In the mid-sixties, inspired by her friend Pauline Boty, the distinguished Pop art painter, she launched a chain of fashion boutiques, as a ‘front’ person and publicist. Later she appeared in the BBC TV series A Whole Scene Going and made appearances on Juke Box Jury with such artists as Marianne Faithfull. The following year, Nightingale co-hosted the music series Sing A Song Of Sixpence, with star actor and host Ronan O'Casey. Nightingale made numerous appearances on Ready Steady Go and was a guest on their uproarious New Year's Eve Specials, which included the biggest pop, soul and rock stars of the era. She also covered the San Remo Song Festival, Italy. At this time, she also hosted other specials for A-R, including The Glad Rag Ball at Wembley, starring the Rolling Stones, and the British Song Festival in Brighton. Nightingale presented the pop culture show, booked guest musicians who had not previously been seen on TV such as The Yardbirds and introduced The Who’s first promotion film. Nightingale joined Associated-Rediffusion TV and hosted her own show That's For Me. She became the newspaper’s first pop music columnist.Īs a result of meeting Dusty Springfield and her manager Vicki Wickham, editor of the new ground-breaking pop TV show Ready Steady Go, Nightingale was invited to host a new sister TV show. The latter involved interviews with Sean Connery in his first James Bond role and Peter Sellars on location. A year later she was promoted to the Brighton Evening Argus, as a general reporter, feature writer, and diarist. Nightingale had joined the weekly Brighton and Hove Gazette as a general reporter. During the early to mid-sixties Nightingale explored opportunities working in television, both as a reporter for BBC's Southampton /Bristol based news programme South Today and light entertainment and music programmes for the ITV Network Southern TV (now Meridien TV.)
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