Esther Rantzen graduated from
Oxford with a degree in English and joined the BBC where her first job
was in radio as a sound effects assistant. From there she moved to television,
first as a clerk, then as a researcher. In 1968 she became a researcher/reporter
for the consumer programme Braden’s Week.
In 1973 Esther was appointed producer/presenter of That’s
Life! which drew audiences of more than 18 million and was on the air
for twenty-one years. In addition to That’s Life!, Esther created
an produced The Big Time, a documentary series which launched the career
of successful singer Sheena Easton.
She has also made a number of pioneering programmes on subjects
such as British women’s experience of childbirth, stillbirth, mental
health, transplantation, drugs and child abuse. While preparing the programme
on child abuse in 1986, she invented the concept of ChildLine, a telephone
helpline for children in trouble or danger who dare not ask for help elsewhere.
ChildLine now has ten counselling centres across the UK and answers more
than one and a half million calls a year.
She has received a number of professional awards for her
achievements in television, including the Royal Television Society’s
Special Judge’s Award for Journalism, and membership of the RTC
Hall of Fame. From the British Academy of Film and Television she has
received the Dimbleby Award for factual presentation; she was the first
woman to receive it. The Variety Club of Great Britain made her the BBC
TV Personality of the Year, she received the Snowdon Award for services
to disabled people, and in 1991 was awarded the OBE for services to broadcasting.
She continues to work actively with a variety of charities
in addition to ChildLine, of which she is the Chair. She also helped to
create the Association of Young People with ME, of which she is President.
For seven years she presented Esther, her own talk show
on BBC2, followed by the weekly ITV programme That’s Esther, which
continued her campaigning work, especially for disabled people. She has
completed her first novel, “A Secret Life” published by Century,
and is currently working on her second.
In addition she took part in a dating documentary, “Would
Like to Meet” and the hit BBC TV series Strictly Come Dancing. She
contributes regularly to The Daily Mail and other publications, and is
in demand as a lecturer on children’s issues, broadcasting and many
other topics. |