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Robert Robinson (born 17 December 1927 in Liverpool) is an English radio and television presenter.

Contents

Biography and career

His father was an accountant and he was educated at Raynes Park Grammar School and Exeter College, Oxford. He then became a journalist for the Sunday Chronicle (TV columnist), the Sunday Graphic (film and theatre columnist), the Sunday Times (radio critic and editor of Atticus) and the Sunday Telegraph (film critic).

He began working on television as a journalist in 1955. During the 1960s and 1970s, he presented the series Open House, Picture Parade[1], Points of View, Ask the Family[2], BBC3 – including the discussion during which Kenneth Tynan became the first person to say "fuck" on British television – and Call My Bluff. He wrote and presented The Fifties on BBC1. Robinson was the presenter of The Book Programme on BBC2 from 1973-80 and a number of spin off documentaries, notably B. Traven - A Mystery Solved (1979). He wrote and presented several BBC1 documentaries under the title Robinson's Travels, among them The Mormon Trail (1976), Cruising and Indian Journey. In 1986 he wrote and presented The Magic Rectangle, one of the BBC1 documentaries marking the fiftieth anniversay of television. He also presented Today, BBC Radio 4's flagship morning news show, and Stop The Week, a fiercely competitive talk programme[3]. Robinson fronted Brain of Britain on BBC Radio 4, but was replaced by Russell Davies during the 2004 series owing to illness. He returned to host the new series in 2005 until handing over the reins to Peter Snow in 2007. In September 2008 Robinson chaired the special Brain of Brains and Top Brain editions of the quiz and has returned again to host the current series in 2008.

Private Eye used to lampoon Robinson under the nickname 'Smuggins'. In a sketch on the BBC's Not the Nine O'Clock News he was impersonated by an actor wearing a cricket box over his forehead. Robinson has also been the subject of a sketch by Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie in the second series of A Bit of Fry and Laurie, and Fry frequently does an affectionate impression of Robinson when hosting the quiz show QI. He has also been lampooned by comedy duo David Mitchell and Robert Webb in the second series of That Mitchell and Webb Look, where he was shown as the presenter of an early version of their fictional gameshow Numberwang. He appeared in a Viz comic strip under the name Robin Robertson.

He is the father of the actress Lucy Robinson[4] and the soprano Suzy Robinson.

Books

  • Inside Robert Robinson (journalism)
  • The Dog Chairman (journalism)
  • Prescriptions of a Pox Doctor's Clerk (journalism)
  • Landscape with Dead Dons (mystery novel)
  • The Conspiracy (novel)
  • Bad Dreams (novel)
  • The Everyman Book of Light Verse (as editor)
  • Skip All That (1997) (autobiography)

References

  1. ^ TV Heroes: #39: Robert Robinson The Independent (London), Sep 12, 2002 by Gerard Gilbert
  2. ^ UKgameshows.com
  3. ^ Skip All That, p 221
  4. ^ Robinson, Lucy Film & TV Database, British Film Institute (accessed 6 Oct 2008)

External links

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