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Richard B Goodwin


Richard B Goodwin, Film Producer (Born 13th September, 1934 in Bombay, India)

In a career spanning 40 years, Richard Goodwin has been involved in a number of well-known British films. As a film producer, he received an Academy Award nomination for A Passage to India (1984), as well as BAFTA nominations. His filmography includes: Romeo and Juliet, The Tales of Beatrix Potter, Murder on the Orient Express, Death on the Nile, The Mirror Crack'd, Evil under the Sun, A Passage to India, Little Dorrit, and Seven Years in Tibet.

Born in Bombay, in 1934, Richard Goodwin grew up in India until the end of the war. He travelled to England in the first convoy to reach the Mediterranean through the Suez Canal. After serving out his time at boarding school, he joined the film industry as a teaboy at the Rank Organisation. Goodwin then spent his national service in the Malayan jungle, and joined the S.A.S in 1952. On his return to England, he turned down a place at Cambridge to return to the film industry, as a military adviser on "A Hill in Korea", starring George Baker. By 1956, Goodwin had begun his long association with fellow producer John Brabourne, and together they were to make films for more than 35 years.

Richard Goodwin learnt his trade as a location and production manager, and after working as associate producer on Franco Zeferelli’s "Romeo and Juliet",(1968), he produced "Tales of Beatrix Potter", featuring the Royal Ballet. John Brabourne's father in law, Lord Mountbatten, secured the film rights to a number of Agatha Christie novels, from the Dame herself. By 1974, Goodwin and Brabourne had produced the first of the “all star” adaptations of Christie’s novels, " Murder on the Orient Express". The film was a success, grossing $35 million from a budget of $1.9 million. Directed by Sidney Lumet, the cast included: Albert Finney, Lauren Bacall, Sean Connery, and Ingrid Bergman. "Death on the Nile" followed in 1978, with another all-star cast, headed by Peter Ustinov as Hercule Poirot. The later adaptions, "The Mirror Crack'd", in 1980, and "Evil Under the Sun", in 1982, received mixed reviews, and disappointed at the box office.


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