Debrett's People of Today

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Debrett's People of Today was a reference work published by Debrett's containing biographical details of approximately 25,000 notable people from across the spectrum of British society, a rival to the longer-established Who's Who . Those included were chosen on significance and merit.

Contents

In its early years, the series was called Debrett's Distinguished People of Today. The last volume appeared in 2017.

History

Debrett's had previously published a similar work called Debrett's Handbook: Distinguished People in British Life, edited by Charles Mosley, which appeared only in 1982. While this title was not repeated, it formed the foundation for the series called People of Today, created in 1988.

The editors at Debrett's identified over forty sectors of British life for the inclusion of leading figures. Of these, the most highly populated were government, education, law, business, armed forces, diplomacy, charitable work, sports, and the arts. They wished to ensure that those chosen for inclusion would be significant.

Publication was always at the end or beginning of the year, with the year ahead named in the title of the volume, latterly in Roman numerals. Some editions have a New Year Honours list included loosely, not forming part of the book.

An online edition of the work began to appear in July 2009, [1] when a full list of the entries was made available without payment. [2]

The last edition of People of Today was that of 2017, published at the end of 2016. The Guardian noted one year later "By mid-2017, Debrett's People of Today was no more, and the future of the Debrett's 500 in doubt. These, it is worth noting, are the only lists they produce that are based on merit." [3]

Selection

From the first volume in 1988, the selection of people to be featured was made by editorial staff at Debrett's, relying on expert nomination panels. Entries were reviewed with each new edition, to ensure continuing relevance. Short biographies included details of the subject's career, education, family, recreations, membership of clubs, and contact address. The work had a section on styles of address and a list of abbreviations used. [4]

Like its rival Who's Who, the choice of subjects was at the discretion of the publisher, and there was no payment made or any obligation to purchase the book. Whereas entries in Who's Who are continued annually for life, people included in People of Today were removed if they were no longer considered to meet the criteria for inclusion. [4]

While formal titles were included automatically, such as knighthoods, those chosen for inclusion were asked to decide their preference for other titles, such as Mr, Miss, Mrs or Ms. [1]

Editions

Notes

  1. 1 2 Megan Lane, "How do you address the great and the good?", BBC News Magazine, 23 July 2009, accessed 22 October 2022
  2. Mark Ronson joins Debrett's People of Today list, pressparty.com, 24 July 2009
  3. Aida Edemariam, "How to be entitled: can Debrett's help outsiders join Britain's elite?", 22 December 2017
  4. 1 2 "David Beckham enjoys wine tasting, says celebrity hobby guide", The Daily Telegraph , 23 July 2009, accessed 3 July 2022

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