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Reg Grundy

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Occupation
  
Television Producer

Children
  
Kim Grundy

Name
  
Reg Grundy

Books
  
Reg Grundy

Role
  
Entrepreneur

Parents
  
Roy Grundy, Lillian Lees

Spouse
  
Joy Chambers (m. 1971)


Reg Grundy 1401695533793jpg


Full Name
  
Reginald Roy Grundy

Born
  
4 August 1923 (
1923-08-04
)
Sydney, Australia

Movies and TV shows
  
Similar People
  
Joy Chambers, Stig Anderson, Lasse Hallstrom, Chuck Woolery, John Davidson

Interview with reg grundy a current affair australia 20 sep 2010


Reginald Roy "Reg" Grundy (4 August 1923 – 6 May 2016) was an Australian entrepreneur and media mogul, one of the pioneers and most successful of his generation, best known for his numerous television productions. He was the creator of game shows such as Blankety Blanks and Wheel of Fortune, before later diversifying into soap operas and serials including Prisoner, The Young Doctors, Sons and Daughters and Neighbours, which was inducted into the Logie Hall of Fame in 2005.

Contents

Reg Grundy Reg Grundy

Reg grundy s wheel of fortune 1959


Early life

Reg Grundy wwwmuseumtvoldsitehttpdocsarchivesetvGhtml

Reginald Roy Grundy was born on 4 August 1923 in Sydney, New South Wales, to Roy Grundy and Lillian Lees. Grundy served in the Australian Army during World War II as a Sergeant stationed in Sydney in the 1 Motor Division Signals. He enlisted in December 1941 and was discharged in August 1946.

Career

Reg Grundy Book Review Reg Grundy

Grundy started his media career as a boxing and general sports commentator for the Sydney radio station 2SM in 1947. While he was working at 2CH Sydney in 1957, Grundy conceived and hosted the Wheel of Fortune game show on radio, which moved to Channel Nine two years later. He founded his own production company Reg Grundy Organisation in 1960, and began producing game shows for the Australian and overseas market, before eventually branching out into drama in 1973. In 1977, he co-produced ABBA: The Movie.

Reg Grundy httpscdntheconversationcomfiles121659area1

The company produced several successful television soap operas and drama series including Class of '74, Class of '75, The Restless Years, The Young Doctors, Prisoner, Glenview High, Sons and Daughters and Neighbours. Grundy was the first person to sell an Australian drama to America (Prisoner) and the first to sell an Australian quiz show to the UK (Going for Gold). He subsequently started the US-based company Reg Grundy Productions, which produced the 1980s NBC daytime game shows $ale of the Century and Scrabble, as well as Time Machine, Bruce Forsyth's Hot Streak for ABC and Scattergories.

Reg Grundy Reg Grundy dies aged 92 at Bermuda home TV producer created

The Grundy Organisation was ultimately owned by Grundy Worldwide Ltd, based in the tax haven of Bermuda. In 1995, he sold the Grundy Organisation to the media and publishing company Pearson PLC, now FremantleMedia, for $386 million. Grundy owned the private media investment company RG Capital which had shares in several FM radio stations. Grundy also had shares in WAM Capital, Austereo, Argus Solutions and Photon Group.

Photography

Reg Grundy Australian TV legend Reg Grundy has died aged 92 Geelong Advertiser

Grundy had a lifelong passion for wildlife photography. He published a book of photographs in 2005, The Wildlife of Reg Grundy. In June 2009, an exhibition of photographs of Bermuda Longtail birds by Grundy, "Longtails: The Bermuda Dream", opened in The Rick Faries Gallery at the Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art.

Personal life

Reg Grundy Australian TV legend Reg Grundy has died aged 92 Geelong Advertiser

Grundy married Patricia Lola Powell in 1954 and they had a daughter, Kim. After Grundy and Powell divorced, he married the actress and author Joy Chambers in 1971. The couple met at a television audition in the 1960s. Chambers was 18 and Grundy was in his forties. They renewed their vows several times. Grundy and Chambers moved to Bermuda in 1982.

Reg Grundy Reg Grundy TV icon

In 2015, the Australian Financial Review listed Grundy as Australia's 59th richest individual, with a wealth of $809 million. Grundy published an eponymous autobiography in 2010. He was the owner of a yacht named Boadicea, which was sold in 2009.

Death

Reg Grundy Reg Grundy took Australian TV to the world SBS News

Grundy died on 6 May 2016 at his Bermuda home, with his family by his side. After his death was announced, many tributes were paid to Grundy. Presenter Andrew Denton commented "I'm sure the record will show that more Australians have watched more hours of Reg Grundy television than that of any other individual." While actress Jackie Woodburne, who worked on Grundy productions Neighbours, Prisoner and The Young Doctors, stated that "Reg was a true groundbreaker in Australian television in the 70s and 80s, and beyond in light entertainment and drama."

Tracy Grimshaw, who interviewed Grundy in 2010, said "RG was a pioneer in game shows, in drama, in soapies. He was a star maker. But he totally rejected the limelight. He only gave one television interview in his life, and I was privileged and fascinated to be the one who spoke with him." Grimshaw's interview with Grundy was rebroadcast during the 9 May edition of A Current Affair. Ian Hogg, whose company bought Grundy Organisation, announced that FremantleMedia were thinking of a permanent way to honour Grundy.

Honours

Grundy was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the New Years Honours of 1983, and was made a Companion of the Order of Australia in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 2008. He received the International Emmy Founders Award in 1996 and the AFI Raymond Longford Award in 2010. In July 2004, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy by the University of Queensland.

Colloquially, in Australia, "Reg Grundies", or "Grundies", is rhyming slang for "undies" (underpants).

References

Reg Grundy Wikipedia