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TV presenter Henry Kelly dies aged 78 | TV presenter Henry Kelly dies aged 78 |
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Irish journalist hosted gameshows including Going for Gold and Game for a Laugh in the 1980s and 90s | Irish journalist hosted gameshows including Going for Gold and Game for a Laugh in the 1980s and 90s |
Henry Kelly, the Irish journalist and presenter best known for hosting UK TV shows such as Going for Gold and Game for a Laugh, has died aged 78. | |
His family said he “died peacefully” on Tuesday “after a period of ill health”. | His family said he “died peacefully” on Tuesday “after a period of ill health”. |
Their statement said: “Henry will be sorely missed by his friends and family, including his partner Karolyn Shindler, their son, Alexander, Henry’s daughter, Siobhan and her mother, Marjorie.” | |
Kelly, who was born in Athlone, started his career as a journalist on the Irish Times going on to become the paper’s northern editor in 1970 at the height of the Troubles. | |
But 10 years and several books later, he made a career switch into light entertainment and followed other Irish stars including Terry Wogan and Eamonn Andrews across the Irish Sea to London. | |
There he landed a job co-hosting Game for Laugh, made by London Weekend Television, which was then the powerhouse of Saturday night entertainment and a springboard for many TV and political figures including Peter Mandelson, Greg Dyke and John Birt, who went on to be BBC director generals, and the veteran political interviewer David Frost. | |
He then got the opportunity to join the new breakfast TV show, TV-am, taking over Michael Parkinson’s weekend duties in early 1983. | |
After four years he left TV-am and returned to gameshows, hosting Going for Gold, a lunchtime quizshow on the BBC, where he remained for almost a decade. | |
During the 1990s he was one of the stalwarts of the radio station Classic FM and later LBC, where he presented the drivetime show, one of the most listened-to slots in a radio station’s schedule. | |
He lived in Hampstead, in north London, with his partner, Karolyn, a historian, and loved the life strolling in the heath and imbibing in his local Bull and Bush pub. | |
His sense of humour was one of his hallmarks, along with his sense of place and modesty. When an interviewer in the Ham & High newspaper asked him what he would say if he had to write his own epitaph, he responded: “Who was he?” |