Administrator
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This is taken from The Daily Telegraph:
Keith Samuel (Filed: 09/03/2006)
Keith Samuel, who died on January 30 aged 66, was the BBC's most successful head of publicity, occupying a unique place in the esteem of his BBC masters and the journalists with whom he frequently tangled.
Samuel's value to his bosses at BBC Television was that he knew almost everything going on inside that labyrinthine organisation and much about newspapers, so that he was able to warn of tricky situations lying in wait.
When EastEnders was increased from two to three weekly episodes, the departing producer concocted a lurid plot involving a pub siege, gunplay and threats of sexual violence. Samuel alone realised that such a scenario before the 9pm watershed would give the press a field day; some heavy rewriting was ordered. Grade, now BBC chairman, tried to take Samuel, whom he considered "a model chief press officer", to Channel 4 when he became chief executive. But Samuel, who had been 26 years with the Corporation, stayed at Television Centre as Controller and a member of the BBC Board of Management.
His first chore each day was to visit senior executives with cuttings from the papers. If one had a meeting with journalists, Samuel would write his speech, and say: "Here's what they're going to ask, and here's what you tell them." He stayed late at work on the ground that an uncleared in-tray was "an unexploded hand grenade with the pin out".
Keith Samuel was born on October 11 1939. On leaving school he joined the Brighton and Hove Herald, and spent 12 years with Southern Television at Southampton. In 1972 he was recruited to the BBC as publicity officer for sport and outside programmes, then rose to head of television publicity. He organised the publicity for general elections and the 60th anniversary of BBC Television in 1986. He instituted spectacular programme launches, ran a campaign to raise the licence fee, and did a spell as a producer on Radio 4's Today.
Sometimes his determination that the Beeb should always be presented in a favourable light led to clashes with journalists.
A former Daily Telegraph critic, Richard Last, once spent half an hour trying to persuade Samuel to make a particular preview available, driving Samuel to shout down the phone: "Will you stop telling me how to do my bloody job!" Both receivers were slammed down, but the incident was forgotten when they met two days later.
At one time weighing 18 stone, Samuel was known, with his carrying voice, as "Boomer", which became a term of endearment.
Away from the BBC, Samuel played trombone with jazz musicians such as Nat Gonella, George Chisholm, Kenny Ball and Kenny Baker, as well as the Gateway band in Southampton.
With his wife, Judy, who survives him with their two sons, he paid a number of visits to New Orleans, where he once made an impromptu appearance with an all-female quartet in a jazz bar.
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