Donald MacCormick

Donald MacCormick (16 April 1939[1] – 12 July 2009)[2] was a Scottish broadcast journalist.

Donald MacCormick
Born
Donald MacCormick

16 April 1939
Died12 July 2009(2009-07-12) (aged 70)
OccupationTeacher, journalist, presenter
Notable credit(s)
Tonight
Newsnight
Question Time
Money Programme
Spouse(s)Lis MacKinlay (div.)
Liz Elton
Children5

Early life

MacCormick's father was a Glasgow teacher who died when Donald was six. As a result he became close to the family of his uncle John MacCormick, a lawyer and advocate for Scottish devolution.[3]

He studied English at the University of Glasgow, where he was chairman of the Labour Club with Donald Dewar and John Smith. Following his graduation, he trained to become a teacher at Jordanhill College of Education and taught at the High School of Glasgow from 1962 to 1967.[4]

Media career

He began his media career in Scotland in 1967, working at Grampian Television as a news reporter and then later, on political programmes both for ITV and BBC. He presented the ground-breaking political programme Public Account for BBC Scotland with James Cox and Andrew Neil.

In 1975, he moved to London and became a presenter on BBC1's new Tonight programme[1] and a series of national roles followed. Most significantly, along with John Tusa and Peter Snow, he made up the triumvirate that anchored Newsnight in its early years. MacCormick also chaired BBC1's Question Time, presented the Money Programme and for several years was a commentator on the BBC's live coverage of the party political conferences.

Moving to London Weekend Television in the early 1990s, MacCormick hosted a lunchtime news analysis programme and conducted a major discussion series during the First Gulf War. On the night of the 1992 general election he was one of the presenters of Sky News's election night coverage, alongside Sir David Frost. He later returned to Scotland to present three seasons of political programmes for Scottish Television in Glasgow. On radio, he hosted his own Sunday morning topical magazine programme on London News Direct.

MacCormick had moved into the corporate sector, interviewing executives for company videos, chairing conferences and working in media training.[1]

On 28 March 2009 MacCormick returned to the BBC to present an evening on BBC Parliament. The Night The Government Fell marked the 30th anniversary of the vote of no confidence in the Labour government headed by James Callaghan. 30 years previously MacCormick had presented a live programme in Westminster covering these same events.

MacCormick died of a heart attack on 12 July 2009. He was divorced from Lis MacKinlay, by whom he had three children. He was married to Liz Elton from 1978 until his death; they had two children. All five children survive MacCormick.

Former Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell, who first met MacCormick at Glasgow University in 1959, paid tribute to the broadcaster saying: "Donald MacCormick was a prince among broadcasters. His style was always civil but insistent. He was always thoroughly prepared and his kind of journalism characterised all that is best in the BBC."[5]

gollark: This is on Arch. There is absolutely no chance that no other ones don't have it either.
gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir ~> ls /etc/network/interfacesls: cannot access '/etc/network/interfaces': No such file or directory```
gollark: Arch is 103.6% more Arch than the leading competitors.
gollark: You could always turn to the Arch side.
gollark: Technically YAML is backward-compatible with JSON through some weird hackery, if I remember right. And JSON's not whitespace-sensitive. So you could do that.

References

  1. Birthdays: Donald MacCormick, The Times, 16 April 2009.
  2. Veteran BBC newsman dies aged 70, BBC News, 12 July 2009.
  3. Wilson, Brian (14 July 2009). "Donald McCormick". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  4. "Donald MacCormick". 23 July 2009 via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  5. Veteran BBC Journalist Donald MacCormick dies, The Guardian, 13 July 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.