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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ken_HughesKen Hughes - Wikipedia

    Ken Hughes. Kenneth Graham Hughes (19 January 1922 – 28 April 2001) [2] was an English film director and screenwriter. He worked on over 30 feature films between 1952 and 1981, including the 1968 musical fantasy film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, based on the Ian Fleming novel of the same name. [3] His other notable works included The Trials of ...

  2. Ken Hughes is a leading consumer behaviouralist and customer experience strategist who speaks on topics such as AI, disruption, innovation and change. He is the author of Blue Dot Consumer and the King of CX, and has spoken at Google, Red Bull and other events.

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0400731Ken Hughes - IMDb

    Ken Hughes (1922-2001) was a British filmmaker who worked on various genres and projects, from crime dramas to musicals. He is best known for writing and directing Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968), based on Ian Fleming's children's book.

    • Writer, Director, Producer
    • January 19, 1922
    • Ken Hughes
    • April 28, 2001
  4. Ken Hughes was a British filmmaker who worked on various genres and projects, from crime dramas to musicals to historical epics. He is best known for adapting Ian Fleming's Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and William Shakespeare's Joe MacBeth.

    • January 19, 1922
    • April 28, 2001
  5. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is a 1968 American-British musical fantasy film directed by Ken Hughes and produced by Albert R. Broccoli. It stars Dick Van Dyke, Sally Ann Howes, Lionel Jeffries, Gert Fröbe, Anna Quayle, Benny Hill, James Robertson Justice, Robert Helpmann, Heather Ripley and Adrian Hall. The film is based on the 1964 children's ...

  6. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: Directed by Ken Hughes. With Dick Van Dyke, Sally Ann Howes, Lionel Jeffries, Gert Fröbe. A down-on-his-luck inventor turns a broken-down Grand Prix car into a fancy vehicle for his children, and then they go off on a magical fantasy adventure to save their grandfather in a far-off land.

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  8. by Stephen Vagg. Ken Hughes was one of those directors I used to dismiss on the basis of a traumatic childhood experience. One day in high school, a history teacher locked us inside the assembly hall and forced us to watch the 1970 epic Cromwell, a sluggardly dull trudge through the English Civil War. Hughes’ name was plastered all over it ...