John Dennis Fowler Green (9 May 1909 – 25 March 2000)[1] was an English radio producer and executive at the BBC.
[5] In 1931, as chairman of the Cambridge University Conservative Association, Green wrote a essay dedicated to Gerard Wallop (courtesy title Viscount Lymington) of the English Mistery: it was for Dorothy Crisp's collection The Rebirth of Conservatism.
[7] In 1934, Green wrote in The National Review on Anthony Ludovici, in an article "Youth Speaks Out II.—A Political Writer".
[9] Part I of "Youth Speaks Out", in the same issue, was by Duncan Sandys, with title "The British Movement", on a short-lived "rightist" conservative group.
In the second article Mr. John Green, a member of the English Mistery, a high loyalist Tory group, tells us about the writer who sets forth the ideals of his society.
[12] Ludovici's Violence, Sacrifice and War (1933), Creation and Recreation (1934) and Recovery: the Quest of regenerate national values (1935) were published by the St James Kin cell of the English Mistery; to whom he had lectured, on the Alexander technique.
[13][14][15] Green attended a 1939 private dinner of the Mistery, in his capacity as Constable of the St James Kin.
[19] Green introduced also "For Farmers Only", on agricultural topics, cancelled on the outbreak of World War II but then reinstated.
[20] Post-war, Green was involved in discussion of the BBC's factual content, and set up the radio series "At Home And Abroad" of the 1950s, which included interviews of world leaders.
[1] Regarded by Asa Briggs as "a strong and forthright character in his own right", he played a role as mediator on news co-operation, on behalf of the Director-General Ian Jacob, between Tahu Hole and Cecil McGivern.
He at one point gave an opinion of Greene: "I think he's got the stuff of which Cromwells are made; his absence of sensitivity doesn't worry him."