Hughie Green
Hughie Green was born on 2nd February 1920 in Kent.
His first show was the hugely popular Double Your Money, one of the first TV quiz shows. This, coupled with the later The Sky's The Limit proved he was an entertainer with an uncanny knack with ordinary people.
However, he will probably be most remembered for his role as the presenter of the TV version of Opportunity Knocks, and in the programme stars such as Bobby Crush, Bernie Flint and Mr. Muscles pay tribute to the man who launched their careers.
Eventually, Green's obsessiveness and reputation for being difficult made him too many enemies in TV management, and his show was canceled. Try as he might, he could not find a way back into television, and his career was effectively over.
It was not until his death on 3rd May 1997 that he really moved back into the public eye. The controversial revelations at his funeral were seized by the tabloids, and the ripples from that day are still being felt.
Golders Green Crematorium,
Monica Rose
In 1963, a 15-year-old girl called Monica Rose
appeared on the show. At the time she was working as a junior accounts clerk, and she won £8 answering questions on "Famous Women". Hughie Green took to the girl so much she was invited back as a hostess on the show the following year and his sequel show The Sky's the Limit. This is one of the rare occasions when someone who has been a contestant later becomes part of the show. Some years later, Rose later tragically committed suicide.
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Douglas
Isle of Man
Actually we didn`t meet Hughie Green, he wasn't introduced to us and he never spoke a word to us!
Id seen an advert outside the Gaiety Theatre asking for talent to audition for an Opportunity Knocks special that was being staged on a Sunday night at the theatre.. We didn't work Sunday nights so I thought it would be a good idea to try and get the Rattlers onto the show.
We carted our instruments and amps from the Villiers to the Gaiety Theatre on a trolley we borrowed from the Villiers,on one very pleasant summers afternoon in the summer of 1966. The pleasantness soon came to an abrupt end!
We decided to do the Cilla Black number Sing A Rainbow with Martyn playing the guitar and Jan Barrie singing. No sooner had we started the number when Hughie`s director came up to the front of the stage and asked us to turn it down, we were too loud. Martyn turned his guitar down and started again. The director came to me again and said Mr. Green still thinks it`s too loud! This time I smiled at him and apologized, trying to placate him. He simply said to me, "Don't smile, this isn't funny son!".
We managed to get through the song with our instruments practically turned off and returned to the dressing room feeling a little peeved.
Shortly, Tony Holland, the man with dancing muscles, came into the dressing room and informed us that Mr. Green would like to hear us again, I must say Tony was a very nice chap, but Jan said to him, "If this is show biz, tell Mr. Green to stick it!" A slightly shocked Tony Holland left the dressing room and I thought, Jan`s blown it for us, but she was perfectly right, I wish I had had the guts to say the same.
As we were getting our gear out of the theatre Mr. Green was rehearsing a dance routine with Monica Rose and neither of them gave us a second glance.
My one regret is that when the director was stood in the pits talking to me, his teeth were perfectly aligned with my Beatle boot..............
Tony Holland
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Tony Holland was an Opportunity Knocks winner who went on to do clubs and cabaret. Later, after a few setbacks, found religion. Now in his early sixties, still has a superb body.
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