Val Parnell


Valentine Charles Parnell was a British television managing director and presenter, actor and theatrical impresario.
A former staple of stage production, his career in television started with the launch of the ITV network in 1955.

Life and career

Parnell was born in London, the son of Fred Russell, a ventriloquist, and began his theatrical career at age 13 working as an office boy for a music-hall circuit. By 1945 he had become managing director of the Moss Empires music hall and variety circuit, in charge of some of London's most well-known theatres.
He auditioned and signed 12-year-old Julie Andrews for her first professional performance and introduced her to her manager, Charles Tucker, also known as Uncle Charlie Tucker.
In 1956 he was appointed Managing Director of Associated Television. He took a personal interest in the station's output and presented the weekly musical variety show Val Parnell's Sunday Night at the London Palladium until 1965.
He lost his position on the ATV board to Lew Grade in 1962 and retired in 1966.
He died of a heart attack on 22 September 1972 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium where a memorial plaque was erected in the West Courtyard at the end of the columbarium.