Penny Marshall (journalist)

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Penny Marshall
Born
Penelope Jane Clucas Marshall

(1962-11-07) 7 November 1962 (age 61)
NationalityBritish
Alma mater London School of Economics
OccupationJournalist
TelevisionAfrica correspondent for ITV News
Relatives Paul Marshall (brother)
Winston Marshall (nephew)

Penelope Jane Clucas Marshall (born 7 November 1962) [1] is a British journalist, working for ITV News as Africa correspondent since September 2019, before that as ITV News social affairs editor.

Contents

Early life and career

Marshall is the daughter of Alan Marshall, a managing director at Unilever, and Mary Sylvia Clucas, daughter of Dr T. S. Hanlin. Her brother is the businessman and entrepreneur Paul Marshall, father of Winston Marshall, formerly of the band Mumford & Sons. [1] [2]

She is a graduate of the London School of Economics where she was active as a student journalist. Whilst at LSE she worked as a stringer for national newspapers and after graduating she became indentured as a trainee reporter on the Wimbledon News. In 1985 she joined ITN as a production trainee.

Marshall established herself as a television news foreign correspondent during the 1980s and 90s, when she was based in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. This work won awards, including an RTS, an EMMY, and a BAFTA.

Following the birth of her children, she chose to work part-time and also took a career break to bring up the family for 5 years. Marshall is an advocate of better and more flexible working arrangements for parents.

Detention camps in Bosnia, 1992

In the summer of 1992, Marshall, together with Channel 4 News ' Ian Williams, were the first television journalists to uncover the Serb-run detention camps in Bosnia. Ed Vulliamy of The Guardian was also with the ITN teams. Their subsequent reports shown throughout the world, generated an international outcry. However, a witness for the defence at a subsequent war crimes trial in the Hague accused the team of faking their footage.

The false accusations were reprinted in the British LM magazine (formerly Living Marxism) in an article by Thomas Deichmann and ITN sued. In March 2000 ITN won their case against the magazine in a High Court libel action. [3] An examination of the case by a professor of cultural and political geography at Durham University argued that the key claims made by the magazine were "erroneous and flawed". [4]

In April 2012, journalist John Simpson apologised for supporting LM magazine and questioning ITN's reporting of the camps. [5]

Later career

In March 2014 she was appointed Education Editor for the BBC but decided not to take up the post after a diagnosis of breast cancer. [6]

She has presented and written documentaries for BBC Radio 4 and received an honorary doctorate from City University in January 2015. She has written for the Times , Guardian and the Daily Mail . [7]

She is a regular volunteer at a Pupil Referral Unit for children excluded from mainstream school in West London and is now a Founding Trustee of a charity to help raise funds and awareness to support them.[ citation needed ]

In the autumn of 2015 Marshall gave evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee investigating women in TV and current affairs and described herself as one of the "last women standing". She said "newsrooms had been built 'by men for men'" and called for broadcasters to collect more data to establish why so many women quit newsrooms. [8]

Private life and other activities

Marshall is married to fellow ITN reporter Tim Ewart and has three daughters, a step daughter and step son.

She is also a visiting professor at City University London. [9] and the founding trustee of a charity for children excluded from school in London, the Tbap Foundation. [10]

Related Research Articles

Living Marxism was a British magazine originally launched in 1988 as the journal of the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP). The magazine attracted attention for denying both the Rwandan genocide and Bosnian genocide. Rebranded as LM in 1992, it ceased publication in March 2000 following a successful libel lawsuit brought by ITN over Living Marxism's criticism of ITN's coverage of the Bosnian war. It was promptly resurrected as Spiked, an Internet magazine.

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References

  1. 1 2 The International Who's Who of Women 2002, third edition, ed. Elizabeth Sleeman, Europa Publications, p. 364
  2. Who's Who in Southern Africa, vol. 54, Ken Donaldson Ltd, 1959, p. 441
  3. "BBC News | UK | ITN wins Bosnian war libel case".
  4. "Atrocity and Memory".
  5. John Simpson "The War is Dead, Long Live the War: Bosnia – The Reckoning by Ed Vulliamy", The Observer. 22 April 2012
  6. Ian Burrell "BBC Education Editor Penny Marshall to return 'home' to ITV", The Independent, 5 November 2014
  7. Person, Some. "Journalist: Is Penny Marshall Jewish Or Christian: Religion And Ethnicity". JazzBlog. Retrieved 23 July 2024.
  8. "Women in news and current affairs broadcasting". House of Lords Communications Committee. Retrieved 19 June 2021.
  9. "Staff profile: Penny Marshall", City University London
  10. "Penny Marshall", The Tbap Foundation