Martin Bronstein (born 1935) is a British-Canadian actor, writer, columnist, broadcaster and journalist.
Bronstein moved to Canada in 1959 and worked as a copywriter, journalist and comedy writer.
[1] He also worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation interviewing a series of entertainers, including Oscar Peterson, Dave Brubeck, Bob Dylan, Jack Benny, Dudley Moore,[2] Dizzy Gillespie, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Nina Simone, and Duke Ellington.
[3] Bronstein was a founding member in 1970 of the Jest Society, which became the Royal Canadian Air Farce in 1973.
[6] In 1982, he returned to Britain to become editor of Squash Player International magazine and has written extensively on the sport in the ensuing decades.