'Esther Louise Rantzen'
CBE (born on ) is an
English journalist and
television presenter who is best known for her long stint in ''
That's Life!'' and her
anti-paedophile activism activities as founder of the charity
ChildLine.
Biography
Born in
Berkhamsted,
Hertfordshire,
England into a Jewish family, and educated at
Somerville College, Oxford, Rantzen began her television career as a production assistant on the
BBC Two documentary series ''
Man Alive'' in the mid-
1960s.
In
1968, Rantzen became one of the onscreen researcher/presenters of
Bernard Braden’s pro-consumer show ''Braden's Week''. When Braden appeared in margarine advertisements, the
BBC decided that this was inconsistent with his image as a consumer advocate and replaced ''Braden’s Week'' with the more populist ''That's Life!'', presented by Esther Rantzen. The format was very similar, including a Fletcher (
Cyril not Ronald) to read out amusing misprints. Braden's replacement by Rantzen was deeply resented by his wife
Barbara Kelly, who spoke bitterly of it some thirty years later.
The Central Television series
Spitting Image parodied ''That's Life'' at least twice. On one occasion they said that Esther Rantzen was unable to present the show as she was recovering from shock after a viewer had sent in his penis because it looked like a carrot. On another occasion her puppet was presenting ''That's Life And Death''. The show featured a totalizer which went up and down according to the number of viewers watching and correspondingly raised money for a girl who needed a liver transplant. When Esther said that the girl would live, the totalizer went down. Esther's final outburst, when it had dropped almost to the bottom, was "That does it! I'm leaving!" at which the red marker shot to the top of the totalizer and flew out towards the ceiling in a cloud of glitter.
Rantzen also developed the documentary series ''
The Big Time'' in
1976, which launched the singing career of
Sheena Easton. She also briefly hosted a junior version of ''That's Life'' in the
1980s.
Rantzen devised a TV series called "Hearts of Gold" in 1988 celebrating people who have performed unsung acts of outstanding kindness or courage. The uplifting theme tune was composed by her friend
Lynsey De Paul.
In the
1990s, Rantzen presented a talk show, ''Esther'', on BBC2.
In
2004, Rantzen participated in the
BBC One show ''
Strictly Come Dancing'' (later exported to the
USA as ''
Dancing With The Stars'').
In
2006, Rantzen took part in the
BBC Two programme ''
Excuse my French'' and was selected to present a new
consumer affairs show with former ''
Watchdog'' presenter
Lynn Faulds Wood, under the title ''Old Dogs New Tricks''.
[1]
Scandal and marriage
In
1970, Rantzen began an affair with
Desmond Wilcox that caused a considerable scandal. Not only was Wilcox her Department Head (boss, essentially) but he was also married at the time to Esther's good friend Patsy. The BBC management solution was to move the entire production team on ''That's Life!'' out of Wilcox's department. What they didn't consider was that the new arrangement brought Esther and Patsy into daily contact. To say that Esther was unpopular with her peer group at that time would be an understatement. The furore died down somewhat when Esther and Desmond married in
1977. They had three children before Desmond died of an aortic dissection in
2000.
[2]
Honours
In
1991, Rantzen was created an
Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to broadcasting, and received honorary doctorates from
Southampton Institute and the
London South Bank University for the creation of Childline and her career as a broadcaster. She was raised to Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) on
17 June 2006.
Footnotes
1. http://www.radiotimes.com/ListingsServlet?event=10&channelId=93&programmeId=47338001&jspLocation=/jsp/prog_details.jsp
2. Esther, The Autobiography, Rantzen, Esther, , , BBC Worldwide, 2001, ISBN 0-563-53741-8