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Not What You Meant?  There are 6 definitions for Bosanquet.

Reginald Bosanquet

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Reginald Bosanquet (9 August1932 - 27 May 1984) was a newsreader on Independent Television News in the United Kingdom for several years.

Contents

Early life

He was educated at Winchester College and at New College, Oxford where he read History. He was the son of the cricketer Bernard Bosanquet, inventor of the "googly" and a cousin of the public relations executive Christopher Bosanquet. Bosanquet was also a great great grandson of Sir Nicolas Conyngham Tindal, Lord Chief Justice from 1829-1843.

Television

Bosanquet joined ITN when it began, as a sub-editor. He later reported from many parts of the world and was the diplomatic correspondent for four years. Reginald briefly became head anchor of ITN from 1974-1976, when Alastair Burnet left to join the BBC's Panorama programme. His partnership with Anna Ford on ITN News was popular with viewers in the late 1970s, with Ford regarded as notably attractive and Bosanquet sometimes showing an obvious gallantry in his behaviour towards her. As Ford has since revealed, this could prove distressing: on one occasion Bosanquet, having somehow discovered the birth-date of Ford's mother, wished the woman a 'happy birthday' at the end of the broadcast - unaware that she had died some time previously. Although held in considerable affection by the public, Bosanquet was not without his critics as a newsreader. At times he could appear puzzled by unfamiliar foreign names and confused by news stories containing technical matters he did not understand. His trademark slurred delivery also fed suspicions that he was a heavy drinker; stories also circulated that he wore a toupee[1]. Such rumours became raw material for wags and comedy writers: Bosanquet acquired such nicknames as "Reginald Beaujolais" and "Reginald Boozalot"", and Richard Stilgoe could point out that an anagram of 'REGINALD BOSANQUET' was 'ITN SQUARE GONE BALD'.

Later career

Bosanquet was elected as Rector of the University of Glasgow from 1980 to 1984. He was a controversial choice. Shortly after his election he hit the headlines when he turned up at an official reception late and considerably the worse for drink, and insulted various guests, including the Lord Provost of Glasgow (and his eventual successor) Michael Kelly.

Personal life

Bosanquet was married three times. He died from pancreatic cancer aged 51.

Trivia

Bosanquet's early and sudden retirement from newsreading in the autumn of 1979 was the inspiration for an affectionate song by the Not the Nine O'Clock News team. Broadcast in the sixth show of the first series (20 November 1979), 'Oh, Reginald!' portrayed Anna Ford (played by Pamela Stephenson) as having been secretly in love with her fellow newsreader, and saddened by his disappearance from the programme ("Oh Bosanquet, why did you go away? Oh, Bosanquet, why did you leave me this way?"). Reports circulated afterwards that Bosanquet found the song extremely touching. Bosanquet also made a cameo in Royal Episode 13 of Monty Python's Flying Circus.

Academic offices
Preceded by
John L. Bell
Rector of the University of Glasgow
1980–1984
Succeeded by
Michael Kelly

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Reginald Bosanquet from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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