Derek Ford

Derek Ford

Birthday: 6 September 1932, Essex, England, UK
Derek Ford (born 6 September 1932 in Tilbury, Essex - died 19 May 1995) was a British film director and writer, most famous for exploitation films such as The Wife Swappers (1970), Keep It Up, Jack (1974) and Diversions (1976), which was also filmed in a hardcore version.Ford began as a writer in collaboration with his brother Donald Ford (died 199... Show more »
Derek Ford (born 6 September 1932 in Tilbury, Essex - died 19 May 1995) was a British film director and writer, most famous for exploitation films such as The Wife Swappers (1970), Keep It Up, Jack (1974) and Diversions (1976), which was also filmed in a hardcore version.Ford began as a writer in collaboration with his brother Donald Ford (died 1991), originally for radio before progressing to television (The Saint (1962), Adam Adamant Lives! (1966)) and film (The Yellow Teddy Bears (1963), A Study in Terror (1965)). Ford's first foray into directing, "Los Tres Que Robbaran Una Banco" (1961), made in Spain in 1961, was an unhappy experience; however, around the same time he entered the exploitation field when he was asked to re-edit and film additional sequences for a Swedish sex film called Svenska flickor i Paris (1962), eventually released as "Paris Playgirls". Ford's directing career began proper in the late 1960s when he entered into partnership with producer Stanley A. Long, resulting in three films including the massively successful "The Wife Swappers", released in America as "The Swappers" with the tag line, "Remember when all the guy next door wanted to borrow was your lawnmower?".Ford's early 1970s films were mainly shot in London and Maldon, Essex, where he lived, while hardcore scenes meant for the European versions of his films were shot in secret at his own house, with his wife Valerie M. Ford acting as co-director and assistant. Interviewed in the book "Keeping the British End Up", fellow director Ray Selfe referred to Ford as "a male nymphomaniac", and themes of swinging, wife swapping and outwardly respectable people living double lives run throughout Ford's work. In the 1970s the two most well-known Ford films in America were Groupie Girl (1970) and Diversions (1976), starring Heather Deeley, which premiered in the Kips Bay area of Manhattan and was nominated for best foreign film by the Adult Film Association of America.In Italy he directed Proibito erotico (1978), while back in England he quit as the director of Don't Open Till Christmas (1984). In the mid-'80s he attempted to find more mainstream work and dissociate himself from his past, but what little work came his way would drag him back to exploitation film. He directed For Members Only (1960) in Italy in 1985, in which (returning to the themes of "The Wife Swappers") a group of Italian women join a "dare club", and co-directed a horror film in Sweden called Blood Tracks (1985), which also features a brief cameo role from Ford as a location scout for a rock video (his only other known acting role is as "Circus Santa Claus" in "Don't Open Till Christmas"). He was also involved in writing a never-made softcore sitcom called "Park Lane". Ford's final film, The Urge to Kill (1989), starring Peter Gordeno and Sarah Hope-Walker, has never been released, although clips from it appear in the documentary "The Wild, Wild World of Dick Randall".At the close of the 1980s, with the impending recession of the early 1990s on the horizon and no work, Ford decided to opt for a quieter life and put his ideas on paper. Leaving the film business behind him for good, he attempted a second career as an author, writing two books. His experience in the world of "B" movies along with his connections in the business reflected on the theme and setting for both books. The two books were "Panic on Sunset" (1989) and "The Casting Couch" (1990) ("the true story of broken dreams, disillusionment and fallen idols"). "Panic on Sunset" concerns George Schapner, the stressed-out manager/agent of Velma Torraine, a vamp of the silent screen whose heavy Brooklyn accent spells the end of her career as the "talkie" era approaches. A visit to a Hollywood whorehouse specializing in celebrity lookalikes provides George with an unlikely solution to their problem. "The Casting Couch" was a collaborative effort with agent Alan Selwyn, and is credited under the joint pseudonym "Selwyn Ford". Confusingly, the book portrays Selwyn Ford as an actual person.A third book, "Bella", about actress Bella Darvi and her married lover, Hollywood mogul Darryl F. Zanuck, was never completed. Ford died after a heart attack in a branch of WH Smith. According to Stanley Long's recent biography, Ford was almost penniless at the time of his death. Show less «
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