Jane Elaine Lush (born 10 August 1952)[1] is the Chairman of BAFTA, and a former BBC executive. She left the British Broadcasting Corporation in 2006, after a career spanning over 35 years.
Lush began working for the BBC as a trainee secretary in 1970 at what is now Langham Hotel, London, but was then owned and used by the Corporation.[2] After nine years, she became a researcher. Lush told Gaby Koppel in 2018: "I think I was quite lucky in that I found myself working for women bosses at crucial times and they took me more seriously and encouraged me much more than my previously male bosses had done, to believe in myself".[3]
After periods as a production assistant and a producer working in presentation,[2] Lush oversaw Barry Norman's Film review programme. She produced the documentary A Film is Born: The Making of Yentl concerning the Barbra Streisand film Yentl (1983). During the 1980s, Lush took over the BBC's Holiday programme and extended its annual run.[3]
In 2008, former BBC newsreader Natasha Kaplinsky told how she felt Lush and her junior managers had intimidated her into participating in the BBC's high-profile Strictly Come Dancing entertainment programme in 2003. After Kaplinsky refused to participate for 6 months, the matter was escalated to the BBC One Controller, Lorraine Heggessey and when that approach failed, Lush, Head of Entertainment took Kaplinsky aside and told her "I'm sure you're not going to be penalised for not doing it".[7]
Later career
Lush left the BBC in 2007 to start up the independent production company, Splash Media,[8] its first output being The Underdog Show. Although she still shares links with the BBC, chairing the Fame Academy Bursary with trustees including Sir Paul McCartney.
Personal life
Lush married Peter Tenenbaum in 1974 and lives in north London; the couple have a daughter (born 1981) and a son (born September 1987).[citation needed] She was a close personal friend of the murdered television presenter Jill Dando.[citation needed]