Commissions
- The Roman Invasion of Britain (The History Channel/S4C)
Why they came, saw and conquered – history series with CGI and dramatic reconstructions - Merlin - The Legend (BBC)
Documentary special on the mystical wizard who brought the magic to King Arthur’s court - Rivers and Life/Afonydd (S4C/FRANCE 5)
The Amazon, Nile, Rhine, Mississippi, Ganges and Yangtze - shaping cultures, changing lives - Gladstone and Disraeli: Clash of the Titans (BBC)
Huw Edwards with a feature-length doc tracing the key political rivalry of Victorian times - Rescuing The Past (National Geographic/ITV)
Revolutionary technology opens up the Pyramids – risky and complex construction challenges - Cwm Glo, Cwm Gwyrdd (How Green Is My Valley) (S4C)
Six-part series challenging youngsters to make an ecological difference on home turf - The Missionary Position (BBC)
The couple running Britain’s first Christian sex-shop: reclaiming erotic pleasure from the Devil - Fel Arall (S4C)
The extraordinary journey of homosexuality in Wales – told in Welsh for the first time - Through Children's Eyes (BBC)
Documentary exploring the world of young children who cope with serious health issues, with the children themselves behind the camera.
- Death Road (History Channel US)
Pilot 60' episode for a 13 part series and possible returning strand The World's Most Dangerous Roads shot in Bolivia with our co-producers Towers Productions, Chicago.Travel high into the Andes on a road that has more deaths per mile than any other. - Small Country/Calon Gaeth (Feature Film/ Ffilm Sinema)
Feature film for the cinema and 4 x 1 hour period drama for television. Siân James's novel about life and love on a Pembrokeshire farm on the eve of World War I, adapted by Diana Griffiths and Stan Barstow (A Kind of Loving). - Gêm y Ganrif / Match of the Century (S4C)
A century on, state-of-the-art computer generated images recreate the greatest rugby match ever played - Wales v New Zealand in 1905 - and the 47,000 crowd who watched it. - Fit For A Change (ITV)
Fun and fitness in this entertaining six-part series as we challenge groups of friends and colleagues to make some real and healthy changes to the way they live. - Glyndwr: The Last Welsh Prince (BBC)
60 minute drama-documentary - how Owain Glyndwr's 1400 rebellion shook the English state to its very foundations. - Lloyd George: The People's Champion (BBC)
Huw Edwards presents a feature length bio-pic for BBC network television of the British Prime Minister whose policies shaped the early Welfare State, the partition of Ireland, the alignment of party politics in Britain and the post-World War I map of Europe. - Anthem (BBC)
The 150th Anniversary of Land of my Fathers / Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau. - On Show (BBC)
Eight documentary films for the flagship arts strand - individual stories ranging from opera to poetry. The latest profiles actor Michael Sheen - Legends: Matt Monro (BBC)
The smooth-voiced "British Sinatra" wasn't "Born Free" - he had a tough East End upbringing. Producer George Martin helped his career break through and he went on to conquer the United States. BBC Two/ BBC Four co-commission. - The Physics Of Rock Guitar (Channel 4)
Dr. Mark Lewney, winner of Channel 4’s Fame Lab, explodes onto the air with the science behind that revolutionary, history-changing instrument - the modern electric guitar. - Say It With Flowers (Film Drama/Drama Ffilm)
Short cinema feature - a post-Romantic drama starring Torchwood 's Eve Myles. - Fy Mab Yng Nghymru (My son in Wales) (S4C)
Powerfull documentary re-visiting new parents Inge Hanson and John Pierce Jones a year after they realise their dream of adopting their son Iwan, the boy from Haiti. - Er Lles Pawb (The State We're In) (S4C)
Six-part series examining the Welfare State sixty years after the Labour landslide of 1945. - Bread Of Heaven (BBC)
From the Age of the Saints to the heyday of the Chapel, the characters and convictions that forged the soul of a nation. The UK's most popular newsreader, Huw Edwards presents this major series - the authoritative television history of religion in Wales. - A Bloody Good Friday (Film Drama/Drama Ffilm)

- Profile: Norman Borlaug (BBC)
Matthew Parris's network profile of the "Father of the Green Revolution" - the Nobel Prize winner credited with saving one billion lives through his work in developing Dwarf Wheat. - Why Does It Always Rain On Us? (BBC)
Season of four documentaries with multimedia wrap-around celebrating the great British climate. Facts, figures, fun - and stories from those whose livelihoods depend on the weather. - Calendr Adfent (Advent Calendar) (S4C)
A month-long extravaganza - seasonal treats from Welsh stars with global recognition. - Profile: Ricardo Semler (BBC)
A network profile of maverick Brazilian business guru who runs "the world's most unusual workplace". Employees choose their own managers, set their own salaries and take breaks in the office hammocks. So how did he ever become a millionaire? - The Welsh Weekend (ITV)
From Friday night on the razz, through a Saturday packed with sport and shopping, to family lunch and that Sunday evening feeling - a six part series on the changing Welsh weekend - Profile: Zaha Hadid (BBC)
The feisty, hugely gifted Iraqi-born architect - one of the few women architects of world standing - opens her first major completed commission, "the most important new American building since the end of the Cold War" (New York Times). - Fy Mab o Haiti (Haitian Adoption) (S4C)
A Welsh couple's attempts to adopt a baby son are caught up in violent revolution in Haiti. - An Archbishop Like This (BBC)
BBC TWO network documentary about the new Archbishop of Canterbury. Exclusive, intimate access to Rowan Williams' life and work during the six months surrounding the announcement of his appointment by Downing Street. Green Bay's documentary was covered as a news story in Australia and the USA, and by the main BBC Television News, Radio 4, The Times, Independent, Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, Sun, Sunday Times, Independent on Sunday and in a Guardian leader and front-page story. - Start Up (ITV)
Six-part series following three new businesses through their first twelve months of trading. The fear of failure. The tensions and conflicts of actually working together. The promise of success. The bold business ambition translated into the harsh reality of the bottom line. - Playing Elizabeth's Tune (BBC)
How Catholic composer William Byrd thrived at the Protestant court of the Virgin Queen. 90-minute special with The Tallis Scholars, one of the world's foremost vocal ensembles. - Cymer Fi (Take It From Me) (S4C)
Six-episode drama - documentary on the pleasures and passions of Valleys teenagers. - Open Day (BBC)
Six-part landscape and history series featuring great estates and historic houses. - My Father's House (Film Drama/Drama Ffilm)
A powerful American missionary seems to offer hope to a demoralised chapel community. D.J. Britton's script explores the dangerous ground between faith and fanaticism. Alan Plater is the script advisor. A development commission from the Arts Council of Wales. - The Story Of Welsh (BBC)
A major series - a big popular hit on BBC One Wales, and networked by BBC Four across the UK: Huw Edwards reveals the full and thrilling story of one of Europe's oldest languages. - Ffynhonnau (Mountain Springs) (S4C)
Glyn Houston and Daniel Evans (Daniel Deronda) star in a 60-minute drama documentary and community event celebrating a classic poem. Rhondda's leading performers, dance groups, brass bands and choirs - and massive gathering at the ancient holy well of Penrhys. - Profile: Cardinal Ratzinger (BBC)
Hywel Williams' network profile of one of the most powerful figures in the Catholic Church today, Joseph Ratzinger, head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. - Summer On The Gower (ITV)
Six part documentary series capturing the magic of the UK's first-ever Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty - and the work of those who ensure that the peninsula's splendours survive. - Claudia and Gwilym (BBC)
Two artists, one van and a lot of paint. Hugely popular and productive, Claudia Williams and her husband, Gwilym Pritchard move lock, stock and canvas, back to home to Wales. - Profile: Tim Smit (BBC)
Patrick Wright meets the creator of the Eden Project, the environmental centre based in a Cornish quarry which has become the UK's most successful Millennium project. - Caru Oddi Cartref (Foreign Affairs) (S4C)
Welsh people in love with partners from abroad - the passions and pressures of sustaining relationships that cross borders. 60-minute special shot in Wales, Brussels and Brittany. - The Archbishop In Action (BBC)
Intimate, exclusive access to the work of Rowan Williams as Archbishop of Wales. Transmitted on the day his appointment as Archbishop of Canterbury was announced. - Profile: Jan Morris (BBC)
Robert McCrum profiles the 'Flaubert of the jet age', the celebrated writer and traveller, who began life as James Morris. Shot in Wales and Trieste. - Strange Beauties (BBC)
The enigma of Gwen John - artist, sister of Augustus, lover of Rodin. With Germaine Greer and Michael Holroyd. Shot in London, Brittany and Paris. - Fun In The Sun (ITV)
6 part docu-soap for midweek primetime - the summer season in Tenby, the new stag night capital of Britain. Storms, foot-and-mouth and other challenges of today's tourism trade. - Life Peer (BBC)
Profile of Ilora Finlay, world class expert in hospice care and one of the first 'People's Peers' as she takes her place in the Lords with a controversial speech about tobacco advertising. - Do Not Go Gentle (BBC)
A celebration of Dylan Thomas's great poem, with rock legend John Cale, Keith Allen and Dylan's daughter Aeronwy. Shot in Wales and New York. Banff Rockie nominee.




