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9780771007576
No one knew quite what to make of Linehan orCity Lightswhen the show started. By the current media standards, this host was hardly an eight-by-ten glossy. Impeccably groomed, he displayed elegant manners and didn't look or sound like anyone else on television. He also looked like he had just won the Irish sweepstakes; had we ever seen anyone on television,ever, who looked so thrilled to be there? Viewers who tuned in found themselves strangely attracted to the show, almost mesmerized by the presence of its off-kilter host. He was different, something to see. Across town at the public broadcaster, legendary entertainer Juliette still Canada's favourite blonde was fascinated by cbc alumnus Moses Znaimer's progress with Citytv, and was particularly taken with Linehan. "People were amazed at the way he looked," she says candidly. "He wasn't your normal tv interviewer type. He had a look that was quite different, a look that probably some producers couldn't come to grips with. He didn't have the looks for his times. "Today, of course, his looks would be completely accepted and not even questioned. I mean, look at Mick Jagger! That ain't no beauty, my dear! But back then Brian looked almost as if he had been in a car accident. His face wasn't a well-chiselled face. He looked like a boxer who had had his face bashed in a couple of times. Looking back, I think maybe he was darn lucky to be doing what he was doing at that time." Linehan's friend and former acting teacher Janine Manatis was thrilled for her pupil. "I would never have thought that Brian would be a tv 'personality,'" she admits with typical candour. "Absolutely not." As his teacher she saw aspects of his personality that she believed people would not Find appealing. "What overcame that, in my opinion, was the brilliance of his ability, which was to me absolutely unique. How he investigated, found out, looked into, and came up with information.Information. Not gossip. Gossip is the conversation of cowards. What Brian came up with wasnotgossip!" What Brian came up with was research. And yes, he really did do his own research. Not just in those early years, but for all the years that followed. "I thought that you went home at night and you had a big folder and you read a book and you did your homework," he said later. "I'd never heard the termresearchers. This was Citytv! Everybody had three jobs. It never, ever dawned on me that there was anything unusual about it." If the stars he interviewed were dazzled by him, and they were, it wasn't just because of his research. It was the way he used it to connect the dots to take them places they had never been before in an interview, regardless of what book or Film they had come on his show to sell. "You went into the Navy," he told Peter O'Toole. "You came out of the Navy two years later and applied for a scholarship at rada. Which you indeed won. You came out of rada and went straight to the Bristol Old Vic. What was happening to you during the two years in the Navy as a signalman and a decoder in the submarine services?" O'Toole stared at him, obviously intrigued. "You're a very interesting man," he remarked. Peggy Lee listened politely as Brian spoke about the rigours of touring. At least, that's what she thought they were going to be talking about. "Someone asked you," he reminded her, "Anthony, George is the author of 'Starring Brian Linehan', published 2007 under ISBN 9780771007576 and ISBN 0771007574.
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