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London Weekend Television

British company
Also known as: LWT

Learn about this topic in these articles:

role of

    • Birt
      • In John Birt, Baron Birt

        …appointed director of programs of London Weekend Television (LWT), one of the most profitable companies in British independent television, not least because of its knack of producing light entertainment programs with mass appeal. Despite being more familiar with the more austere end of television output, Birt found little difficulty in…

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    • Dyke
      • In Greg Dyke

        …and as a researcher for London Weekend Television (LWT), a commercial television company, where he swiftly rose to become an editor of the topical weekly London Programme.

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    Sir David Frost

    British talk show host and journalist
    Also known as: Sir David Paradine Frost
    Quick Facts
    In full:
    Sir David Paradine Frost
    Born:
    April 7, 1939, Tenterden, Kent, England
    Died:
    August 31, 2013, at sea (aged 74)

    Sir David Frost (born April 7, 1939, Tenterden, Kent, England—died August 31, 2013, at sea) was an English talk-show host, journalist, and writer who was noted for his interviews of public figures, notably former U.S. president Richard Nixon, who, under Frost’s skillful questioning, apologized for the Watergate scandal.

    Frost studied history at the University of Cambridge, where he became active in the Footlights Dramatic Club and showed a talent for satire. His first achieved recognition on BBC TV’s satiric sketch show That Was the Week That Was (TW3; 1962–64) and its successor, Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life (1964–65). By 1966 he was the host of The Frost Report, the first of a series of eponymous TV series, culminating in Frost over the World, which debuted in 2007 on the English version of Al Jazeera, a cable news network based in Qatar.

    In 1977 Frost interviewed Nixon, who was unexpectedly candid about his involvement in the Watergate scandal and issued a dramatic apology. Frost financed and distributed the interviews himself through syndication deals when no TV network would broadcast them. The phenomenal public response to the interviews—which later served as the basis for a successful play (2006) and film (2008)—made Frost a celebrated interviewer, with access to newsmakers from the world of politics, sports, and entertainment. Frost also was a cofounder of London Weekend Television and in 1983 of Britain’s TV-am. In addition, he wrote several books. Frost was made OBE in 1970 and was knighted in 1993. In 2013 he died suddenly on board the Queen Elizabeth cruise ship en route from England to Portugal.

    This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.