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Celebrities / Actors / Alan Gibson / Biography
Alan Gibson

Alan Gibson

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Biography

This page uses content from the Alan Gibson biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.

Norman Alan Stanley Gibson (born May 28, 1923 at Sheffield, Yorkshire; died April 10, 1997The date April 10 is given in his Wisden obituary; an alternative source gives April 19, and has his third name as "Stewart" rather than "Stanley". at Taunton, Somerset) was an English journalist, writer and radio broadcaster, best known for his work in connection with cricket, though he also sometimes covered football and rugby union. At various times Alan Gibson was also a university lecturer, poet, BBC radio producer, historian, Baptist lay preacher and Liberal parliamentary candidate.

He was born in Yorkshire, but the family moved to the East End of London when he was a small child, and subsequently to the West Country, where he attended Taunton School. Apart from his time at university, he spent all his subsequent life in that region, most of his cricket reporting being of Somerset and Gloucestershire matches. After school he went to Queen's College, Oxford, where he gained a First in history and was President of the Oxford Union.

He was briefly a travelling lecturer with University College, Exeter, before getting a job with the West Region of the BBC Radio Home Service. That led him into cricket (and other sporting) commentary on matches in the region, though he did not do much of this until leaving the BBC staff and becoming a freelance. Eventually he graduated to national broadcasts, including appearances on Test Match Special from 1962 to 1975.Christopher Martin-Jenkins, Ball by Ball: The Story of Cricket Broadcasting, 1990. Subsequently he did some TV commentary on county matches for HTV.

He wrote on cricket at various times for The Sunday Telegraph, The Guardian, The Spectator and The Cricketer. From 1968 he was a regular cricket reporter for The Times. He also reported rugby, in print and on radio. He spent some time as an early-morning disc-jockey, as well as appearing on the radio shows Sunday Half-Hour and Round Britain Quiz.

His books included:

  • Jackson's Year: The Test Matches Of 1905, Sportsman Book Club, 1966.
  • A Mingled Yarn, Collins, 1976. ISBN 0-00-216115-X (Autobiography)
  • Growing Up With Cricket - Some Memories of a Sporting Education,George Allen & Unwin, 1985. ISBN 0-04-796099-X
  • The Cricket Captains of England, The Pavilion Library, 1989. ISBN 1-85145-390-3 (A revised edition, the original being published in 1979.)
  • West Country Treasury: A Compendium of Lore and Literature, People and Places, Ex Libris Press, 1989. ISBN 0-948578-19-X (co-authored with his son, Anthony Gibson)

As a cricket commentator he was articulate and often drily humorous. An example of his spontaneous wit is the remark attributed to him about the New Zealand bowler Bob Cunis: "This is Cunis at the Vauxhall End. Cunis - a funny sort of name. Neither one thing nor the other."The Cunis quote His cricket writing for The Times was generally light-hearted, often concentrating more on his journey to the match (invariably by train, often changing at Didcot, rarely straightforward) than on the cricket itself. In his pieces he coined the descriptions "the Sage of Longparish" for his colleague John Woodcock, "the Demon of Frome" for Colin Dredge of Somerset and "the Shoreditch Sparrow" for Robin Jackman. Woodcock said concerning their reports for The Times: "I write about the cricket, and Alan writes about 'A Day at the Cricket'."Growing up with Cricket, p174. His cricket books, though still containing plenty of humour, were more serious affairs, knowledgeable and well researched.

He was President of the Cricket Writers' Club in 1983-4.Cricket Writers' Club presidency

Not a robust man, he had spells of depression, once spending some time in a psychiatric hospital. He also had a drink problem (which was the reason he was dropped from Test Match Special). His reports for The Times often referred to his regular appearances at The Star public house in High Littleton, where he lived, and reports of matches involving Gloucestershire invariably mentioned the GRIP – the Gloriously Red-headed Imperturbable Pamela, the barmaid in the main pavilion bar at the County Ground at Bristol.

Notes

References

  • Taunton School obituary
  • Wisden obituary
  • Another Wisden piece
  • Gibson, Alan. Growing Up With Cricket - Some Memories of a Sporting Education, George Allen & Unwin, 1985. ISBN 0-04-796099-X

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
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