Great Lives
Great Lives is a BBC Radio 4 biography series, produced in Bristol. It has been presented by Joan Bakewell, Humphrey Carpenter, Francine Stock and currently (since April 2006) Matthew Parris. A distinguished guest is asked to nominate the person they feel is truly deserving of the title "Great Life". The presenter and a recognised expert (a biographer, family member or fellow practitioner) are on hand to discuss the life. The programmes are 28 minutes long, originally broadcast on Fridays at 23:00, more recently at 16:30 on Tuesday with a repeat at 23:00 on Friday.
Programmes
Series 0, August – November 2001
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Tim Waterstone, bookshop owner |
Clement Attlee former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom |
Joan Bakewell |
Rosie Boycott, journalist |
Sir Ernest Shackleton, polar explorer |
Terence Conran, food and design entrepreneur |
André and Édouard Michelin, French inventors of the detachable pneumatic tyre and the travel guide |
Ralph Steadman, cartoonist and caricaturist |
Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher |
Barbara Castle, Labour politician |
Sylvia Pankhurst, suffragette |
Frank Delaney, writer and broadcaster |
Henri Matisse, French artist |
Jonathan Miller, theatre and opera director |
Marshall McLuhan, communication theorist and philosopher |
Fay Weldon, writer |
H. G. Wells, visionary author |
Rabbi Lionel Blue, journalist and broadcaster |
Swami Vivekananda, 19th-century Hindu missionary |
Jackie Stewart, racing driver |
King Hussein of Jordan |
Joan Littlewood, theatre director |
Brendan Behan, Irish writer |
Lord Tebbit, Conservative politician |
King Alfred the Great, 9th-century King of Wessex |
Series 1, May – August 2002
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Ned Sherrin, broadcaster, author and stage director |
Sir Donald Wolfit, actor-manager |
Humphrey Carpenter |
Elizabeth Filkin, former Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards |
George Eliot, novelist |
Steven Isserlis, cellist |
Franz Schubert, Austrian composer |
Lord Carrington, conservative politician |
Field Marshal Viscount Slim, military leader |
Frederic Raphael, author and screenwriter |
Alexander the Great |
Janet Street-Porter, journalist and media executive |
Marquis de Sade, French philosopher, revolutionary politician and libertine |
Chris Barber, jazz trombonist and bandleader |
Louis Armstrong, American jazz trumpeter and singer |
Sue Limb, writer and broadcaster |
Lord Byron, poet |
Frank Keating, sports writer |
Tom Spring, 19th-century bare-knuckle boxer |
Kirsty Young, broadcaster |
Katharine Graham, American newspaper publisher |
Series 2, October – December 2002
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Bernard Manning, comedian, |
Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Albanian Roman Catholic nun |
Humphrey Carpenter |
Sir Paul Nurse, geneticist and cell biologist, |
Erasmus Darwin, 18th century physician |
Darcus Howe, writer and broadcaster, |
C. L. R. James, sportsman and revolutionary |
Bea Campbell, journalist and author, |
Rachel Carson, marine biologist and conservationist |
Muriel Gray, journalist and broadcaster, |
M. R. James, writer of ghost stories |
Ahdaf Soueif, novelist and cultural commentator, |
Umm Kulthum, Egyptian singer, songwriter and actress |
Professor Sir Harry Kroto, chemist, |
Spinoza, Portuguese philosopher |
Steve Bell, political cartoonist, |
James Gillray, 18th-century caricaturist |
Tam Dalyell, Labour politician, |
Richard Crossman, Labour politician |
Greg Dyke, media executive, |
Captain James Cook, explorer |
Series 3, April – June 2003
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Beryl Bainbridge, novelist |
Robert Falcon Scott, polar explorer |
Humphrey Carpenter |
Leonard Slatkin, conductor and composer |
Sergei Rachmaninoff, Russian-American composer |
John Sergeant, journalist and broadcaster |
Arthur Ransome, author and journalist |
Benjamin Zephaniah, writer and poet |
Bob Marley, Jamaican reggae musician |
Steve Jones, geneticist |
James Hogg, poet and novelist |
Richard Ingrams, journalist and satirist |
G. K. Chesterton, writer |
Stacey Kent, jazz singer, |
Powell and Pressburger, film-makers |
Richard Holmes, military historian |
the Man in the Iron Mask, mysterious French prisoner in the Bastille |
Tanni Grey-Thompson, Welsh athlete and broadcaster, |
David Lloyd George, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom |
Esther Rantzen, journalist and broadcaster, |
Queen Elizabeth I, Queen of England and Ireland |
Series 4, October – December 2003
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Peter Bazalgette, television executive |
Noël Coward, playwright, composer, director, actor and singer |
Humphrey Carpenter |
Kit Wright, writer |
Samuel Johnson, author and lexicographer |
Kate Adie, war reporter |
Flora Sandes, pioneer female soldier |
Jenny Eclair, comedian |
Sarah Bernhardt, French actress |
Brian Keenan, writer |
Bernardo O'Higgins, Chilean independence leader |
Brenda Dean, trade unionist and politician |
Octavia Hill, co-founder of the National Trust |
Clement Freud, broadcaster, writer, politician and chef |
Tommy Cooper, comedian and magician |
Armando Iannucci, comedian and writer |
Charles Dickens, novelist |
Linda Smith, comedian |
Ian Dury, singer |
Ann Leslie, journalist |
Mary Kingsley, writer and explorer |
Series 5, April – June 2004
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Lord Alistair McAlpine, Conservative politician |
Machiavelli |
Humphrey Carpenter |
Denis Healey, Labour politician |
Ernest Bevin, Labour politician |
Ruth Lea, economist |
Pyotr Tchaikovsky, composer |
George Monbiot, environmental activist and writer |
Thomas Paine, American author and revolutionary |
Benedict Allen, explorer |
Horatio Nelson, naval hero |
Charles Wheeler, journalist and broadcaster |
Lyndon B. Johnson, 36th President of the United States |
Kimberley Fortier |
Edith Wharton, writer |
Richard Eyre, theatre director |
Anton Chekhov, Russian dramatist |
Kenneth Clarke, Conservative politician |
Benjamin Disraeli, 19th century Conservative Prime Minister |
Lord May, scientist |
Joseph Banks, naturalist and botanist |
Series 6, October – December 2004
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Dillie Keane, actress, singer and comedian |
Gilbert and Sullivan, librettist and composer of comic operettas 1 |
Humphrey Carpenter |
Baroness Jay, former Leader of the House of Lords |
Vice-Admiral Robert FitzRoy RN, captain of HMS Beagle |
Christina Gorna, barrister |
Vivien Leigh, actress |
Jilly Goolden, wine expert |
Leonard Woolf, writer and political thinker |
Gerry Anderson, broadcaster |
Burt Lancaster, American actor |
Tim Marlow, art historian and broadcaster |
Marvin Gaye, soul singer |
Shami Chakrabarti, civil-rights campaigner |
George Orwell, author and journalist |
Marjorie Wallace, writer and charity worker |
Sir Edward Elgar, composer |
David Puttnam, film-maker |
Michael Collins, Irish nationalist leader (repeat of Programme 1?) |
Lucinda Lambton, writer and broadcaster |
Captain Henry Morgan, privateer |
- 1The programme originally scheduled by wtih the guest film-maker David Puttnam who nominated the Michael Collins, Irish nationalist leader) was withdrawn due to "production quality".[1]
Hogmanay Special, 31 December 2004
- Carpenter died on 4 January 2005, this was he's last Great Lives programme 1
Series 7, April – June 2005
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Joe Queenan, humorist, critic and author |
Genghis Khan, founder of the Mongol Empire |
Francine Stock |
Mary Kenny, author |
George Sand, writer |
Valerie Grove, journalist |
Charles M. Schulz, the Peanuts cartoonist |
Douglas Dunn, poet |
Robert Louis Stevenson, writer |
Michael Morpurgo, Children's Laureate |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Austrian composer |
Martin Smith, Chairman of English National Opera |
John D. Rockefeller, American industrialist, investor and philanthropist |
Yvonne Brown, lawyer |
Marcus Garvey, Pan-Africanist leader |
Amanda Vickery, historian |
Elizabeth Gaskell, novelist |
Lord Powell |
Ronald Reagan, 40th President of the United States |
Frederick Forsyth, novelist |
the 1st Duke of Wellington, soldier and statesman |
Series 8, October 2005 – February 2006
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Kathy Lette, writer |
Mae West, Hollywood actress |
Francine Stock |
Carole Stone, author and broadcaster |
R. D. Laing, psychiatrist |
Howard Goodall, composer |
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, composer |
Antony Beevor, historian, and Gillian Slovo, novelist |
Vasily Grossman, Soviet writer |
Robert Thomson, journalist |
Zhao Ziyang, Chinese premier |
Derek Wilson, historian and author |
Thomas Cromwell, 16th century politician |
Fiona Reynolds, Director-General of the National Trust |
Beatrix Potter, writer |
Annie Nightingale, radio broadcaster |
Marty Feldman, comedian and actor |
Adam Hart-Davis, historian and broadcaster |
Nevil Shute, novelist and aeronautical engineer |
Helen Lederer, writer and actress |
Dorothy Parker, writer and poet |
Series 9, April – June 2006
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Penelope Keith, actress |
Morecambe and Wise, comedy double act |
Matthew Parris |
Jeff Randall, journalist |
Andrew Carnegie, Scottish-American industrialist and philanthropist |
Julian Clary, comedian |
Noël Coward, playwright, composer, director, actor and singer; Coward was previously nominated by Peter Bazalgette in Series 4 Progamme 1 |
Craig Brown, critic and satirist |
Sigmund Freud, Austrian neurologist and psychotherapist |
Ivan Massow, entrepreneur |
Ella Fitzgerald, jazz singer |
Duncan Goodhew, athlete |
Johnny Weissmuller, American athlete-turned Tarzan actor |
Frances Cairncross, economist, journalist and academic |
Ignaz Semmelweis, Hungarian physician and pioneer of antiseptic procedures |
Anna Raeburn, broadcaster and agony aunt |
Tamara Karsavina, Russian ballerina |
Piers Morgan, journallist and broadcaster |
W. G. Grace, English cricketer |
Krishnan Guru-Murthy, journalist and broadcaster |
Robin Day, broadcaster and political interviewer |
Series 10, August – September 2006
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Christopher Hitchens, author and journalist |
Leon Trotsky, Russian revolutionary |
Matthew Parris |
Garry Bushell, newspaper columnist |
Max Miller, comedian |
Helena Kennedy, civil liberties lawyer |
Eleanor Roosevelt, First Lady of the United States |
Jeremy Vine, journalist and broadcaster |
W. H. Auden, poet |
Elaine Showalter, feminist literary critic |
Julia Ward Howe, 19th-century American abolitionist, social activist and poet |
Lord John Biffen, Conservative politician |
Stanley Baldwin, Conservative Prime Minister |
Joanna MacGregor, pianist |
Nina Simone, singer and civil rights activist |
Adair Turner, businessman and academic |
Charles Darwin, naturallist |
Series 11, December 2006 – January 2007
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Joe Boyd, record producer |
John H. Hammond, record producer |
Matthew Parris |
Lesley Abdela, feminist campaigner |
Millicent Garrett Fawcett, suffragette |
Kathy Sykes, scientist and broadcaster |
Albert Einstein, German-American physicist |
Victor Spinetti, actor |
Joan Littlewood, theatre director |
Alan Davies, actor and comedian |
Richard Beckinsale, actor |
Camilla Wright, journalist |
Martha Gellhorn, American war reporter |
Anne Fine, author |
William Beveridge, economist and social reformer |
Ann Widdecombe, former Conservative MP |
Pope John Paul II |
Series 12, April – May 2007
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Phill Jupitus, comedian |
Joe Strummer, frontman of The Clash |
Matthew Parris |
Nick Danziger, photographer |
Tintin, fictional Belgian reporter |
William Boyd, author |
Anton Chekhov, Russian playwright |
Pallab Ghosh, BBC science correspondent |
Marie Curie, Polish chemist & physicist |
Pauline Black, singer & actor |
Billie Holiday, American jazz singer |
Fiona Bruce, television presenter & newsreader |
Mata Hari, Dutch accused spy |
Yvonne Brewster, theatre director, actress and writer |
Claude McKay, poet |
Barry Cunliffe, archaeologist |
Julius Caesar, Roman Emperor |
Phil Hammond, comedian & broadcaster |
George Bernard Shaw, Irish writer & activist |
Series 13, August – October 2007
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Jude Kelly, theatre director and producer |
Lilian Baylis, theatrical producer and manager |
Matthew Parris |
David Trimble, politician |
Elvis Presley, American singer |
Maggi Hambling, painter and sculptor |
Rembrandt, Dutch artist |
The Earl of Snowdon, photographer, and Alex Moulton, engineer |
Alec Issigonis, car designer |
Michael Craig-Martin, conceptual artist |
John Cage, avant-garde composer |
David Rowntree, drummer with Blur and political activist |
Lord Denning, judge |
John Motson, football commentator |
Brian Clough, football manager |
Prue Leith, restaurateur |
Elizabeth David, food writer |
General Sir Michael Rose, British Army officer |
George Washington, first President of the United States |
Series 14, December 2007 – January 2008
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Jan Ravens, impressionist |
Thora Hird, actress |
Matthew Parris |
Quentin Blake, illustrator |
George Cruikshank, caricaturist |
Redmond O'Hanlon, travel writer |
Alfred Russel Wallace, naturalist |
Sir Richard Sykes, biochemist |
Howard Florey, pharmacologist and pathologist |
Roger Graef, documentary maker |
Groucho Marx, American comedian and film star |
Jacqueline Wilson, author of children's literature |
Katherine Mansfield, writer |
Joe Simpson, mountaineer |
Hermann Buhl, mountaineer |
Series 15, April – May 2008
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Mark Gatiss, actor and writer |
Peter Cushing, actor |
Matthew Parris |
Rhona Cameron, comedian |
Charles Bukowski, novelist and poet |
Steve Cram, former athlete |
Paavo Nurmi, Finnish runner |
Stirling Moss, racing car driver |
Juan Manuel Fangio, Argentine racing car driver |
Anna Ford, TV newsreader |
Paul Robeson, black singer, actor and civil rights activist |
Simon Armitage, poet |
Ian Curtis, lead singer with Joy Division |
Nicholas Parsons, actor and radio & TV presenter |
Edward Lear, painter and poet |
Arabella Weir, comedian, actress and writer |
Joyce Grenfell, actress, comedian and singer-songwriter |
Colin Dexter, crime writer |
A. E. Housman, scholar and poet |
Series 16, August – September 2008
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Jon Snow, journalist and broadcaster |
Lord Longford, politician and social reformer |
Matthew Parris |
David Lammy, politician |
Richard Pryor, comedian |
David Attenborough, naturalist and broadcaster |
Robert Hooke, 17th century scientist |
Bob Harris, radio presenter |
Alan Freed, disc jockey |
George Osborne, then shadow chancellor |
Henry VII, king |
Lesley Riddoch, broadcaster |
David Ervine, Northern Ireland politician |
Mike Jackson, army general |
Bill Slim, second world war Field Marshal |
Deborah Meaden, businesswoman |
Lady Hester Stanhope, traveller, diplomat and spy |
Ian Hislop, editor of Private Eye |
William Hogarth, painter and satirist |
Series 17, December 2008 – February 2009
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Harvey Goldsmith, performing arts promoter |
Luciano Pavarotti, Italian operatic tenor |
Matthew Parris |
Michael Grade, broadcasting executive |
Billy Marsh, theatrical agent |
Raymond Briggs, illustrator and writer |
Beachcomber, columnist |
David Soul, actor |
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German theologian and Resistance figure |
Tracy-Ann Oberman, actress |
Bette Davis, American film actress |
Pam Ayres, poet |
Tony Hancock, comedian and actor |
Redmond O'Hanlon, travel writer |
Alfred Russel Wallace, naturalist |
Rachel De Thame, horticulturalist |
Margot Fonteyn, ballerina |
Ken Livingstone, former Mayor of London |
Robert Kennedy, American politician and brother of president John F. Kennedy |
Series 18, April – May 2009
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Stuart Hall, broadcaster |
Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France |
Matthew Parris |
Polly Toynbee, journalist |
Roy Jenkins, Labour politician |
David Mellor, politician |
Thomas Beecham, conductor |
Ruby Wax, American comedian |
Carl Jung, Swiss founder of analytical psychology |
Colin Murray, broadcaster |
Frank Sinatra, American singer |
Andy Sheppard, saxophonist |
John Coltrane, saxophonist |
Michael O'Donnell, doctor and broadcaster |
Fred Astaire, dancer and actor |
Misha Glenny, journalist |
Giovanni Falcone, Italian judge and anti-Mafia campaigner |
Series 19, August – September 2009
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Andrew Motion, Poet Laureate |
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Poet Laureate |
Matthew Parris |
David Miliband, Member of Parliament and Minister |
Joe Slovo, South African ANC leader |
George Galloway, Member of Parliament |
John Cornford, poet and activist |
Dervla Murphy, travel writer |
Freya Stark, travel writer |
Rolf Harris, Australian musician and artist |
Kyffin Williams, Welsh artist |
Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London |
Samuel Johnson, writer of the great dictionary |
Kate Humble, TV presenter |
Miriam Makeba, South African singer and anti-apartheid activist |
Paul Daniels, magician |
Harry Houdini, American escapologist |
John Major, former British Prime Minister |
Rudyard Kipling, author and poet |
Series 20, December 2009 – February 2010
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Sir Ranulph Fiennes, explorer |
Henry V, King of England |
Matthew Parris |
Rich Hall, stand-up comedian |
Tennessee Williams, American playwright |
Neil Innes, musician and performer |
Vivian Stanshall, musician and comic writer |
Munira Mirza, London Mayoral advisor on arts and culture |
Hannah Arendt, German-American political philosopher |
Christopher Biggins, acto |
Nero, Roman Emperor |
Jenny Agutter, actress |
Lise Meitner, Austrian physicist |
David Bailey, photographer |
Pablo Picasso, Spanish artist |
John Williams, composer |
Agustin Barrios Mangore, Paraguayan guitarist |
Richard Dawkins, ethologist and evolutionary biologist |
Bill Hamilton, evolutionary theorist |
Series 21, April – May 2010
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
John Godber, playwright |
Bertolt Brecht, writer and theatre director |
Matthew Parris |
Clive Stafford Smith, human rights lawyer |
Robin Hood, folklore hero |
Peter White, broadcaster |
Douglas Jardine, England cricket captain |
John Lloyd, comedy writer and television producer |
Richard Buckminster Fuller, architect and futurist |
Stuart Rose, chairman of Marks and Spencer |
Matthew Flinders, cartographer |
Baroness Sarah Hogg, economist and journalist |
Charlotte Guest, polymath and businesswoman |
Brian Cox, physicist |
Carl Sagan, astronomer and astrophysicist |
Viv Anderson, England footballer |
Arthur Wharton, athlete and football player |
Series 22, August – September 2010
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
John Harris, journalist and author |
John Lennon, musician |
Matthew Parris |
Bettany Hughes, historian |
Sappho, Ancient Greek poet |
Dominic Sandbrook, historian |
Richard Nixon, 37th President of the United States |
Camila Batmanghelidjh, founder of Kids Company |
Mary Carpenter, educational and social reformer |
Eleanor Bron, actress |
Simone Weil, French philosopher and mystic |
Edwina Currie, former MP |
Golda Meir, former Prime Minister of Israel |
Digby Jones, former director of the CBI |
Winston Churchill, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom |
Series 23, November 2010 – January 2011
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Mark Borkowski, PR man |
Malcolm McLaren, the rock & roll swindler |
Matthew Parris |
John Hegley, poet |
DH Lawrence, writer |
Gerry Robinson, business guru |
Samuel Beckett, Irish playwright |
Lionel Blair, dancer & TV celebrity |
Sammy Davis Jr, dancer, singer & entertainer |
Neil Kinnock, former MP |
Aneurin Bevan, founder of the NHS |
Barry Cryer, comedian |
J. B. Priestley, novelist & playwright |
Jim Al-Khalili, Iraqi-born physicist |
Gertrude Bell, writer, traveller, politician & administrator |
Katherine Whitehorn, journalist |
Mary Stott, campaigning journalist |
Kwame Kwei-Armah, playwright & actor |
Marcus Garvey, African-American political leader 1 |
- Garvey was previously nominated by Yvonne Brown in Series 7 Programme 7 1
Series 24, April – May 2011
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Clive Sinclair, British inventor |
Thomas Edison, American inventor |
Matthew Parris |
Charles Hazlewood, conductor |
Leonard Bernstein, conductor and composer |
Diana Quick, actress |
Simone de Beauvoir, French philosopher |
Sue MacGregor, broadcaster |
Kathleen Ferrier, contralto singer |
Lynne Truss, writer and journalist |
Lewis Carroll, mathematician and author of Alice in Wonderland |
Caroline Lucas, British Green MP |
Petra Kelly, German Green politician |
Matthew Syed, sports journalist |
Jack Johnson, "the Galveston Giant", boxer |
Diane Abbott, Member of Parliament |
Harold Pinter, playwright |
Series 25, August – September 2011
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Tim Butcher, journalist |
Graham Greene, author, playwright and critic |
Matthew Parris |
Janice Long, broadcaster |
Kirsty MacColl, singer-songwriter |
Gwyneth Lewis, poet |
Emily Dickinson, American poet |
Antonio Carluccio, Italian restaurateur |
Eduardo Paolozzi, artist |
Daisy Goodwin, broadcaster and poetry curator |
William Shakespeare, poet and playwright |
Simon Day, comedian |
Hans Fallada, German writer |
Simon Jenkins, journalist |
Edwin Lutyens, architect |
Cerys Matthews, musician |
Hildegard of Bingen, German mystic |
Graeme le Saux, former England footballer |
Gerald Durrell, author and conservationist |
Series 26, December 2011 – January 2012
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Michael Sheen, actor |
Philip K. Dick, science fiction writer |
Matthew Parris |
Raymond Tallis, philosopher |
Ludwig Wittgenstein, German philosopher |
Steven Pinker, psychologist and cognitive scientist |
Thomas Hobbes, philosopher |
Brian Sewell, art critic |
Ludwig II of Bavaria |
Jim Carter, actor |
Lonnie Donegan, skiffle musician |
Martin Rees, astrophysicist |
Joseph Rotblat, physicist and campaigner against nuclear weapons |
Emma Kennedy, actress |
Gracie Allen, comedian |
Clare Gerada, doctors' leader |
Vera Brittain, writer, feminist and pacifist . |
Baroness Warsi, Conservative politician |
Razia Sultana, 13th-century Indian princess |
Series 27, April – May 2012
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Owen Sheers, Welsh poet |
Dylan Thomas, Welsh poet |
Matthew Parris |
Will Self, journalist and novelist |
Oscar Wilde, Irish writer and poet |
Erin Pizzey, writer and campaigner |
Gertrude Stein, writer and art collector |
Tom Robinson, singer and leader of the Tom Robinson Band |
George Lyward, educationalist, teacher and psychotherapist who worked at Finchden Manor |
Alexei Sayle, comedian |
Edward Said, Palestinian-American literary theorist and campaigner for Palestinian rights |
Eric Pickles, politician |
John Ford, American film director |
Diana Athill, British novelist, memoirist and diarist |
Francisco Goya, Spanish painter |
Lynn Barber, British journalist |
Sebastian Walker, founder of Walker Books, a publishing house for children |
Series 28, July – September 2012
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Des Lynam, sports commentator |
Henry Cooper, English heavyweight boxer |
Matthew Parris |
Janine di Giovanni, author and foreign correspondent |
Josephine Bonaparte, wife of Napoleon Bonaparte |
Rory Stewart, Tory Member of Parliament, author and adventurer |
Sir Walter Scott, Scottish author |
Bill Paterson, actor |
Leonard Maguire, Scottish actor |
Natalie Haynes, comedian |
Juvenal, Roman poet |
Ken Dodd, comedian |
Stan Laurel, film actor and one half of the duo Laurel and Hardy |
Stephen Frears, film director |
Karel Reisz, film director |
Alan Johnson, politician and former home secretary |
George Orwell, writer |
Naomi Wolf, commentator and author of The Beauty Myth |
Edith Wharton, novelist, wit and feminist |
Series 29, December 2012 – January 2013
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Martin Broughton, chairman of British Airways and the British Horse Racing Board |
Dick Francis, crime novelist and former jockey |
Matthew Parris |
Francesca Simon, children's writer and author of the Horrid Henry books |
Jean Cocteau, French writer and film director |
Lemn Sissay, author and broadcaster |
Prince Alemayehu, favourite prince of Queen Victoria |
Stuart Maconie, radio presenter and music critic |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, composer and folk music collector |
Richard Herring, comedian |
Grigori Rasputin, Russian Orthodox mystic |
Max Mosley, former president of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) |
John Stuart Mill, philosopher |
Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, interior designer |
Aubrey Beardsley, artist of the Aesthetic movement |
Grace Dent, journalist |
Nancy Mitford, novelist and biographer |
Carol Klein, gardening expert |
William Robinson, Irish-born journalist and gardener |
Series 30, April – May 2013
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Peter Hitchens, author and columnist |
George Bell, Anglican theologian |
Matthew Parris |
Bobby Friction, DJ and presenter |
Galileo Galilei, Italian pioneer astronomer |
Chris Tarrant, DJ and former television presenter |
Kenny Everett, comedian and former disc jockey |
John Blashford-Snell, explorer |
David Livingstone, explorer |
Gyles Brandreth, writer and broadcaster |
Arthur Conan Doyle, author |
Justine Roberts, founder of Mumsnet, a website for parents |
Bill Shankly, football manager |
John Cooper Clarke, poet |
Salvador Dalí, Spanish surrealist painter |
Edmund de Waal, ceramicist and writer |
Primo Levi, Italian chemist and Holocaust writer |
Dr Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces |
Florence Nightingale, nurse, health administrator and statistician |
Series 31, August - October 2013
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Russell Grant, astrologer and broadcaster |
Ivor Novello, composer and actor |
Matthew Parris |
Gabriel Gbadamosi, playwright |
Fela Kuti, Nigerian musician |
Tanika Gupta |
Rabindranath Tagore, Indian poet |
Julie Burchill, writer |
Ava Gardner, American film star |
Paul Mason, journalist and broadcaster |
Louise Michel, 19th century French anarchist |
Peter Bowles, actor |
George Devine, theatre director |
Konnie Huq, television presenter and writer |
Ada Lovelace, computing pioneer |
Brendan Barber, trade unionist |
John Steinbeck, American novelist |
Al Murray, comedian |
Bernard Montgomery, WW2 British General |
Series 32, December 2013 - January 2014
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Ricky Ross, singer with Deacon Blue |
Hank Williams, singer-songwriter |
Matthew Parris |
Michael Horovitz, poet |
Allen Ginsberg, Beat poet |
Meg Rosoff, novelist |
Isabella Bird, Victorian traveller |
David Chipperfield, architect |
Le Corbusier, Swiss-French architect |
David Baddiel, comedian |
John Updike, novelist |
Adil Ray, actor and TV personality |
Dave Allen, comedian |
Mark Constantine, businessman and founder of Lush cosmetics |
Kahlil Gibran, poet |
Sara Cox, radio presenter |
Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes, hip-hop artist |
Series 33, April - May 2014
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Evelyn Glennie, percussionist |
Jacqueline du Pré, cellist |
Matthew Parris |
Sarah Vine, newspaper columnist |
Dante Alighieri, 12th-13th century Italian poet |
Mark Walport, Chief Scientific Adviser |
Hans Sloane, art collector and benefactor of the British Museum |
Marcus du Sautoy, mathematician |
Jorge Luis Borges, Argentinian writer |
Deborah Moggach, novelist |
Arnold Bennett, 19th-century novelist |
Isy Suttie, comedian, musician and actor |
Jake Thackray, singer-songwriter |
John Craven, journalist and TV presenter |
Isambard Kingdom Brunel, 19th-century British engineer |
Emma Kirkby, soprano singer |
Henry Purcell, 17th-century composer |
Michael Palin, Python, writer and broadcaster |
Ernest Hemingway, American writer |
Series 34, August - October 2014
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Jonathan Meades, writer and broadcaster |
Edward Burra, artist |
Matthew Parris |
Jazzie B, DJ and music entrepreneur |
James Brown, American singer |
Oona King, politician |
Ida B. Wells, American journalist and civil rights leader |
Ray Mears, woodsman and TV presenter |
Rommel, German field marshal of World War II |
Tom Shakespeare, sociologist |
Gramsci, Italian Marxist politician |
Labi Siffre, poet and singer-songwriter |
Arthur Ransome, author and journalist |
Stella Rimington, writer and former Director General of MI5 |
Dorothy L. Sayers, crime writer |
Andrew Adonis, politician and academic |
Joseph Bazalgette, Victorian engineer responsible for London's main sewers |
Edith Hall, classicist |
Lucille Ball, American actress and comedian |
Series 35, December 2014 - January 2015
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Arthur Smith, comedian |
Emil Zátopek, Czechoslovak distance runner |
Matthew Parris |
Laura Bates, feminist writer |
Louisa May Alcott, 19th century American author of Little Women |
Brian Eno, musician |
Michael Young, sociologist and politician |
Philippa Langley, historian |
Richard III, 15th -century King of England |
Tom Solomon, neurologist |
Roald Dahl, children's writer |
Michael Dobbs, politician and novelist |
Guy Burgess, spy |
Eve Pollard, journalist and editor |
Nora Ephron, American screenwriter |
Mervyn King, former Governor of the Bank of England |
Risto Ryti, Governor of Bank of Finland and Prime Minister and President of Finland during World War II |
Series 36, April - June 2015
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Trevor McDonald, news presenter |
Learie Constantine, Trinidadian cricketer and politician |
Matthew Parris |
Rachel Johnson, author and journalist |
Lady Ottoline Morrell, literary hostess and associate of the Bloomsbury Group |
Kulvinder Ghir, comedian and actor |
Zoran Mušič, Slovene artist and survivor of Dachau |
Helen Ghosh, Director General of the National Trust |
James Lees-Milne, writer and expert on country houses |
Wendy Cope, poet |
John Clare, 19th-century poet |
Antonia Quirke, film critic |
Marlon Brando, American actor |
Matthew Barzun, American ambassador |
John Gil Winant, American ambassador to UK 1941-46 |
David Blunkett, blind politician |
Louis Braille, 18th-century French inventor of Braille |
Val McDermid, crime writer |
P. D. James, crime writer |
Series 37, April - June 2015
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Ian McKellen, actor |
Edmund Hillary, mountaineer and explorer |
Matthew Parris |
Vicky Pryce, Greek-born former British Government economist |
Melina Mercouri, Greek actress, singer and politician |
Michael Howard, Conservative politician |
Queen Elizabeth I, English monarch |
Ade Adepitan, television personality and Paralympian |
George Washington Williams, American Civil War veteran and historian |
Monica Ali, novelist |
Richard Francis Burton, explorer and adventurer |
Frances Crook, prison reformist |
Barbara Castle, Labour Party politician |
Hannah Rothschild, philanthropist and documentary filmmaker |
Thelonious Monk, jazz musician |
Nick Stadlen, former High Court judge |
Bram Fischer, South African lawyer and anti-apartheid activist |
Toyah Willcox, singer and actress |
Katharine Hepburn, Hollywood actress |
Series 38, August 2015 - January 2016
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Dickie Bird, cricket umpire |
Sir Leonard Hutton, England Test cricker |
Matthew Parris |
Roger Saul, founder of the Mulberry fashion label |
Gertrude Jekyll, garden designer |
Alvin Hall, financial journalist |
James Baldwin, African American writer |
Precious Lunga, epidemiologist |
Wangari Maathai, Kenyan environmental and political activist |
Martin Jennings, sculptor |
Charles Sargeant Jagger, sculptor of British World War One war memorials |
Susan Calman, Scottish comedian |
Molly Weir, Scottish actress |
Nitin Sawhney, musician and producer |
Jeff Buckley, singer-songwriter |
Eliza Manningham-Buller, former Director General of MI5 |
Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States |
Series 39, April 2016 - present
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Anthony Horowitz, novelist and screenwriter |
Alfred Hitchcock, film director |
Matthew Parris |
Nancy Dell'Olio, lawyer |
Lucrezia Borgia, Italian princesses |
Ray Peacock, Comedian |
Lenny Bruce, Comedian |
Sudha Bhuchar, actress |
Zohra Sehgal, Indian actress |
Graeme Lamb, SAS commando |
Christine Granville, spy |
Timmy Mallett, TV presenter |
Richard the Lionheart, King |
Charles Moore, journalist |
Gordon Hamilton-Fairley, medical oncology |
Ann Limb, chair of the Scout Association |
George Fox, founder of the Quaker |
Frank Turner, folk singer |
Joseph Grimaldi, comedian |
Series 40, August 2016 - present
Guest |
Nominee |
Presenter |
Hilary Devey, television personality |
Gracie Fields, actress |
Matthew Parris |
Alex Salmond, Scottish former First Minister |
Thomas Muir, Father of Scottish Democracy. |
Sara Pascoe, stand-up comedian |
Virginia Woolf, writer |
Georgina Godwin, journalist |
Dag Hammarskjold, Secretary General of the United Nations |
Tony Hawks, Comedian |
Marshall Rosenberg, psychologist |
Maureen Lipman, actress |
Cicely Saunders, nurse |
Eliza Carthy, folk musician |
Caroline Norton, poet |
A. A. Gill, writer |
Neville Chamberlain, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom |
Cyrus Todiwala, chef |
Dadabhai Naoroji, first British Indian MP |
References
External links