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Ned Sherrin

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Cause of death
  
Throat cancer

Education
  
Exeter College, Oxford

Role
  
Broadcaster


Name
  
Ned Sherrin

Nationality
  
British

Plays
  
The Mitford Girls

Ned Sherrin BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs Ned Sherrin

Full Name
  
Edward George Sherrin

Born
  
18 February 1931 (
1931-02-18
)
Low Ham, Somerset, England

Occupation
  
Broadcaster, author and stage director

Died
  
October 1, 2007, Chelsea, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
Oxford Dictionary of Humorous Quotations

Movies and TV shows
  
Orlando, Every Home Should H, Up the Front, Friday Night - Saturday, The National Health

Similar People
  
Caryl Brahms, David Kernan, Millicent Martin, Alistair Beaton, Milton Shulman

Ned sherrin a tribute


Edward George "Ned" Sherrin, CBE (18 February 1931 – 1 October 2007) was an English broadcaster, author and stage director. He qualified as a barrister and then worked in independent television before joining the BBC. He appeared in a variety of radio and television satirical shows and theatre shows, some of which he also directed.

Contents

Ned Sherrin BBC Radio 4 Extra That Reminds Me Series 1 Ned Sherrin

Ned sherrin loose ends 4 july 1987


Early life

Ned Sherrin wwwukgameshowscompimageseeeNedsherrinhead

The son of Thomas Adam Sherrin, a farmer, and his wife, Dorothy Finch Drewett, Sherrin was born at Low Ham on the Somerset Levels.

Ned Sherrin Capital Breakfast Side By Side With Sherrin and what else

He was educated at Sexey's School, in Bruton, Somerset, and rendered his national service in the Royal Signals, being commissioned as an officer in 1950.

Ned Sherrin so you want to be a writer Ned Sherrin

Although he read law at Exeter College, Oxford, and subsequently qualified as a barrister, he became involved in theatre at Oxford and joined British television at the founding of independent television in 1956, producing shows for ATV in Birmingham.

Career

Ned Sherrin The man who broke the Establishment Ned Sherrin dies

Sherrin joined the BBC in 1957 as a temporary production assistant, then began working for them as a producer in "Television Talks" in 1963. Specialising in satirical shows, he worked extensively in film production and television.

In 1962 he was responsible for the first satirical television series That Was The Week That Was starring David Frost and Millicent Martin and its successors Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life and BBC-3. His other shows and films included Up Pompeii!, Up the Front, The Cobblers of Umbridge and The Virgin Soldiers. In 1978, he also hosted We Interrupt This Week, a lively and humorous news events quiz featuring two teams of well-known journalists and columnists sparring against one another. The show was a production of WNET/Channel 13 New York.

Sherrin produced and directed numerous theatre productions in London's West End, including Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell and the landmark musical Side By Side By Sondheim. He received an Olivier Award in 1984 for directing and conceiving The Ratepayers' Iolanthe, an adaptation by Sherrin and Alistair Beaton of the Gilbert and Sullivan opera Iolanthe.

On BBC Radio 4, from 1986, he presented a light entertainment show on Saturday mornings (latterly evenings) called Loose Ends, and Counterpoint, a quiz show about all types of music, until forced off the air when his voice succumbed to throat cancer. In his autobiography, (So, anyway), John Cleese describes Sherrin as 'money mad' and 'treacherous'.

He also toured the UK with his one-man show An Evening of Theatrical Anecdotes.

Sherrin wrote two volumes of autobiography, several books of quotations and anecdotes, as well as some fiction; and several works in collaboration with Caryl Brahms.

Personal life

Openly gay, he was a patron of the London Gay Symphony Orchestra, as well as the Stephen Sondheim Society of Singapore up until 1995. Sherrin was awarded a CBE in the 1997 New Year's honours list. He was diagnosed with unilateral vocal cord paralysis in January 2007 and died of complications of throat cancer on 1 October 2007, aged 76.

Selected works

  • Sherrin, Ned (1983). A small thing – like an earthquake. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. 
  • Sherrin, Ned; Shand, Neil (1984). 1956 and all that: a memorable history of England since the war to end all wars (Two). London: M Joseph. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (1984). Cutting edge, or, "Back in the knife-box, Miss Sharp": Ned Sherrin's anthology of wit. London: J M Dent. 
  • Brahms, Caryl; Sherrin, Ned (1984). Song by song: the lives and work of 14 great lyric writers. Egerton, Bolton: R Anderson Publications. 
  • Brahms, Caryl; Sherrin, Ned (1986). Too dirty for the windmill. London: Constable. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (1991). Ned Sherrin's theatrical anecdotes: a connoisseur's collection of legends, stories, and gossip. London: Virgin. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (1993). Ned Sherrin in his anecdotage: a classic collection from the master raconteur. London: Virgin. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (1995). The Oxford dictionary of humorous quotations. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (1996). Sherrin's year. London: Virgin. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (1996). Scratch an actor. London: Sinclair-Stevenson. 
  • Brahms, Caryl; Sherrin, Ned (1998). The Mitford girls: a musical. London: Warner/Chappell Music. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (2004). I wish I'd said that. New York: Oxford University Press. 
  • Sherrin, Ned (2005). Ned Sherrin: the autobiography. London: Little, Brown. 
  • Frost, David; Sherrin, Ned (1963). That was the week that was. London: W H Allen. 
  • References

    Ned Sherrin Wikipedia