| Sir David Paradine Frost (born April 17, 1939) is a British television presenter. He was born at
Tenterden, Kent, the son of a Methodist minister and attended Gillingham Preparatory School and then Wellingborough School.
Early Career
From early on, Frost allegedly declared his ambition to become a TV personality, despite attending Cambridge. Frost's well-known ability to network with the
right people was in evidence there, where he edited the literary magazine Granta and
was the secretary of the Footlights comedy troupe, which included people of
note such as Peter Cook and John Bird.
After leaving university, he became a trainee at Associated Redifusion and worked for Anglia Television. At the same time, he kept up his cabaret performances.
That Was The Week That Was [TW3]
After several others declined the role (including Peter Cook, John Bird, and Brian Redhead), he was chosen by writer and producer Ned
Sherrin to compere a pioneering satirical programme called That Was The Week That Was. This caught the wave of the satire boom in 1960 Britain and became enormously popular as well as influential, although it often riled
politicians.
After TW3
Frost also fronted many programmes imitating the success of TW3, most notably The Frost Report (1966-7). On
ITV's The Frost Programme, he interviewed a number of controversial characters such as Sir Oswald Mosley and Rhodesian premier Ian Smith (he
accused Smith of denying promotion to black members of Rhodesia's army, navy and airforce, only to be told by Smith that
landlocked Rhodesia didn't have a navy).
In the late 1960s, a moving tribute to recently-assassinated President John F. Kennedy on That Was The Week That Was saw Frost's fame spread to the USA. LP recordings of TW3 became best sellers and so began an intensely busy
period for Frost, including his practically commuting across the Atlantic (mostly by Concorde). His Frost on America show featured guests such as Jack
Benny, Tennessee Williams and, in 1977, Richard Nixon.
He is perhaps best known to most ordinary people in the UK for presenting various panel games, including Through the Keyhole, which featured house expert Loyd Grossman and, more recently, Catherine Gee. His Sunday morning
interview program Breakfast With Frost has been running on the BBC since 1992 after transferring from ITV.
Frost has had numerous critics throughout his career. Satirist and contemporary Peter Cook disliked him, perhaps because he stole his Beyond The Fringe act impersonating UK Prime Minister Harold Macmillan (whilst Cook was performing the act at one theatre, Frost was performing exactly the same
act at another). Though Frost demonstrated a great deal of respect for Cook, Cook was critical of Frost's career, feeling he had
done little more than stolen Cook's early image. Cook often claimed, tongue-in-cheek, that the biggest mistake he ever made was
saving Frost from drowning in a swimming pool. Further borrowing of comedy material from others caused Beyond The Fringe
performer Jonathan Miller to dub Frost "the bubonic plagiarist". For
these reasons and others, the satirical magazine Private Eye has been a
persistent critic of Frost, particularly during the 1970s.
In addition, Frost's interview style of late has been described as sycophantic, and markedly different to his performance in
the 1960s and 1970s which almost bordered on
verbal bullying – it was from such fiery encounters that the phrase 'trial by television' was popularised.
Frost has been instrumental in starting up two important TV franchises: LWT in 1967, and
as one of the Famous Five who launched TV-am in 1982. He owns a production company called
Paradine Productions, after his middle name.
Frost is the only person to have interviewed all of the past six British prime ministers and the past seven US presidents
(Larry King has also interviewed all US presidents starting with Richard Nixon).
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