Bill Collins' Golden Years Of Hollywood
Bill Collins has been described as "Mr.
Movies of Australia". He has presented films on television and on
video since 1963 and has come to seem like a trusted and enthusiastic
guarantor of whatever film he happens to be presenting.
As a high school English teacher, long
interested in the cinema and its possible role in the classroom, he
completed a Master's degree in Education on the role of film in
education and took up a position as a lecturer in English at the
Sydney Teachers' College.
In 1963 he made his first appearance on
television, producing and presenting a series of filmed segments on
film appreciation. That same year also saw him compiling a weekly
column the Australia's television guide, TV Times, entitled
"The Golden Years of Hollywood". The column consisted of a series of
reviews of upcoming Hollywood films to be screened on Australia's
three commercial networks as well as the public broadcaster, the ABC.
Collins' reviews were invariably to the point and reliable in their
production credits at a time when this kind of information was not so
easily available as it is nowadays.
To write these reviews, Collins was
having to preview many of the films. It seemed quite logical, then,
when TCN Channel 9 (owned by Consolidated Press who co-published TV
Times with the ABC) decided to have Collins host a Saturday night
movie, with the generic name of The Golden Years of Hollywood. Collins
continued to host the Saturday night movie on Channel 9 in Sydney
until 1975 when he moved to the Seven Network. Channel 9 disputed that
Collins had the legal right to call his Saturday night movie program
The Golden Years of Hollywood and so the Seven program became
Bill Collins' Golden Years of Hollywood.
The change suited Collins because his
career as a movie host was now taking off. His Saturday night movie
was now increasingly seen nationally and as his earnings increased
Collins quit his teaching job to concentrate full time on his
television work.
At Seven Collins began to host a Sunday
daytime film, Bill Collins' Picture Time and also a more
general program featuring film clips and promotion for new releases,
Bill Collins' Show Business.
Collins moved yet again in 1980 in a move
that made him even busier. Rupert Murdoch had recently acquired the
third commercial network which he re-named Network Ten. The latter had
always lagged in the ratings and Murdoch was determined to change this
situation even if it meant spending a lot of money to hire Collins
away. Collins now became a national figure to the point that other
movie hosts on regional stations ceased to have any importance and
little recognition. By this time he seemed to be everywhere.
Not only did he host a double feature on
a Saturday night under the old title of The Golden Years of
Hollywood, a double feature on Sunday lunch time and afternoon,
the midday movie during the week on a capital city by capital city
basis but also an afternoon book review and promotion program.
Thanks both to the size of his program
budgets as well as his commercial standing, Collins was able to do
live interviews with major Hollywood actors including his very
favourite, Clint Eastwood. He also published two books, lavishly
illustrated, on his favourite films. In addition Collins also had his
own series of Hollywood feature films on video which he hosted -
Bill Collins' Movie Collection. Collins also made professional
visits to fans across the country, these taking the form of breakfasts
and lunches. To carry out these massive commitments Collins now had a
staff of researchers and his own press and publicity agents.
In 1987 because of the introduction of
new cross-ownership rules in Australia media, Murdoch sold off Network
Ten. Collins continued there until 1994. The network suffered from
financial problems, so there was a curtailment of his
programs. However, in 1995 he, in effect, rejoined the Murdoch camp
when he began presenting films on Australia's first cable network,
Foxtel, owned and operated by Murdoch's News Corporation and Telstra
Corporation. Collins now hosts films produced by Twentieth Century-Fox
on Foxtel Channel.
There is no gainsaying the achievement of
Bill Collins. He appeared on Australian television at a time when
Hollywood films, not only of the 1930s and 1940s, but also of the
1950s were becoming available for television programming. He has
helped to make Hollywood films popular with generations who were born
after the Hollywood studio era.
As befits a former teacher, his
introductions to particular films are invariably interesting,
enthusiastic and well researched. He will often display a still or a
poster, brandish the book on which a film is based (he has an
extensive collection of these, often extremely rare books) or play
some of a film's theme music. Altogether Bill Collins is one of the
most durable and valuable figures in the history of Australian
television.
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