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Mike Neville (newsreader)

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Full Name
  
Michael Neville

Name
  
Mike Neville


Role
  
Television Actor

TV shows
  
ITV News Tyne Tees

Mike Neville (newsreader) wwwtransdiffusionorgimagescityroad320trailer1

Born
  
17 October 1936 (age 87) (
1936-10-17
)
Willington Quay, Northumberland, England

Itv news tyne tees mike neville tribute 7 9 2017 edited


Michael Neville, MBE (born James Armstrong Briggs, 17 October 1936 – 6 September 2017) was a British broadcaster, best known as a presenter on regional TV news in North East England. In a 43 year career with the BBC and ITV franchisee Tyne Tees Television, he became an iconic figure in the region and is remembered for his solid presentational style and witty banter. In 1990, Neville was awarded the MBE for services to broadcasting.

Contents

Mike Neville (newsreader) Mike Neville the legendary North East news anchorman has died

Bbc look north mike neville tribute 6th september 2017


Early life

Mike Neville (newsreader) Mike Nevilles final farewell to Look North BBC1 1996 YouTube

Born as James Armstrong Briggs in Willington Quay, North Tyneside on 17 October 1936 - to James Briggs, a labourer, and Mary - he attended the Addison Potter Infant and Junior School in Willington Quay and Stephenson Memorial Secondary School in Howdon.

Mike Neville (newsreader) Mike Neville People Transdiffusion

His first job at the age of 15 was at the Northern Guild of Commerce and Chamber of Trade. He was subsequently an junior editorial assistant at the Daily Mail's Newcastle offices. In 1955, he began two years of National Service in Cyprus where he rose to the rank of Corporal in the Wiltshire Regiment. After a short time as an insurance agent, he joined the repertory company of Newcastle Playhouse full-time in 1957 and changed his name to Michael Neville.

Career

Mike Neville (newsreader) Mike Neville Legendary northeast broadcaster dies BBC News

While working as an actor, the North East's independent television station - Tyne Tees Television - began broadcasting in January 1959. A few months later, Neville made his television debut, playing a policeman in Tyne Tees' children's programme Happy Go Lucky. He later appeared in a similar role in Under New Management, a locally-produced pub sitcom produced by future Dad's Army co-creator David Croft and written by Johnny Speight.

Mike Neville (newsreader) Look North blooper YouTube

After five years working in the theatre, Neville switched permanently to television in 1962 and joined Tyne Tees full-time as a continuity announcer, newsreader and reporter. In March 1964, he became the anchorman of the station's nightly news magazine programme, North East Newsview, but within a short time, he was approached by BBC North East to replace Frank Bough as the anchor of its rival news programme Look North.

Neville went onto anchor Look North for 32 years, becoming the longest serving main anchor of any BBC regional news programme. From 1969 to 1983, he became well known nationally for his contributions to the early evening magazine programme Nationwide - a programme he would go onto present occasionally. Despite achieving national fame, he turned down offers to move to London, preferring to stay in the North East of England.

At Look North, Neville and co-presenter George House (one of the BBC's first North East TV newsreaders) regularly incorporated Geordie into the programme, usually in comedy pieces pointing out the gulf between ordinary Geordies and officials speaking Standard English. They were also responsible for a series of recordings and theatre shows, beginning with Larn Yersel' Geordie, which attempted, not always seriously, to bring the Geordie dialect to the rest of the UK. The pair went onto compere the annual Geordierama shows at the Newcastle Festival, later televised locally by BBC North East and broadcast nationally on BBC Radio 4.

Away from the nightly regional news, Neville featured on a host of regional and networked programmes for the BBC - one such series, The Mike Neville Show (1975), was based on his experiences whilst completing National Service, in repertory theatre and on television. At a national level in the mid-1960s, he presented Come Dancing and the annual Miss United Kingdom contest. Other regional programmes included A Likely Story (1974), Friday North (1977), Mike on Friday (1980) and Phone In Now (1981). He also featured on A Song for Europe and the annual Children in Need telethon.

In 1989, Neville was caught by Noel Edmonds with a Gotcha on his BBC1 programme Noel's Saturday Roadshow. He was tricked into thinking he was filling seven minutes of airtime because there was a technical fault with the network feed screening Wogan. He was easily able to adapt to the situation and stay professional, and was the only local anchorman in the UK to ever receive a Gotcha.

Nicholas Owen, a former Look North reporter who moved onto ITN, described Neville as his mentor in a 2004 newspaper article, remarking that, He is a Geordie legend and has a towering reputation, in a way that no-one in national television does. Neville was appointed an MBE in the 1991 New Year Honours for services to broadcasting.

Return to Tyne Tees

In 1996, Neville was approached by Tyne Tees Television and offered a chance to return to the commercial station. Tyne Tees offered him his own hour long news programme, North East Tonight with Mike Neville. Neville made the switch back to Tyne Tees, which coincided with a short-lived station rebrand from Tyne Tees to Channel 3 North East. Shortly after its launch, North East Tonight won the Royal Television Society's award for best regional news programme. In 1998, it won a World Service Medal in New York for "Best News Magazine Programme".

While at Tyne Tees, he revived his regional chat show, The Mike Neville Show and presented occasional specials including Christmas Past and the station's 40th anniversary celebrations in 1999.

In 2003, Neville received the Outstanding Contribution Award at the Tom Cordner North East Press Awards ceremony and two years later, Northumbria University conferred an honorary degree upon him.

Neville remained with Tyne Tees until shortly after the station moved to new smaller studios in Gateshead in July 2005 - at the time, he underwent an emergency operation to remove a blood clot from his leg. Despite intending to return, Neville announced his retirement from regional television news on 5 June 2006. By this point, he was Britain's longest serving TV presenter, having received a Unique Achievement award from the Royal Television Society in 2001.

Neville went onto make occasional guest appearances on TV and radio, including a BBC4 documentary celebrating regional television in July 2011. In February 2017, he was honoured again by the Royal Television Society in the North East with a special award in February 2017 to mark his 80th birthday.

Personal life

He lived in Whickham with his wife Pamela Edwards, whom he married in 1962 after they met in repertory theatre in Blyth. She survives him with their daughter, Carolyn. They

On 6 September 2017, Neville's family announced he had died at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Gateshead, following a short illness caused by cancer.

Filmography

Self
1993
BBC Look North: North East and Cumbria (TV Series) as
Self - Former Presenter / Self - Presenter
- 17th October 2016 Evening News (2016) - Self - Former Presenter
- 7 September 1993: Evening Bulletin (1993) - Self - Presenter
2011
Regional TV: Life Through a Local Lens (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
2005
The Phillip Schofield Show (TV Movie) as
Self
2005
You're Watching Tyne Tees (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
2002
Mike Neville: A Life in Television (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
2000
Strange Meeting: The Making of the Film Wilfred (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1999
The Storyteller (Video documentary) as
Self - Narrator (voice)
1999
That's Entertainment (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1996
Christmas Past from Beamish (TV Movie) as
Self
1987
The Paul Daniels Magic Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #8.8 (1987) - Self
1986
Open Air (TV Series) as
Self / Self - Help Line
- Episode #1.37 (1986) - Self
- Episode #1.27 (1986) - Self
- Episode #1.22 (1986) - Self
- Episode #1.17 (1986) - Self
- Episode #1.12 (1986) - Self
- Episode #1.9 (1986) - Self - Help Line
- Episode #1.4 (1986) - Self
1977
Once Upon a Union (TV Movie documentary) as
Self - Reporter
1970
BBC Look North: Yorkshire (TV Series) as
Self / Presenter
- Episode dated 14 December 1970 (1970) - Self / Presenter
1967
Miss United Kingdom at Blackpool (TV Special) as
Self - Host
1966
Miss United Kingdom at Blackpool (TV Special) as
Self - Commentator
1963
A Matter of Degrees (TV Special documentary) as
Self - Narrator (voice, as Michael Neville)
Archive Footage
2017
BBC Look North: North East and Cumbria (TV Series) as
Self
- 6 September 2017: Late Bulletin (2017) - Self

References

Mike Neville (newsreader) Wikipedia