David Frost
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| David Frost | |
Sir David Frost, OBE, during an interview with Donald Rumsfeld.
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| Born | 7 April 1939 Kent, England |
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| Nationality | British |
| Occupation | Television presenter |
| Known for | That Was The Week That Was Breakfast with Frost , Frost On Sunday,(TV-am) |
| Spouse(s) | Lynne Frederick (1981-1982) Lady Carina Fitzalan-Howard (1983-present) |
Sir David Paradine Frost, OBE, born 7 April 1939, is a British satirist, writer, journalist and television presenter, best known as a pioneer of political satire on television and for his serious interviews of political figures, the most notable being the interviews with Richard Nixon. Since 2006, he has hosted the weekly programme Frost Over the World on Al Jazeera English. He was portrayed by Welsh actor Michael Sheen to Frank Langella's Richard Nixon in the 2006 Peter Morgan stage play Frost/Nixon, and in Ron Howard's 2008 film version.
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[edit] Early life
David Frost was born at Tenterden, Kent, the son of a Methodist minister, the Rev. W.J. Paradine Frost. In his youth he started training as a Methodist Local Preacher, which he did not complete. He attended Barnsole Road Primary School in Gillingham, Kent, then Gillingham Grammar School and finally Wellingborough Grammar School.[1] He subsequently won a place at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, where he graduated with a First in English. He had turned down a contract with Nottingham Forest Football Club to attend university.[2]
At Cambridge, he edited a student newspaper, Varsity, and a literary magazine, Granta. He was also secretary of the famous Footlights Drama Society, which included actors such as Peter Cook and John Bird.
After leaving university, he became a trainee at Associated-Rediffusion and worked for Anglia Television. At the same time, he kept up his cabaret performances.
He is married to Lady Carina née Fitzalan Howard, a daughter of the 17th Duke of Norfolk. He was previously married (1981-82) to Lynne Frederick, widow of Peter Sellers. He was also engaged to American actress Diahann Carroll in the early 1970s.[3] In 1993, Frost was honoured with a knighthood.[4]
Frost also interviewed politicians and their spouses, like Katrina Biss, fiance of George Smith, in 1966. It was a popular interview, considering Smith was in legal difficulties after he had tried to embezzle $4 million from the state of Ohio. Biss, as his accomplice, was sentenced to 3 years in prison after Smith had bailed himself and her out. She was later caught trying to steal money from her future husband's company.
[edit] That Was the Week That Was (TW3)
Frost was chosen by writer and producer Ned Sherrin to host a pioneering satirical programme called That Was the Week That Was, alias TW3. This caught the wave of the satire boom in 1960s Britain and became a popular programme. Since most of the jokes and sketches were stolen wholesale from the works of people like Peter Cook, John Fortune, John Bird, and Eleanor Bron, Frost was dubbed "The Bubonic Plagiarist." TW3 was the last piece of scheduled programming broadcast by the BBC on a Saturday, and regularly overran its time slot.[citation needed]
By the second series, it was followed by repeats of The Third Man, starring Michael Rennie. Frost took note of this, and at the end of each edition of TW3 would reveal the plot featuring the key twists and turns of each episode so that there would be very little point in watching the programme. After three weeks, the BBC took note; The Third Man was taken off the air and TW3 got its full hour back.
After a pilot episode on 10 November 1963, a 30-minute American version of TW3 featuring Frost ran on NBC from 10 January 1964 to May 1965. In 1985, David Frost produced and hosted a television special in the same format, That Was the Year That Was, on NBC.
[edit] After TW3
Frost fronted a number of programmes following the success of TW3, including its immediate successor, Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life, which he co-chaired with Willie Rushton and P. J. Kavanagh. More notable was The Frost Report, 1966 and 1967, which launched the television careers of John Cleese, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett. He signed for Rediffusion, the ITV weekday contractor in London, to produce a "heavier" interview-based show called The Frost Programme. Guests included Sir Oswald Mosley and Rhodesian premier Ian Smith. His memorable dressing-down of insurance fraudster Emil Savundra was generally regarded as the first example of "trial by television" in the UK.
In 1963 a tribute to the recently assassinated President John F. Kennedy on That Was the Week That Was had seen Frost's fame spread to the United States. His 1970 TV special Frost on America featured guests such as Jack Benny & Tennessee Williams.[5]
From 1969 to 1972, Frost kept his London shows and fronted The David Frost Show on the Group W (U.S. Westinghouse Corporation) television stations in the United States.[6] In 1977, he met US President Richard Nixon in a series of interviews for American television. These culminated in a discussion of Watergate, when Nixon famously avowed that whatever the President did was legal and a further admission that he had let the American people down.
That same year Frost was the executive producer of the Academy Award-nominated The Slipper and the Rose. Frost was an organiser of the Music for UNICEF Concert at the United Nations General Assembly in 1979. Ten years later, Frost was hired as the anchor of the new American tabloid news program Inside Edition. However, he was dismissed after only three weeks, and future Fox News personality Bill O'Reilly was recruited in his stead.
During the 1990s, he presented the panel game Through the Keyhole, which featured a long running partnership with Loyd Grossman. After transferring from ITV, his Sunday morning interview programme Breakfast with Frost ran on the BBC from January 1993 until 29 May 2005. The programme originally began in this format on TV-am in September 1983 as Frost on Sunday until the station lost its franchise at the end of 1992. Later it transferred briefly to BSB before moving to the BBC.
As of November 2006, he works for Al Jazeera English, presenting a live weekly hour-long current affairs programme, Frost Over the World, which started when the network launched in November 2006. The programme has regularly made headlines with interviewees such as Tony Blair, President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan, Benazir Bhutto and President Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua. The programme is produced by the former Question Time editor and Independent on Sunday journalist Charlie Courtauld.
[edit] Achievements
Frost was instrumental in starting up two important TV franchises: LWT in 1967, and as one of the Famous Five who launched TV-am in February 1983. On 20 and 21 July 1969, during the British television Apollo 11 coverage, he presented David Frost's Moon Party for LWT, a ten-hour discussion and entertainment marathon from LWT's Wembley Studios, on the night Neil Armstrong walked on the moon. Two of his guests on this programme were British historian A.J.P. Taylor and Sammy Davis, Jr. Taylor was sceptical about the proceedings and believed that the moon landing was actually a mock-up being broadcast from a Hollywood studio.[7] Frost started a production company called David Paradine Productions and was also part of a consortium with Richard Branson, which failed to acquire three ITV franchises under the CPV-TV name.
Frost is the only person to have interviewed all seven British prime ministers serving between 1964 and 2009 (Harold Wilson, Edward Heath, James Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown[8]) and the seven US presidents in office between 1969 and 2008 (Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush). He was also the last person to interview Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran.
He is a patron and former vice-president of the Motor Neurone Disease Association charity, as well as being a patron of the Alzheimer's Research Trust, East Anglia's Children's Hospices, the Home Farm Trust and the Elton John AIDS Foundation.[9][10]
After having been in television for 40 years, Frost is worth £200 million.[11] This valuation includes the assets of his main British company and subsidiaries, plus homes in London and the country.
He received a fellowship from BAFTA in 2005, the highest accolade that the academy gives.
[edit] Frost/Nixon
Originally a play by Peter Morgan that was developed from a series of interviews, Frost/Nixon was presented both in London and on Broadway. The play was adapted into a motion picture, starring Michael Sheen as David Frost, Frank Langella as Richard Nixon, directed by Ron Howard, and released in 2008. The film was nominated for five Golden Globe awards: Best Motion Picture Drama, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Screenplay and Best Original Score, [12] as well as five Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Editing.
[edit] Publications
- David Frost and Michael Shea (1986) The Rich Tide: Men, Women, Ideas and Their Transatlantic Impact. London, Collins.
- David Frost (1993) An Autobiography. Part 1: From Congregations to Audiences.
- David Frost (2007) Frost/Nixon.
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.wellingboroughgrammarschool.co.uk/
- ^ "My Life in Media: Sir David Frost". The Independent. May 2, 2005. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20050502/ai_n14608735.
- ^ "Diahann Carroll Talks Of Love, Life And Those Legs". NPR. September 26, 2008. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=95034315.
- ^ http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/F/htmlF/frostdavid/frostdavid.htm
- ^ www.museum.tv: David Frost
- ^ The David Frost Show
- ^ "ITV Moon Landing Coverage". British TV History. http://www.tvhistory.btinternet.co.uk/html/moon_itv.html. Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
- ^ http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5hafMGjJrLdxCNUfuLeuESadII9WA
- ^ Who's Who In Charities 2007, CaritasData (ISBN 1-904964-27-3)
- ^ Patrons page at Alzheimer's Research Trust
- ^ Sunday Times Rich List 2006-2007, A & C Black (ISBN 978-0713679410)
- ^ http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ifcdf033a039397d33af1e1010cab7e66?pn=2
[edit] External links
- BBC News Profile of David Frost
- The Frost/Nixon Interviews Site
- TV Cream on Paradine Productions
- David Frost Interview with Benazir Bhutto
- Frost's entry at IMDb
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