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Richard Dimbleby

Richard Dimbleby (May 25, 1913December 22, 1965) was a British journalist and broadcaster.

Dimbleby was born in Richmond-upon-Thames and began his career with the family newspaper, the Richmond and Twickenham Times , in 1931. He joined the BBC as a radio news reporter in 1936, and in 1939 accompanied the British Expeditionary Force to France. In 1945 he broadcast the first reports from Belsen concentration camp.

After the war Dimbleby switched to television, eventually becoming the BBC's leading news commentator and the host of the flagship current affairs series Panorama. He was perhaps best known as the commentator on a series of major state occasions including the coronation of Elizabeth II in 1953 and the funerals of George VI, John F. Kennedy, and Winston Churchill. He took part in the first Eurovision television relay in 1951 and appeared in the first live television broadcast from the Soviet Union in 1961. In addition to heavyweight journalism, he hosted lighter programmes such as Twenty Questions and Down Your Way .

He was appointed an OBE in 1945 and advanced to CBE in 1959. He died aged only 52 from lung cancer and the Richard Dimbleby Cancer Fund was founded in his memory.

Married to Dilys Thomas in Copthorne, West Sussex in 1937, Dimbleby had four children, two of whom, David and Jonathan, have followed in his footsteps to become major broadcasting figures in their own right.

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Last updated: 05-07-2005 17:47:56
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