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Petroc Trelawny

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Nationality
  
British

Known for
  
BBC Radio 3 Breakfast


Name
  
Petroc Trelawny

Role
  
Radio broadcaster

Petroc Trelawny httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages4441236801597

Full Name
  
James Edward Petroc Trelawny

Born
  
27 May 1971 (age 52) (
1971-05-27
)
Worcester, Worcestershire, England, UK

Occupation
  
Classical music radio and television broadcaster

Profiles

Petroc Trelawny at the Last Night of the Proms


James Edward Petroc Trelawny (born 27 May 1971) is a British classical music radio and television broadcaster, who joined BBC Radio 3 in 1998, where he now presents Breakfast.

Contents

Petroc Trelawny BBC classical music presenter Petroc Trelawny to fly home

Bbc radio 3 interview with petroc trelawny and gillian davis


Career

Petroc Trelawny BBC Radio 3 Breakfast Petroc Trelawny

James Edward Petroc Trelawny was born in Worcester but grew up in the Meneage district of the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall and attended Helston School. He started his career with BBC Radio Devon in 1989, aged 19, as a reporter and presenter. During the First Gulf War, Trelawny was a newsreader for the British Forces Broadcasting Service, and then joined the station as a presenter in Hong Kong for a year.

Petroc Trelawny BBC presenter Petroc Trelawny arrested in Zimbabwe World news

In 1992 Trelawny joined new radio station Classic FM, in London, as the first presenter of the afternoon show. In 1994 Trelawny joined London News Radio where he hosted a daily three-hour news and talk show. In 1997 he co-presented the BBC GMR Breakfast Show, broadcast from Manchester, with Victoria Derbyshire.

Petroc Trelawny BBC Radio 3 Petroc Trelawny presents the Breakfast show live from

In 1998 Trelawny joined BBC Radio 3 full-time. Trelawny presented Breakfast, and subsequently In Tune, and has introduced hundreds of broadcasts for the station, many from the BBC Proms, as well as the Cardiff Singer of the World and the Leeds International Piano Competition.

He had also broadcast for RTE Lyric FM in Ireland, where his major documentary series Max and St Magnus – An Orkney Saga won an ESB Media Award. Trelawny is a regular television presenter of classical music programmes for BBC Two, BBC Four and Sky Arts.

As a writer Trelawny has regularly contributed to The Spectator, The Irish Times, The Catholic Herald and BBC Music Magazine. Trelawny is particularly fond of the operas of Britten and Mozart, the symphonies of Shostakovich and Beethoven's piano sonatas. He has also written blogs for the Daily Telegraph and for the BBC Radio 3 website.

In May 2012 Trelawny featured in the international news after being arrested in Zimbabwe while hosting a charity music festival in Bulawayo. He was presenting a concert to raise funds for a children's charity. Immigration officials claimed he was in the country without a work permit. There was widespread international condemnation in the media following his arrest. He was not, in fact, working but giving his services free of charge. Whilst in detention he slipped and injured his shoulder. All charges were later dropped, but the Zimbabwean immigration authorities insisted that he had violated the terms of his entry visa and he was detained until a court sat to decide the outcome. He was released after a few days.

In 2014, on the news that the Cornish were to be recognised as a national minority, Trelawny wrote in the Daily Telegraph: "Abroad, when I explain where I am from, the inevitable response is: 'So you are English.' 'No,' I reply, 'Cornish.' I’ll accept British, or European, but being described as English is something that rankles with most Cornishmen."

References

Petroc Trelawny Wikipedia