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・ Timothy J. O'Connor, Jr.
・ Timothy J. Roemer
・ Timothy J. Rosta
・ Timothy J. Savage
・ Timothy J. Sinclair
・ Timothy J. Sullivan
・ Timothy J. Tobias
・ Timothy J. Toomey, Jr.
・ Timothy J. Yeatman
・ Timothy Jacob Jensen
・ Timothy James Beck
・ Timothy James Webb
・ Timothy Jenkins
・ Timothy Jenner
・ Timothy Jennings
Timothy John Byford
・ Timothy John Parker
・ Timothy Johns
・ Timothy Johnson
・ Timothy Johnson (medical journalist)
・ Timothy Jollie
・ Timothy Jones
・ Timothy Jones (cricketer)
・ Timothy Jones (cyclist)
・ Timothy Jordan II
・ Timothy Joseph Harrington
・ Timothy Joseph Lyne
・ Timothy Joseph McGhee
・ Timothy Joseph O'Shea
・ Timothy Jost


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Timothy John Byford : ウィキペディア英語版
Timothy John Byford
Timothy John Byford ((セルビア語:Тимоти Џон Бајфорд/Timoti Džon Bajford); 25 July 1941 – 5 May 2014) was an author, film director, translator, and educator.
Byford was born in England, but spent most of his life in Belgrade. He became a naturalized citizen of Serbia in 2004. He directed children's television programmes, first in the UK for the BBC, and later in Yugoslavia, for TV Belgrade and TV Sarajevo. His children's TV series enjoyed great success in former Yugoslavia, and continue to be popular.〔
==Biography==
Born in Salisbury, Byford started his TV career directing films for the BBC ''Blue Peter'' programme.〔 His first TV documentary ''"I Want to Be a Showjumper"'' won a BAFTA Harlequin "Rediffusion Star Award" (for Children's Programmes) in 1970.
In 1971 he moved to Yugoslavia, where he married〔 and continued to write and direct children's television programmes during the 1970s and 1980s.〔 He is best known for his children's TV series: ''Neven'' ('Marigold'), ''Babino unuče'' ('Granny's Boy') and ''Poletarac'' ('Fledgling'),〔 all for TV Belgrade,〔 as well as ''Nedeljni zabavnik'' ('Sunday Magazine'), 'Musical Notebook' and ''Tragom ptice Dodo'' ('On the Trail of the Dodo'), all for TV Sarajevo. 'Fledgling' won a Grand Prix at the Prix Jeunesse International Festival in Munich in 1980.〔
He spent his last fifteen years teaching English, writing and translating. In 2006, after 40 years of working with children, he joined the Children's Cultural Centre Belgrade, where he wrote and directed programmes, taught English and translated. He has written and published a self-portrait trilogy, ''"Pigs Do Not Eat Banana Skins"'', completed a collection of seven short stories under the title ''"The Golden Candlestick"'', and completed his official autobiography, ''"Warts and All"''.
His name is also associated with a park in the southern suburbs of Belgrade, Banjica Forest, as during the late 1980s he campaigned for it to have special protection because of the large number of nightingales and other species of birds that nest in it. The wood is now an officially protected natural habitat and has been dubbed by some (unofficially) as ''Byford's Forest''.
In 1 April 2010, Byford celebrated the 50th year of his artistic career with the opening of his photograph exhibition, ''Joy in 100 Pictures'', consisting of photographs he took at the 'Joy of Europe' festivals in 2008 and 2009. The same year, he appeared on screen as a cricket umpire in a television advert for Mivela water during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The ad featured players from the Serbia national cricket team and Serbian footballer Radosav Petrović.

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