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Gareth Edwards () (born in 1965) is a radio and television producer and writer. He is the great-grandson of Hollywood pioneer Albert E. Smith, founder of Vitagraph Studios. ==TV and radio career== He has worked on a number of radio and TV programmes including ''Comedy Firsts'' (ITV, 1995), ''The Big Town All Stars'' (BBC Radio 4, 1998), ''Spaced'' (Channel 4, 1999), ''The Bigger Issues'' (BBC Radio 4, 2000), ''Parsons and Naylor's Pull-Out Sections'' (BBC Radio 2, 2001), ''Dead Ringers'' (BBC Two, 2003, 2004), ''Posh Nosh'' (BBC Two, 2003), ''Vent'' (BBC Radio 4, 2006–09) Edwards produced ''That Mitchell and Webb Sound'' (BBC Radio 4, 2003–09), which won a Sony Silver Award in 2004; he also produced the TV version of this, starring the same David Mitchell and Robert Webb, entitled ''That Mitchell and Webb Look'' (BBC Two, 2006–10), which won best comedy BAFTA in 2006. Edwards also produced ''The One Ronnie'' (BBC One, 2010), a one-off comedy television sketch show that aired on BBC One on Christmas Day 2010 to celebrate the 80th birthday of Ronnie Corbett and ''Still Open All Hours'' (BBC One Boxing Day 2013). He has also produced ''Bleak Expectations'' (BBC Radio 4, 2007–11),〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Sanjeev Kohli and Gareth Edwards: 7 on 7 )〕 the cult radio show starring Anthony Head and the TV spin-off to this, ''The Bleak Old Shop of Stuff'' (BBC Two, 2011). Gareth Edwards also produced the short-lived radio comedy series ''The Airport'' (BBC Radio 4, 1995), which was the first radio comedy series in Britain to feature self-representative experiences of black people.〔Alison Donnell (ed.), (''Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture'' ), Routledge, 2002.〕 Edwards was appointed acting head of radio comedy at the BBC from November 2008 to May 2009, though announced subsequently that he was returning to producing and writing. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Gareth Edwards (producer)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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