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Day, Sir Robin

 
AnswerNote: Day, Sir Robin
Day, Sir Robin
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On August 6, 2000, Britain lost one of its most renowned journalists and broadcasters with the passing of Sir Robin Day, who in the words of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, "single-handedly pioneered modern political interviewing."

Nicknamed the "Grand Inquisitor," Day, who died at age 76 in London, was best known for presenting BBC's Question Time and Panorama.

During the 1950's, he established himself as a television journalist after becoming one of the first broadcasters on ITN News.

Last updated: June 14, 2004.

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Art Encyclopedia: Robin Day
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(b High Wycombe, Bucks, 25 May 1915). English designer. He studied at High Wycombe Art School and worked for a local furniture manufacturer for a year, winning a scholarship to the Royal College of Art, London, in 1935. In 1948 he and his wife Lucienne Day (b 1917), a textile and wallpaper designer (see WALLPAPER, colour pl. V, fig. 3), opened a London office where he practised as a graphic, exhibition and industrial designer. That year he and Clive Latimer (b c. 1916) won first prize in the International Low-cost Furniture Competition, held at MOMA in New York, for their storage furniture design. Such storage units became standard elements in 1950s British homes, contributing to contemporary ideas of flexibility in interiors. The prize brought him to the attention of Hille International, a British manufacturer looking to produce modern, contract furniture in a post-war market and to whom he became a design consultant with the opportunity to explore new materials and techniques in the production of low-cost furniture. In 1950 he designed the 'Hillestak' stacking chair (see ENGLAND, fig. 57), made of plywood, using newly available plastic glues and with inverted V-shaped splayed legs, characteristic of the period. His most successful chair for Hille, the 'Polyprop', of injection-moulded polypropylene on a slim metal tube base, developed the principle of different materials for base and seat established in the mid-1950s by the American designer Charles Eames. The 'Mark II' shell of 1963 continued to be produced in the late 20th century (see MASS PRODUCTION, fig. 2). Day designed seating for the Festival Hall (1951), for the Barbican Arts Centre (from 1968), both in London, and furniture for Gatwick Airport, W. Sussex (1958).

See the Abbreviations for further details.




(1915- )

Robin Day was recognized as a leading British furniture designer from the 1940s onwards, especially for his design work for the manufacturing company Hille. His training took place between 1931 and 1933 at the art school in High Wycombe, an important centre for furniture manufacture, followed by a period working for a local firm. With his wife Lucienne Day, he opened his own design office in London in 1948 coming to critical attention when, with Clive Latimer, he won first prize for storage furniture at the New York Museum of Modern Art's Low Cost Furniture Competition in 1948. This was followed by a commission from Hille Ltd. to design a contemporary dining room for the 1949 British Industries Fair, a large-scale annual showcase for British manufacturing industry that was dominated by designs which generally looked either to the past or a highly improbable version of the future. His relationship with Hille flourished thereafter, resulting in commercially successful designs including the plywood Hillestack chair (1950-1), the Q-Stack chair (1953), and Form unit seating (1957). He was also quick to respond to the possibilities afforded by advances in plastics technology with his Polypropylene Mark 1 (1962) and Mark 2 (1963) chairs, the latter selling millions and becoming a design icon. Other furniture successes included the Disque knockdown table for cafeterias (1967) and seating for the Barbican Centre, London. Day was also one of a generation of British designers who came to prominence at the Festival of Britain of 1951, designing signposts, litter bins, and seating for the Festival Hall on the South Bank, London. In addition to his work for Hille, Day also designed a range of products for the British audio-visual manufacturing company Pye, including radios and television sets, perhaps the most noted of which was his 1957 television with metal legs. He also played a significant role in design education in the later stages of his career, in charge of the London College of Furniture from 1974 to 1978. In 1981 his significance as a designer was recognized by the mounting of a major exhibition of his work at the Victoria and Albert Museum. In 2001 another major show of both his and his wife's designs was mounted at the Barbican Centre London.

Quotes By: Sir Robin Day
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Quotes:

"Television thrives on unreason, and unreason thrives on television. It strikes at the emotions rather than the intellect."

Wikipedia: Robin Day
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Sir Robin Day, OBE (24 October 1923 – 6 August 2000) was a British political broadcaster and commentator. His obituary in The Guardian states that "he was the most outstanding television journalist of his generation. He transformed the television interview, changed the relationship between politicians and television, and strove to assert balance and rationality into the medium's treatment of current affairs"[1].

Contents

Personal life

He was the son of a telephone engineer who became telephone manager at Gloucester. In 1965, he married Katherine Ainslie, an Australian law don at St Anne's College, Oxford, and had two sons. The marriage was dissolved in 1986. One of the tragedies of his life was that his elder son never fully recovered from the effects of multiple skull fractures he sustained in a childhood fall.

In the 1980s, Day had a coronary bypass, and he suffered from breathing problems that were often evident when he was on the air. He had always fought against a tendency to put on weight. As an undergraduate, he weighed 17 st 0 lb (108 kg; 238 lb), and claimed that, in the course of his life, he had succeeded in losing more weight than any other person.

Day had problems relating to women. The broadcaster Joan Bakewell recalled that whilst he was professional when in the office:

"Socially he was a menace. There was no subtlety in his manner: at office parties he would attack head on. 'Do the men you interview fancy you? Do they stare at your legs? Do they stare at your breasts? Do you sleep with many of them?' ... Whenever he loomed in sight, I made myself scarce"[2]

Later, broadcaster Anna Ford pushed Day into a bush as a result of his unwanted advances.

Education

Day attended Brentwood School from 1934 to 1938,[3] briefly attended The Crypt School, Gloucester and later Bembridge School on the Isle of Wight.

War Service

He served with the army in East Africa, where he reached the rank of Captain but was demoted to Lieutenant as part of a cull of rear-echelon jobs.

University & Barrister

After the war Day attended St Edmund Hall, Oxford and, while a student, was elected president of the Oxford Union debating society. Day also took part in a debating tour of the United States run by the English-Speaking Union.

He was called to the Bar in 1952, but practised only briefly. In his memoirs he recorded that he secured the acquittal of a lorry-driver accused of indecent exposure by persuading the magistrates that the man had been "shaking the drops from his person" after urinating, and by getting the man's young wife to testify, wearing a tight sweater, that she and her husband enjoyed a healthy love life.

Media

Day spent almost his entire career in journalism. He rose to prominence on the new Independent Television News (ITN) from 1955, when he was the first British journalist to interview President Nasser of Egypt after the Suez Crisis.

On television, he presented Panorama and chaired Question Time (1979–89), and on radio was presenter of The World at One from 1979 to 1987. His incisive and sometimes - by the standards of the day - abrasive interviewing style, together with his heavy-rimmed spectacles and trademark bow tie, made him an instantly recognisable and frequently impersonated figure over five decades.

He became known in British broadcasting as 'the Grand Inquisitor' for his abrasive interviewing politicians, a style out of keeping with the British media's culture of deference to authority that prevailed during the early days of his career.

In 1958 he interviewed Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, in what the Daily Express called: 'the most vigorous cross-examination a prime minister has been subjected to in public' . The interview turned Macmillan into a television personality, and was probably the first time that British television became a serious part of the political process.

In the early 1970s, Day was involved on BBC Radio, where he proved an innovator with 'It's Your Line' from 1970- 76. This was a national phone-in programme that enabled ordinary people, for the first time, to put questions directly to the prime minister and other politicians (it later spawned 'Election Call' ). He also presented The World At One, from 1979-87. In 1981, he was knighted for his services to broadcasting.

He was a regular fixture on all BBC Election Night programmes from the 1960s until 1987. After leaving Question Time, he moved to the new satellite service BSB where he presented the weekly political discussion programme Now Sir Robin. When BSB merged with Sky Television, the programme continued to be broadcast on Sky News for a while. On the night of the 1992 General Election, Sir Robin resumed his role as interviewer, this time on ITN's Election Night coverage, broadcast on ITV.

In the mid-90s, he regularly contributed to the lunchtime Channel Four political programme Around the House and also presented Central Lobby for Central TV, the ITV franchise in the Midlands. The show was sometimes broadcast at the same time as his old programme, Question Time was being shown on BBC One.

In October 1982, during an interview with the Conservative Secretary of State for Defence John Nott, pursuing cuts in defence expenditure, he posed the question: "But why should the public, on this issue, as regards the future of the Royal Navy, believe you, a transient, here-today and, if I may say so, gone-tomorrow politician, [a reference to Nott's announcement that he was to stand down at the next General Election] rather than a senior officer of many years?" Nott rose, removed his microphone, and said "I'm sorry, I'm fed up with this interview. Really, it's ridiculous" and walked off the set. Nott's autobiography in 2003 was called Here Today Gone Tomorrow: Recollections of an Errant Politician

For 25 years he campaigned tirelessly, and eventually successfully, for the televising of parliament - not in the interests of television, but of parliament itself. He claimed that he was the first to present the detailed arguments in favour, in a Hansard Society paper in 1963.[4]

Monty Python's Flying Circus often used Day as a reference, including the 'Eddie Baby ' sketch in which John Cleese turns to the camera and states: 'Robin Day's got a hedgehog called Frank.' In another sketch, Eric Idle said he was able to return his 'Robin Day tie' to Harrod's. He was also spoofed (as Robin Yad) on The Goodies' episode 'Saturday Night Grease' . Day appeared as himself on an installment of the Morecambe & Wise show, in which he berates Ernie Wise in character. Then Morecambe, acting as a TV presenter, says, "Sadly, we've come to the end of today's "Friendly Discussion with Robin Day."

Day published two autobiographies; 'Day by Day' in 1975 and 'Grand Inquisitor' in 1989.

Politics

In the 1959 General Election he stood as a Liberal Party candidate for Hereford but failed to win.

References

  1. ^ "The Guardian - Obituary by Dick Taverne, 8 August 2000". http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2000/aug/08/guardianobituaries1. Retrieved 2008-09-01. 
  2. ^ Joan Bakewell The Centre of the Bed: An Autobiography, 2003, Sceptre, p234-5.
  3. ^ List of Old Brentwoods Retrieved 10 March 2009
  4. ^ Robin Day, (1963) The Case for Televising Parliament (London: Hansard Society for Parliamentary Government)

External links

Programme Created Regular Host of Question Time
1979–1989
Succeeded by
Peter Sissons

 
 

 

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