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Derek Davis

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Occupation
  
Broadcaster

Name
  
Derek Davis


Role
  
Television host

Derek Davis cdn02independentieincomingarticle31218984ece

Born
  
26 April 1948 (
1948-04-26
)
County Down, Northern Ireland

Died
  
May 13, 2015, County Dublin, Republic of Ireland

TV shows
  
Live at 3, Davis at Large

Best of Live at 3 - John Creedon/Derek Davis/Marty Whelan (1994)


Derek Davis (26 April 1948 – 13 May 2015) was an Irish broadcaster. On television, he co-hosted Live at 3, presented Davis at Large and Out of the Blue and won Celebrity Bainisteoir.

Contents

Derek Davis Tributes are paid to former broadcaster Derek Davis Newstalk

Candyman pt2 with rizen records president of operation derek davis


Early life

Derek Davis Life Broadcaster Derek Davis has died aged 67

Davis was born in Bangor County Down to a Protestant father and a Roman Catholic mother (a native of Bray, County Wicklow). He attended St. MacNissis College, a Catholic boarding school in County Antrim and described his early childhood life as ecumenical. During his childhood he acquired a love of boats which later provided the inspiration for the TV series Out of the Blue.

Television

Derek Davis Broadcaster Derek Davis dies aged 67 Belfast Newsletter

Davis started as a news reporter with the American network ABC and BBC Northern Ireland before spending 11 years in the newsroom in RTÉ. In the early 1980s he became a newsreader for The Six-o-clock News and began to become well-known due to his sometimes off-the cuff comments on news stories.

Derek Davis TV great Derek Davis dies aged 67 RT Ten

Davis impersonated Big Tom on the RTÉ satirical programme Hall's Pictorial Weekly. He was offered a part in a show-band in Cork as a result of this. After a ballroom tour, he joined RTÉ proper in 1975, initially to work as a television news reporter, eventually becoming newsreader on the nine o'clock news. In the mid-1980s, Davis hosted his own talk show, Davis at Large. It was on this show, which was screened live, that he was attacked and hurled across the studio by a guest female body builder. In addition to this he had an interactive summer current affairs show, simply called Davis. In 1986, Davis began co-hosting (with Thelma Mansfield) RTÉ 1's afternoon programme Live at 3, a role he would fill for eleven years.

Derek Davis Former RT radio amp TV host Derek Davis has died Radio Today

Davis presented the Rose of Tralee twice in 1995 and 1996, the first of these when Gay Byrne was taken ill at short notice. He memorably thanked the providers of the air conditioning while wiping sweat from his brow. Live at 3 came to an end in 1997. Nearly 15 years later, Thelma Mansfield said, "They wanted to get rid of the old faces and bring in some new ones". Davis returned to the screen in the late 1990s with a marine programme devoted to boats and the waters around Ireland called Out of the Blue, which ran for four series, the last of which was broadcast in 2001.

In 2005, he hosted a show called Time on Their Hands, a travel series for older people. One of his last television appearances was on the second season of Celebrity Bainisteoir in 2009, in which he and seven other Irish celebrities managed an intermediate Gaelic football club team from their home county in an official GAA tournament. Davis's team won the tournament. He and eventual runner-up Katherine Lynch appeared together on Tubridy Tonight the evening before the final was broadcast.

During the 2010s, Davis made frequent guest appearances on TV3's Tonight with Vincent Browne, where he and another guest would preview the following morning's papers.

Radio

In 2000, Davis presented a radio quiz show called A Question of Food. During the summer season he had taken over RTÉ Radio 1's mid-morning slot usually occupied by Today with Pat Kenny, and he also hosted the radio phone-in show, Liveline, when regular presenter Joe Duffy was on holiday. Later, he presented Sunday Magazine with Davis on 4 on 4fm.

On 10 May 2015, Davis spoke on the topic of obesity on Marian Finucane's Sunday radio show (presented that day by Aine Lawlor). Lawlor introduced Davis by remarking on his own substantial recent weight loss: "You look, you are literally, I'd say, about a third of the man that you used to be."

A short illness followed and Davis died three days later, aged 67. His funeral took place in the Victorian Chapel, Mount Jerome Crematorium in Harold’s Cross, Dublin.

Awards

Davis won two Jacob's Awards for his television work. In 1984, he received his first award for the series The Season That's In It. He won his second award in 1991 for his co-presenting of Live at 3.

References

Derek Davis Wikipedia