Marcel Berlins

Marcel Berlins (30 October 1941 – 31 July 2019) was a French-born lawyer, legal commentator, author, broadcaster and columnist. He was best known for his work in the United Kingdom, writing for British national newspapers The Times and The Guardian, presenting BBC Radio 4's legal programme Law in Action for 16 years, and teaching Media Law at City, University of London.

Marcel Berlins
Born(1941-10-30)30 October 1941
Marseille, France
Died31 July 2019(2019-07-31) (aged 77)
EducationUniversity of the Witwatersrand
London School of Economics
OccupationJournalist, broadcaster
Notable credit(s)
Law in Action (BBC Radio 4)

Biography

Berlins was born in Marseille, France, on 30 October 1941,[1][2] the only child of Jacques Berlins and his wife, Pearl, who were of Latvian Jewish origin. The couple had migrated to France before the war and ran a small hotel. When the country was occupied by the Nazis in 1940, Jacques became active in the Resistance; the family moved to a remote village in the hills near Luberon.[1] He moved with his parents to South Africa in 1951 and stayed there until his early adulthood.[3] Berlins completed his schooling in South Africa and only then started to learn English; he claimed to have perfected the language by reading Agatha Christie novels.[1] He remained a French citizen, however, and voted in the 2007 French presidential election.[4][5] Berlins studied law at the University of the Witwatersrand and spent his early career in the lower criminal courts of Johannesburg.[1]

The deteriorating political situation in South Africa prompted a return to Europe, and Berlins moved to Paris. He considered enrolling as a student at the Sorbonne, but the possibility of French military service, led him to move again, to London. In London he studied for his master of laws degree at the London School of Economics.[1]

Berlins wrote a weekly column for The Guardian, and regularly reviewed crime fiction for The Times.[5] Berlins began presenting BBC Radio 4's legal affairs programme Law in Action in 1988, and won two awards for Legal Broadcaster of the Year, before retiring from the programme in 2004.[6] He was a contestant for the South of England team in the 2007 series of Radio 4's Round Britain Quiz[7][8][1] and continued in the series until 2014.[9] He devised and presented, for London Weekend Television, the first television drama-documentary to feature real lawyers and judges doing their job and created and edited the award-winning publication The Law Magazine.[10]

Berlins was a visiting professor at City, University of London, in the Department of Journalism.[6][11] He taught Media Law to students on the Postgraduate Diplomas in Broadcast Journalism, Magazine Journalism, Newspaper Journalism and Television Current Affairs Journalism, as well as the BA in Journalism and a Social Science.

Berlins was a fine pianist throughout his life and for a time played in a club in Lourenço Marques in Mozambique. He occasionally played on the public piano in St Pancras railway station.[1] In one of his final articles for The Guardian, Berlins wrote that it had been Orson Welles’s onscreen depiction of Clarence Darrow, the prominent American lawyer who defended two high-profile murderers facing the death penalty in 1924, which had encouraged his early fascination with the law and justice.[2]

Personal life

In 2005, Berlins married Lisa Forrell, a corporate lawyer and theatre director. Together they wrote the play Best of Motives (2002), examining how antiterrorism laws, passed following the September 11 attacks, could be used to subvert the values they were supposed to protect. The couple owned several properties, including a flat in Paris, a spacious mansion-block apartment in Bloomsbury (West End of London), and an old house in Provence, close to where Berlins had spent his childhood.[1]

Death

Berlins died on 31 July 2019, following a brain haemorrhage.

Dr Paul Lashmar of the Department of Journalism at City, University of London, said: "Marcel really was a brilliant commentator on the law. He made it accessible to the ordinary reader. And what’s more, he did so with a sense of humanity. His wonderful writing will be missed."[12]

Berlins is survived by his widow and a stepson and a stepdaughter.[1]

Books

  • Caught in the Act (1974), (with Geoffrey Wansell), a study of young offenders and their treatment[1]
  • Ramesh Maharaj, Barrister Behind Bars (1979), the true story of a Trinidadian lawyer’s detention[1]
  • Living Together (1982), (with Clare Dyer), on the legal pitfalls of cohabitation[1]
  • The Law Machine (1982), (with Clare Dyer), the evolution of the justice system evolved and how it operates[1]
  • The Law and You (1986), for the Consumers’ Association, examining aspects of consumer law[1]

Plays

  • Best of Motives (2002), (with Lisa Forrell), about antiterrorism laws after the September 11 attacks[1]
gollark: That seems vaguely defined and may also imply grammar rules still, if significantly weaker ones than usual.
gollark: Thus, is an English sentence valid Lojban because the speakers understand it too?
gollark: I'd expect that a large fraction of Lojban speakers also speak English, though.
gollark: Interesting.
gollark: Understood by a majority of people who identify themselves as "English speakers"?

References

  1. "Marcel Berlins obituary". The Times. London. 1 August 2019. Retrieved 1 August 2019. (subscription required)
  2. Rawlinson, Kevin (1 August 2019). "Marcel Berlins, the Guardian's 'brilliant, humane' legal columnist, dies at 77". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  3. Berlins, Marcel (14 December 2005). "I lived in a South Africa ruled by apartheid. Now I return to find that freedom has plunged the country into the real, hard world". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 April 2008.
  4. Berlins, Marcel (25 April 2007). "Yes, I backed the wrong horse in the French election, but at least I had some fun voting". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 April 2008.
  5. Marcel Berlins biography, The Guardian
  6. About Law in Action, BBC website, retrieved 26 August 2009
  7. "BBC Radio 4 - Round Britain Quiz, 2007, Episode 10". BBC.
  8. "Round Britain Quiz". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  9. "BBC Radio 4 - Round Britain Quiz, 28/07/2014". BBC.
  10. "Marcel Berlins". January 15, 2004 via news.bbc.co.uk.
  11. Marcel Berlins Archived 22 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine City University London website
  12. Lines, Chris (1 August 2019). "A tribute to Marcel Berlins". City, University of London. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
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