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  1. Apr 8, 2021 · Soon after, talks about a brand-new live music television show were discussed with Andrea Wonfor, the inventor of The Tube and Malcolm Gerrie, who would go onto become the show’s producer. Ms Llewellyn-reeve told me: “I remember sitting round our canteen at Tyne Tees and Andrea Wonfor and Malcolm Gerrie saying to me ‘Oh we are going to do ...

  2. Before The Tube, there was kids’ TV show Razzmatazz which brought small screen anarchy to the masses. Presenter Lyn Spencer and producer Malcolm Gerrie tell the tale of how this pioneering tea-time programme turned Newcastle into a hotbed of 80s pop. By Dan Biggane

  3. Nov 4, 2022 · Malcolm Gerrie recalled: “Everybody said it would never work in Newcastle and that wed never get the stars up there. But look who we got. It did work." Many of pop...

  4. Nov 6, 2013 · Thirty years after his last presenting job, TV producer Malcolm Gerrie is back on camera talking to some of music’s biggest hitters. SAM WONFOR nudges him off the interviewe­r’s chair to hear more.

  5. May 31, 1998 · Then, Ray Connolly, the writer of Stardust, put me in touch with a woman at Tyne Tees TV called Andrea Wonfor, and, in 1977 she offered me a job. The first show I worked on there was called ...

  6. Jan 15, 2016 · From there we “laugh at the crazy adventures” of Popeye and get the first ITN news bulletin, followed by the first local news and then a ten minute address by the Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan – a former MP for Stockton on Tees (he would take his title, Earl Stockton, from there a few years later)

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  8. Feb 14, 2022 · In all but the number of episodes (Andrea pitched six hour-long episodes, which was expanded to 20 one hundred-minute episodes), the Wonfors and Malcolm Gerrie were granted full creative control on account of their proven track record for producing light entertainment and music specials for Tyne Tees.

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