Denise O'Donoghue

Last updated

Denise O'Donoghue, OBE (born 13 April 1955, in Wembley) is a British television production company executive.

Contents

Early life

She attended the Catholic St Dominic's Convent Grammar School in north-west London (became St Dominic's Sixth Form College in 1979). She graduated in 1979 with a BA in Politics from University of York. [1]

Career

With Rory McGrath and Jimmy Mulville, she co-founded the independent British TV production company Hat Trick Productions in 1986. As a television producer, O'Donoghue has worked on shows such as the original British version of Whose Line is it Anyway? , and Have I Got News for You . [2] McGrath left the company in 1992.

In 2003, O'Donoghue and Mulville, as the remaining co-founders of Hat Trick, were listed in The Observer as two of the 50 funniest people in Britain. [3]

Personal life

O'Donoghue married Mulville in 1987. They divorced in the mid-1990s but continued to work together. In 2006, she married Michael Holland, an oil shipping businessman, whose wife, Jane Attenborough (daughter of Richard Attenborough), their daughter Lucy, and his mother, Jane Holland, drowned in the tsunami in December 2004. He founded the charity Oil Aid.

She was appointed an OBE for services to television in the New Year Honours list of 1999. [4]

Notes

  1. University of York, press release, 29 June 2006 Archived 6 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 1 February 2009
  2. O'Donoghue on IMDb
  3. "The A-Z of laughter (part two)". The Guardian. 7 December 2003.
  4. Honours list from the BBC

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jane Seymour (actress)</span> English actress (born 1951)

Jane Seymour is an English actress. After making her screen debut as an uncredited extra in the 1969 musical comedy Oh! What a Lovely War, Seymour transitioned to leading roles in film and television, including a leading role in the television series The Onedin Line (1972–1973) and the role of psychic Bond girl Solitaire in the James Bond film Live and Let Die (1973).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rory McGrath</span> English comedian

Patrick Rory McGrath is a British comedian, television personality, and writer. He came to prominence in the comedy show Who Dares Wins and was a regular panellist on the game show They Think It's All Over for many years. He acted in the sitcom Chelmsford 123 and appeared in the ITV reality show Sugar Free Farm.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Griff Rhys Jones</span> Welsh born comedian, actor and TV host

Griffith Rhys Jones, often known and credited as Griff Rhys Jones, is a Welsh comedian, writer, actor, and television presenter. Rhys Jones starred in a number of television series with his comedy partner, Mel Smith. He and Smith came to national attention in the 1980s for their work in the BBC television comedy sketch shows Not the Nine O'Clock News and Alas Smith and Jones.

Rosamunde Pilcher, OBE was a British novelist, best known for her sweeping novels set in Cornwall. Her books have sold over 60 million copies worldwide. Early in her career she was published under the pen name Jane Fraser. In 2001, she received the Corine Literature Prize's Weltbild Readers' Prize for Winter Solstice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hat Trick Productions</span> British independent TV production company

Hat Trick Productions is an independent British production company that produces television and radio programmes, mainly specialising in comedy, based in London.

<i>Chelmsford 123</i> British TV series or programme

Chelmsford 123 is a British television situation comedy produced for Channel 4 by Hat Trick Productions. Chelmsford ran for two series, of six and seven episodes respectively, in 1988 and 1990.

James Thomas Mulville is an English comedian, comedy writer, producer and television presenter. He is best known for co-founding the British independent television production company Hat Trick Productions with Denise O'Donoghue and Rory McGrath. In 2003, Mulville and O'Donoghue, as co-founders of Hat Trick, were listed in The Observer as two of the 50 funniest people in Britain.

Who Dares Wins is a British television comedy sketch show, an adaptation of BBC Radio 4's Injury Time, broadcast between 1983 and 1988, featuring Jimmy Mulville, Rory McGrath, Philip Pope, Julia Hills and Tony Robinson. It was one of the first TV outlets for alternative comedy and was broadcast by Channel 4 late at night in a first attempt at "Post-Pub television". It was eventually aired by the Playboy Channel in cable television outlets in the United States.

Michael John Attenborough is an English theatre director.

Yvonne Jones Brewster is a Jamaican actress, theatre director and businesswoman, known for her role as Ruth Harding in the BBC television soap opera Doctors. She co-founded the theatre companies Talawa in the UK and The Barn in Jamaica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jed Mercurio</span> British television writer, producer and director

Gerald Gary "Jed" Mercurio is a British television writer, producer, director and novelist. A former hospital doctor and Royal Air Force officer, Mercurio has been ranked among UK television's leading writers. In 2017, Mercurio was awarded a Fellowship of the Royal Television Society and the Baird Medal by RTS Midlands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St Dominic's Sixth Form College</span> Sixth form college boarding (ex) school in Harrow, Greater London, England

St Dominic's Sixth Form College is a selective Roman Catholic sixth form college on Harrow on the Hill, England founded in 1878, originally founded as a boarding school. The college was opened and initiated by Cardinal Hume.

Jane Mary Attenborough was an English arts administrator and arts manager. The eldest daughter of the actor and filmmaker Richard Attenborough and the actress Sheila Sim, she was first employed as overseas membership secretary at the Royal Academy of Dance. Attenborough later joined the Arts Council of Great Britain to its national touring programme in 1979 before moving to the Rambert Dance Company as dance liaison officer, expanding its education programme from schools activities to local community events.

Maureen Jane Beattie is an Irish-born, Scottish actress of both stage and screen.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Attenborough</span> British actor (1923–2014)

Richard Samuel Attenborough, Baron Attenborough, was an English actor, film director and producer.

Lesley Walker is a British film and television editor with more than thirty feature film credits. She came into prominence in the 1980s, when she "developed a fast and snappy editing style in the decade, with A Letter to Brezhnev (1985), Mona Lisa, Cry Freedom (1987), and Shirley Valentine." She has worked extensively with directors Terry Gilliam and Richard Attenborough.

Anna Carragher is an Irish former broadcasting executive and television producer. From 2000 to 2006, she was Controller of BBC Northern Ireland.

Celeste Dandeker is a British dancer who fell and was left with quadriplegia. She is known for co-founding the Candoco Dance Company which features both disabled and able-bodied dancers. She has danced, designed costumes, created dances and she became the artistic director and then patron of Candoco.

John Steven Rule Stroud, was a British television director and producer, who contributed to popular UK television comedy programmes over three decades.

Charlotte Isabel Attenborough is a British stage, film and television actress known for her appearances in Jane Eyre (1996) and Jeeves and Wooster. She is the daughter of Richard Attenborough and Sheila Sim.