such children's serials as ''Mandog'' (1972), adapted by Peter Dickinson from his own novel, because budgets did not allow her to contract more experienced people.〔Alistair McGown ("Home, Anna (1938-)" ), BFI screenonline〕 ''The Changes'' (1975, made in 1973), a serial produced and adapted by Home from another Dickinson novel followed. By 1975, she was exclusively an executive producer of children's drama, and in this role commissioned the long-running ''Grange Hill'' (1978-2008) which had been rejected by several ITV companies, including Yorkshire Television whose children's department was now headed by Joy Whitby, which had questioned why children should want to watch a drama about being at school.〔Phil Redmond ''Mid term Report'', London: Century, 2012, p.95〕 ''Grange Hill'' was initially a controversial series. "As the press launched into us and No 10 was complaining loudly to the DG", Home recalled "the Department of Health became very interested – after all we were tackling just the issues they were concerned with, but better than they could."〔Jean Seaton ("War on the BBC: the triumphs and turbulence of the Thatcher years" ), ''The Guardian'', 20 February 2015 (extract from Seaton's book ''Pinkoes and Traitors: The BBC and the Nation, 1974-1987'')〕
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