Sue Woodford-Hollick, Lady Hollick

Last updated

Sue Woodford-Hollick, Lady Hollick

OBE
Born (1945-05-16) 16 May 1945 (age 78)
Other namesSue Woodford
Alma mater University of Sussex
Occupation(s)Businesswoman, consultant, journalist
Spouse Clive Hollick, Baron Hollick
Children3
Parent

Susan Mary Woodford-Hollick, Baroness Hollick OBE (born 16 May 1945) [1] is a British businesswoman and consultant with a wide-ranging involvement in broadcasting and the arts. A former investigative journalist, she worked for many years in television (as Sue Woodford), where her roles included producer/director of World in Action [2] for Granada TV and founding commissioning editor of Multicultural Programmes for Channel Four. [3] As a campaigner for human rights, world health, literacy, and the arts, she serves as trustee or patron of a range of charities and foundations. She is founder and co-director of Bringing up Baby Ltd, [4] a childcare company. Other causes and organisations with which she is associated include the African Medical and Research Foundation (AMREF), [5] the Leader's Quest Foundation, [6] Complicité theatre company, Reprieve, [7] the Free Word Centre. [8] the Runnymede Trust [9] and the SI Leeds Literary Prize. [10] Of English and Trinidadian heritage, she is the wife of Clive Hollick, Baron Hollick, with whom she has three daughters. [11]

Contents

Biography

Early years

Sue Woodford-Hollick was educated at the University of Sussex [12] and is the daughter of Ulric Cross, a former High Court judge in Trinidad, Trinidadian High Commissioner to London (1990–93) and much-decorated RAF squadron leader in World War II. [13] [14] [15] On BBC Woman's Hour on 8 August 2012, in the feature "Family Secrets" for which she was interviewed by her daughter Abigail, [16] Woodford-Hollick spoke about growing up believing that she had been adopted by the white parents she knew as "Auntie May and Uncle Dick", only to discover in her twenties that her natural father was a Caribbean war hero and that her much older "sister" was in fact her mother, who had been forced to marry someone else: "Illegitimacy was not accepted in those days, and prejudice against black people was rife everywhere." [1] Woodford-Hollick contributed the memoir "Who I Was Then and Who I Am Now" to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa , edited by Margaret Busby. [17]

Career

In 1969, she joined Granada Television in Manchester as a newsreader and presenter/reporter on the regional news magazine programme, and she went on to become one of the few women to produce/direct the flagship current affairs programme World in Action . [18] [19]

In 1981, she joined Channel 4 Television as the first Commissioning Editor for multi-cultural programming, one of the priorities of the new channel, where she commissioned a range of programmes to reflect the diversity of Britain's minority ethnic communities. [18] [20] [8] Her work at Channel 4 has been described by Farrukh Dhondy as "revolutionary": "She ditched the mission to complain and ran on the channel, among a diversity of offerings, one West Indian and one Asian magazine show, a black arts showcase programme and then a situation comedy called No Problem , co-written by veteran Trinidadian playwright Mustafa Matura and myself. The brief to the writers was clear – a situation comedy makes people laugh.... Under Sue Woodford the mission to complain was subverted. There were two clear strategic objectives which emerged from Channel 4. More people from the ethnic communities should be making programmes, serving an apprenticeship if necessary. There were, inevitably headcounts of the number of ethnic faces appeared on-screen as newsreaders, reporters, presenters or actors. A fair volume of programming of diverse sorts would ensure or at least begin the assimilation of the new communities into the nation's primary instrument or mirror of self-awareness." [21]

Consultancy and voluntary work

She has been involved throughout her life with many campaigns for human rights and diversity. [12] Between 1993 and 2000, she chaired Index on Censorship , the international magazine for free speech, [22] of which she remains a patron. [18]

In September 2000, she succeeded Trevor Phillips as Chair of the London Arts Board, and on the creation of a single funding body for the arts in England, Woodford-Hollick was appointed in 2002 to the national council of the new organisation, Arts Council England (ACE), [23] and to chair its London regional council, [24] which she did for seven years. [18]

She has been an adviser on Caribbean affairs to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), [18] and in 1998 she served on the Commission on the Future of Multi-Ethnic Britain, an independent inquiry set up by the Runnymede Trust and chaired by Lord Parekh. [25] She has also served on the boards of a wide range of organisations, including Talawa Theatre Company, the Theatre Museum, [7] Tate Members, the Royal Commonwealth Society Contemporary Dance Trust, the English National Opera and the University of Westminster.

She is currently a trustee of the African Medical and Research Foundation (AMREF), [5] Africa's largest health NGO, based in Nairobi, Kenya. She chairs the Leader's Quest Foundation [26] and is a trustee of Complicite theatre company and of Reprieve. [7] She is also a patron of the Runnymede Trust [9] and a trustee of the Free Word Centre. [8] In addition, she is a patron of the SI Leeds Literary Prize, an award for unpublished fiction for Black and Asian women in the UK. [18]

In April 2012, in Port of Spain, Trinidad, she announced the inauguration of the Hollick Arvon Caribbean Writers Prize, sponsored by the Hollick Family Charitable Trust and the Arvon Foundation, in association with the NGC Bocas Lit Fest, an award to allow a Caribbean writer living in the Anglophone region and writing in English, and who has not yet published a full-length book, to devote time to advancing a work in progress. [27]

She was named as one of the supporters of the Women's Prize for Fiction 2013. [28] [29] [30]

She is a trustee of the foundation announced in December 2014 in memory of cultural theorist Stuart Hall. [31] [32] [33]

Family

She is married to the businessman Clive Hollick, Baron Hollick, with whom she has three daughters: Caroline, Georgina and Abigail. [12]

Honours and awards

She was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2011 Birthday Honours for services to the arts. [34] [35] She is an Honorary Fellow of the University of Westminster and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. [18]

She is regularly included on the Power List of "Britain's 100 Most Influential Black People". [18] [36]

In January 2018, she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Sussex. [12] [37]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helena Kennedy, Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws</span> Scottish barrister, broadcaster, and politician

Helena Ann Kennedy, Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws, KC, FRSA, HonFRSE, is a Scottish barrister, broadcaster, and Labour member of the House of Lords. She was Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford, from 2011 to 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Usha Prashar, Baroness Prashar</span> British politician

Usha Kumari Prashar, Baroness Prashar, is a British politician and a crossbench member of the House of Lords. Since the 1970s, she has served as a director or chair of a variety of public and private sector organisations. She became the first chair of the Judicial Appointments Commission upon its creation in April 2006.

The Runnymede Trust is a British race equality and civil rights think tank. It was founded by Jim Rose and Anthony Lester as an independent source for generating intelligence for a multi-ethnic Britain through research, network building, leading debate and policy engagement. The Trust began operations in 1968, the year of two major events in global and British race relations: the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr and Enoch Powell's "Rivers of Blood" speech. Runnymede Trust has played a leading role in the UK's national debate around race, helping shape legislation including the 1971 and 19756 Race Relations Acts, introducing popular usage of the term "Islamophobia" with its 1996 Commission on British Muslims, and more recently its work informing civil society's debate of issues including the 2021 Sewell Report and the Nationality and Borders Act 2022. The Trust is led by its director and chief executive, Halima Begum, appointed in 2020. Its chairman is Sir Clive Jones.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jo Shapcott</span> English poet

Jo Shapcott FRSL is an English poet, editor and lecturer who has won the National Poetry Competition, the Commonwealth Poetry Prize, the Costa Book of the Year Award, a Forward Poetry Prize and the Cholmondeley Award.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martha Kearney</span> British-Irish journalist and broadcaster (born 1957)

Martha Catherine Kearney is a British-Irish journalist and broadcaster. She was the main presenter of BBC Radio 4's lunchtime news programme The World at One for 11 years, and in April 2018 became a presenter of the early morning Today programme.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arvon Foundation</span> UK charitable foundation providing writing courses

The Arvon Foundation is a charitable organisation in the United Kingdom that promotes creative writing. Arvon is one of Arts Council England's National Portfolio Organisations.

Dame Elizabeth Anne Lucy Forgan, DBE is an English journalist, and radio and television executive.

Pestalozzi International Foundation is an educational charitable organisation based in East Sussex, England.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Sieghart</span> British businessman

William Matthew Timothy Stephen Sieghart is a British entrepreneur, publisher and philanthropist and the founder of the Forward Prizes for Poetry. He is former chairman of the Somerset House Trust.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marina Salandy-Brown</span> Trinidad and Tobago journalist, broadcaster and cultural activist

Marina Salandy-Brown FRSA, Hon. FRSL, is a Trinidadian journalist, broadcaster and cultural activist. She was formerly an editor and Senior Manager in Radio and News and Current Affairs programmes with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in London, one of the BBC's few top executives from an ethnic minority background. She is the founder and inaugural director of the NGC Bocas Lit Fest, held annually in Trinidad and Tobago since 2011, "the biggest literary festival in the Anglophone Caribbean", and of the OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature. She was also co-founder of the Hollick Arvon Caribbean Writers Prize.

The NGC Bocas Lit Fest is the Trinidad and Tobago literary festival that takes place annually during the last weekend of April in Port of Spain. Inaugurated in 2011, it is the first major literary festival in the southern Caribbean and largest literary festival in the Anglophone Caribbean. A registered non-profit company, the festival has as its title sponsor the National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago (NGC). Other sponsors and partners include First Citizens Bank, One Caribbean Media (OCM), who sponsor the associated OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, CODE, and the Commonwealth Foundation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ulric Cross</span> Trinidadian lawyer and diplomat (1917–2013)

Philip Louis Ulric Cross was a Trinidadian jurist, diplomat and Royal Air Force (RAF) navigator, recognised as possibly the most decorated West Indian of World War II. He is credited with helping to prevent some two hundred bombers from being shot down in a raid over Germany in 1943. He subsequently studied law at London's Middle Temple, and went on to fulfil a distinguished international career as a jurist across Africa and within Trinidad and Tobago. He also served as a diplomat for Trinidad and Tobago to the United Kingdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Stone (anti-racism activist)</span>

Richard Stone is a British medical doctor, social and campaigner and philanthropist. Stone is best known for his association with the Runnymede Trust and the Jewish Council for Racial Equality on issues of race and politics, as well as race and society more generally in the United Kingdom. Stone was appointed to the panel of the Stephen Lawrence inquiry; a case involving a Black teenager who was murdered in London in 1993; which eventually led to the Macpherson Report, which defined the British Metropolitan Police's response to the incident as "institutionally racist." Stone is also noted for his association with the Jewish interfaith group The Woolf Institute.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gus John</span> British writer (born 1945)

Augustine John is a Grenadian-born writer, education campaigner, consultant, lecturer and researcher, who moved to the UK in 1964. He has worked in the fields of education policy, management and international development. As a social analyst he specialises in social audits, change management, policy formulation and review, and programme evaluation and development. Since the 1960s he has been active in issues of education and schooling in Britain's inner cities such as Manchester, Birmingham and London, and was the first black Director of Education and Leisure Services in Britain. He has also worked in a number of university settings, including as visiting Faculty Professor of Education at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, as an associate professor of education and honorary fellow of the London Centre for Leadership in Learning at the UCL Institute of Education, University of London, and visiting professor at Coventry University. A respected public speaker and media commentator, he works internationally as an executive coach and a management and social investment consultant.

Angela Barry is a Bermudian writer and educator. She spent more than 20 years living abroad – in England, France, The Gambia, Senegal and Seychelles – before returning to Bermuda, where she has primarily worked as a lecturer since the 1990s. Her creative writing reflects her connections with the African diaspora, and as a PhD student at Lancaster University she worked on cross-cultural projects. She was married to Senegalese Abdoulaye Barry and they have two sons, Ibou and Douds, although eventually divorcing.

Dr Joanna Kennedy OBE FREng FICE,, is a British civil engineer and project manager. She is currently a non-executive director of the property company Native Land and a director of the ERA Foundation, having been Global Leader for Programme and Project Management at Arup until 2013. She is a Patron of Women into Science and Engineering (WISE), which she helped launch in 1984. In June 2015 she was appointed a Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, where she is deputy chair of the Trustee Board and chairs the project board for the gallery’s Inspiring People redevelopment.

Ansel Keith David Wong is a Trinidadian-British cultural and political activist, who has been influential in many organisations particularly in the black community in the United Kingdom, where he has been based since the 1960s. He is the former Chair of the Notting Hill Carnival Board and founder of Elimu Mas Band. He is also an educationist and academic, and in a wide-ranging career has worked at senior levels in various organisations in the public and charitable sectors, including with the Windrush Foundation established in 1996 by Arthur Torrington.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barbara Jenkins</span> Trinidadian writer

Barbara Jenkins is a Trinidadian writer, whose work since 2010 has won several international prizes, including the Commonwealth Short Story Prize and the Wasafiri New Writing Prize.

Shivanee Ramlochan is a Trinidadian poet, arts reporter and blogger. Her first collection of poems Everyone Knows I Am a Haunting was shortlisted for the 2018 Felix Dennis Prize for best first collection.

Ruth Borthwick, Hon. FRSL, is a British arts administrator, literature executive and educator, who for more than three decades has worked with writers in bookselling and publishing, and as an advocate for literature in the UK and internationally. In 2018, she was elected an Honorary Fellow by the Royal Society of Literature, rewarding "significant contribution to the advancement of literature". Formerly chief executive and artistic director of the Arvon Foundation for ten years (2009–2019), she has been Chair of English PEN since 2021.

References

  1. 1 2 "Family Secrets", Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4, 8 August 2012.
  2. Sue Woodford page at IMDb.
  3. Dorothy Hobson, Channel 4: The Early Years and the Jeremy Isaacs Legacy, I.B. Tauris & Co, 2006, pp. 68–70.
  4. Management team, Bringing Up Baby.
  5. 1 2 "Lady Sue Woodford-Hollick", Who We Are, AMREF. Archived 31 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  6. LQ Foundation Trustees Archived 29 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine , Leader's Quest.
  7. 1 2 3 "About us: Sue Woodford-Hollick", Reprieve.
  8. 1 2 3 About Us – Trustees, Free Word.
  9. 1 2 Patrons, Runnymede.
  10. "Sue Woodford-Hollick" Archived 12 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine , SI Leeds Literary Prize.
  11. "UK: Masterclass – Hollick's Nights at the Movies", Management Today, 1 January 1997.
  12. 1 2 3 4 Jacqui Bealing, "Broadcast: News items – Be persistent, be focused, but start with your own community, says Lady Hollick", University of Sussex, 17 January 2018.
  13. "Susan Mary Woodford-Hollick, Lady Hollick (1945–), Arts administrator", National Portrait Gallery.
  14. "Ulric Cross (1917–), Judge", National Portrait Gallery.
  15. Carla Bridglal, "Ulric Cross dies at 96", Trinidad Express Newspapers, 4 October 2013.
  16. "Interviews", Abigail Hollick website.
  17. "Introduction". New Daughters of Africa (PDF). Myriad Editions. 2019. p. xxiii.
  18. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Sue Woodford-Hollick" Archived 12 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine , SI Leeds Literary Prize.
  19. Steve Bryant, "World in Action (1963–98)", BFI Screenonline.
  20. Clive James Nwonka, "Channel Four and the Emergence of Independent Black British Filmmaking" Archived 19 April 2013 at archive.today . Brunel University, 2012.
  21. Farrukh Dhondy, "Is the BBC still 'hideously white'?", New Statesman , 18 March 2014.
  22. Bhikhu C. Parekh, "Sue Woodford-Hollick Chair of Index on Censorship, 1993–2000, and founding commissioning editor of multicultural programmes, Channel 4", The Future of Multi-ethnic Britain: Report of the Commission on the Future of Multi-Ethnic Britain, London: Profile Books, 2000, p. 317.
  23. "ACE Announced the New Council" Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine , The British Theatre Guide, 2 June 2002.
  24. "News – Nine old faces on new Council", ArtsProfessional, 3 June 2002.
  25. "Embracing the need to build an inclusive society", The Guardian, 11 October 2000.
  26. LQ Foundation Trustees Archived 29 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine , Leader's Quest.
  27. "Announcing the Hollick Arvon Caribbean Writers Prize" Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine , Caribseek News, 1 May 2012.
  28. "The Women's Prize for Fiction 2013 launches with new partners, sponsors and judges", Book Trust, 9 October 2012.
  29. Benedicte Page, "Women's Prize for Fiction to be 'privately funded' for 2013", The Bookseller, 8 October 2012.
  30. "About BWPFF", BAILEYS Women's Prize for Fiction.
  31. Stuart Hall Foundation.
  32. "Goldsmiths Honour Stuart Hall By Naming Building After Him" Archived 8 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine , The Voice, 4 December 2014.
  33. "Goldsmiths renames academic building after Professor Stuart Hall", Goldsmiths, University of London, 11 December 2014.
  34. "No. 59808". The London Gazette (Supplement). 11 June 2011. p. 10.
  35. "Queen's Birthday Honours 2011: list in full", The Telegraph, 11 June 2011.
  36. "Power List 2010: Britain’s 100 most influential black people", Breaking Perceptions, 2 March 2010.
  37. "Broadcast: News items – University of Sussex graduates encouraged to make positive change", University of Sussex, 19 January 2018.