British Reggae Band. |
ibiza classifieds |
Former wife of Prince Andrew. Now presenter, host and spokesperson |
English Band |
Professor Robinson a prominent adviser to the UK Government |
One of Britain’s most popular actresses and comediennes. 'Beattie' in classic BT ads. Unique one woman show. |
One of the most articulate and acute songwriters of the postpunk era |
Award-winning broadcaster specialising in environment, transport, energy, development, public health, and risk. Currently a senior correspondent for BBC Radio 4 Today Programme. |
UK jazz/pop act |
America's most popular comedian |
Vocal and instrumental group, all born England. |
English Group |
After Dinner Speakers: Johnny Orchestra Dankworth, Bad Manners, Jude Law
Most of the world knows Dankworth best as Cleo Laine's longtime husband and accompanist, but he's been a steady, if not especially inventive player for many decades. He started his career in novelty and traditional ensemble called The Garbage Men led by Freddy Mirfield. Dankworth studied at the Royal Academy of Music from 1944 - 1946, then took playing jobs on transatlantic liners in order to come to America and hear jazz. He switched to alto sax in the late '40s, aand in 1948 was a founding member of the Club Eleven. He began the Johnny Dankworth Seven in 1950, and from 1953 to 1964 led a large jazz band featuring his wife Cleo Laine. A numbe of top players passed through, among them Derek Smith, Alan Branscombe, Danny Moss, Peter King, Ronnie Ross and current comic/actor Dudley Moore. Dankworth became Laine's music director in 1971 and trimmed the band down to 10 pieces. Then in the early '80s he formed a touring quintet. Dankworth's profile as a composer is bigger than as a player; he's written operatic works, pieces for a jazz band with symphony orchestra and film scores. He and Laine formed The Wavendon Allmusic Plan, a cultural organization attracting international performers from every sphere appearing in its 300 seat concert hall, in 1969. Dankworth has also done hundreds of lectures and conducted classes, workshops and seminars. He was honored for his contributions to jazz in England in 1974.