Known for Acting

Born in Liverpool in 1940, Neville Smith, a one time collaborator of director Ken Loach, is one of a number of working-class actors and writers to have transformed the subject-matter and tone of television drama in the 1960s and 1970s. He was responsible for two of Loach's finest television films - 'The Golden Vision' (The Wednesday Play, BBC, tx. 17/4/1968) and After a Lifetime (ITV, tx. 18/7/1971) - but also developed a partnership with the director Stephen Frears, for whom he wrote the cult British detective film, Gumshoe (UK/US, 1971).
1987
as Police Inspector
1987
as Cinema Manager
1963
as Youth (uncredited)
1971
as Arthur
1971
Writer
1983
as Manager
1987
as Wedding Guest
1982
Writer
1979
as Cyril
1978
as Neville
1971
as Jerry
1978
as Hopkins
1976
as Tony Scannell
1976
Writer
1965
as He
1964
as D'Argenson
1979
as Christian Harvey
1979
Writer
1969
as Spider
1967
as Eddie