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Richard Ingrams

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Occupation
  
Role
  
Journalist

Spouse(s)
  
Sara Sudain (m. 2011)

Siblings
  
Leonard Ingrams

Children
  
3

TV shows
  
Q...

Name
  
Richard Ingrams


Richard Ingrams Richard Ingrams I39m a contented curmudgeon at last

Full Name
  
Richard Reid Ingrams

Born
  
19 August 1937 (age 86) (
1937-08-19
)
Chelsea, London, England, United Kingdom

Residence
  
Aldworth, Berkshire, England

Parent(s)
  
Leonard St Clair Ingrams and Victoria "Nee" Reid

Education
  
Books
  
The life and adventur, Goldenballs, Muggeridge, Dear Bill: The Collected, John Stewart Collis

Similar People
  

Private eye documentary 1 5 peter cook richard ingrams ian hislop


Richard Reid Ingrams (born 19 August 1937 in Chelsea, London, is an English journalist, a co-founder and second editor of the British satirical magazine Private Eye, and founding editor of The Oldie magazine. He left the latter job at the end of May 2014.

Contents

Private eye documentary 5 5 richard ingrams ian hislop auberon waugh


Early life and education

Richard Ingrams Richard Ingrams 39I have lots of enemies some of them

Ingrams's parents, who had three other sons including the banker and opera impresario Leonard Ingrams, were Leonard St Clair Ingrams (1900-1953), O.B.E., an investment banker from a clergy family, who worked as a government official in propaganda, economic warfare and the secret services during World War II, and Victoria, the daughter of Sir James Reid, private physician to Queen Victoria. Through his maternal grandmother and her ties to the Baring family, Ingrams is a direct descendant of the 19th-century prime minister Earl Grey.

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Ingrams was educated at the independent preparatory school West Downs in Winchester, Hampshire, followed by Shrewsbury School, where he met Willie Rushton and edited the school magazine. Before attending Oxford, he did his National Service in the army ranks after failing his interview for officer training, something which was unusual for someone from his background at the time. At University College, Oxford, where he read Classics, he shared tutorials with Robin Butler, later Cabinet Secretary and sometimes referred to as a "pillar of the Establishment". More importantly, he met Paul Foot, another former Shrewsbury pupil not yet the left-wing radical he became, who was to be a lifelong friend, and whose biography Ingrams wrote after Foot's death.

Career

Richard Ingrams Richard Ingrams in love is he serious Telegraph

Along with several other Old Salopians, including Willie Rushton, Ingrams founded Private Eye in 1962, taking over the editorship from Christopher Booker in 1963. It was a classic case, he claimed on Desert Island Discs in 2008, of the "old boy network". Private Eye was part of the satire boom of the early 1960s, which included the television show That Was The Week That Was, for which Ingrams wrote, and The Establishment nightclub, run by Peter Cook. When Private Eye ran into financial problems Cook was able to gain a majority shareholding on the proceeds of his brief but financially successful venture.

Richard Ingrams Richard Ingrams quits 39The Oldie39 in row with publishers

Ingrams vacated the editor's chair at the Eye in 1986, with Ian Hislop taking over. In 1992 Ingrams created and became editor of The Oldie, a now monthly humorous lifestyle and issues magazine mainly aimed at the older generation. As of 2005 he was still chairman of Private Eye, working there every Monday, spending four days a week in London.

He was television critic for The Spectator from 1976 to 1984, though he rarely showed much enthusiasm for the medium. He was a regular on the radio panel quiz The News Quiz for its first twenty years and contributed a column to The Observer for eighteen years. In late 2005 he moved to The Independent, considering The Observer to have gone downhill, particularly as a consequence of its support for the Iraq war. In his 27 August 2011 column, he announced that he had been sacked by the newly appointed editor of The Independent. Shortly after the death of Jimmy Savile, because several national newspapers were unwilling to publish, Ingrams' The Oldie was the first publication to break the story of Savile's history of child abuse.

After a series of clashes with James Pembroke, owner and publisher of The Oldie, Ingrams left the magazine at the end of May 2014 having resigned as editor. He is currently writing a biography of Ludovic Kennedy.

Private life

Ingrams married Mary Morgan on 24 November 1962; they had three children: a son, Fred (b. 14 February 1964), who is an artist; a second son, Arthur, who was disabled and died in childhood; and a daughter, Margaret ("Jubby", 4 May 1965 – 12 May 2004), who was married to David Ford ("an executive with society caterers The Admirable Crichton") and a mother of three, and died aged 39 of a heroin overdose in Brighton.

By 1993 Ingrams had become involved with Deborah Bosley, a former head waitress at the Groucho Club and an author. In 1996 they split briefly, during which time Bosley had an affair and became pregnant, causing a scandal.

Ingrams played the organ for many years in his local Anglican church in Aldworth, Berkshire, each Sunday. The Romney Marsh Historic Churches Trust was formed under the patronage of Ingrams and the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie. In 2011 he announced he had converted to Roman Catholicism.

Ingrams currently lives in Berkshire with his wife Sara, a medical researcher with her sons, and his youngest son Louis.

A biography, Richard Ingrams: Lord of the Gnomes (ISBN 0-434-77828-1) by Harry Thompson, was published in 1994.

As author

  • Mrs Wilson's Diary (with John Wells) 1965
  • Mrs Wilson's Second Diary (with John Wells) 1966
  • Mrs Wilson's Diaries (with John Wells) 1967
  • The Tale of Driver Grope (with Ralph Steadman) 1969
  • The Bible for Motorists: By Old Jowett (with Barry Fantoni) 1970
  • Harris in Wonderland: By Philip Reid (pseudonym of Ingrams and Andrew Osmond) 1973
  • God's Apology: A Chronicle of Three Friends 1977
  • Goldenballs 1979
  • Dear Bill: The Collected Letters of Denis Thatcher (with John Wells) 1980
  • Romney Marsh and the Royal Military Canal (with Fay Godwin) 1980
  • The Other Half: Further Letters of Denis Thatcher (with John Wells) 1981
  • One for the Road (with John Wells) 1982
  • Piper's Places: John Piper in England & Wales (with John Piper) 1983
  • My Round! (with John Wells) 1983
  • Bottoms Up! (with John Wells) 1984
  • Down the Hatch! (with John Wells) 1985
  • John Stewart Collis: A Memoir 1986
  • Just the One (with John Wells) 1986
  • The Best of "Dear Bill" (with John Wells) 1986
  • Mud in Your Eye! (with John Wells) 1987
  • You Might as Well be Dead 1988
  • Still Going Strong (with John Wells) 1988
  • The Ridgeway: Europe's Oldest Road 1988
  • Number 10 (with John Wells) 1989
  • On and On (with John Wells) 1990
  • Muggeridge: The Biography 1995
  • My Friend Footy: A Memoir of Paul Foot 2005
  • The Life and Adventures of William Cobbett 2005
  • Quips and Quotes: A Journalist's Commonplace Book 2011
  • Ludo and the Power of the Book: Ludovic Kennedy's Campaigns for Justice 2017
  • As compiler and editor

  • What the Papers Never Meant to Say: "Private Eye's" Second Book of Boobs 1968
  • The Life and Times of Private Eye 1961–1971 1971
  • Beachcomber: The Works of J. B. Morton 1974
  • Cobbett's Country Book: An Anthology of William Cobbett's Writings on Country Matters 1974
  • "Private Eye's" Book of Pseuds: A Mood Statement 1975
  • "Private Eye's" Second Book of Pseuds 1977
  • The Penguin Book of Private Eye Cartoons 1983
  • Dr Johnson by Mrs Thrale: The "Anecdotes" of Mrs Piozzi in Their Original Form 1984
  • England: An Anthology 1989
  • The Bumper Beachcomber 1991
  • The Oldie Book of Cartoons 1996
  • More Cartoons 1996
  • I Once Met: Fifty Encounters with the Famous 1996
  • Jesus: Authors Take Sides: An Anthology 1999
  • The Oldie Book of Cartoons, 1992–2009 2009
  • The Oldie Book of Cartoons: A New Selection 2013
  • References

    Richard Ingrams Wikipedia