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  1. Frederick Richard Dimbleby CBE (25 May 1913 – 22 December 1965) was an English journalist and broadcaster, who became the BBC's first war correspondent, and then its leading TV news commentator. As host of the long-running current affairs programme Panorama, he pioneered a popular style of interviewing that was respectful but searching.

  2. May 21, 2024 · Richard Dimbleby, pioneer radio news reporter and the first of Britains great broadcast journalists. He was the first war correspondent for the BBC. He also was host of Panorama, an influential BBC public-affairs weekly documentary program. Learn more about Dimbleby’s life and career.

  3. Richard Dimbleby became a household name as the BBCs first frontline radio reporter in 1936. With the arrival of postwar television, he led the coverage of all major events on the new medium. As ‘the Voice of the Nation’, his death from cancer in 1965 at the age of 52 shocked the British people.

  4. Oct 23, 2022 · In April 1945, the BBC’s Richard Dimbleby was the first reporter to enter the liberated Belsen concentration camp. His report describing the unimaginable horror he found, was the first time...

  5. Richard Dimbleby was born on May 25, 1913 in Richmond, Surrey, England, UK. He was an actor and producer, known for Libel (1959), This Is the BBC (1959) and School for Sinners (1965). He died on December 22, 1965 in London, England, UK.

  6. Apr 15, 2020 · 75 years ago the BBC’s Richard Dimbleby was the first broadcaster to report from the liberation of Belsen concentration camp by the British Second Army on April 15th, 1945. His 10 minute radio report is an extraordinary historic act of journalism as witnessing.

  7. www.bbc.com › historyofthebbc › bbc-100Richard Dimbleby - BBC

    History of the BBC. Richard Dimbleby ensconced in the tiny commentators box in the Triforium of Westminster Abbey, from which he covered the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, 2...

  8. Richard Dimbleby describes the scenes of almost unimaginable horror that greeted him as he toured Belsen concentration camp shortly after its liberation by the British...

  9. Richard Dimbleby became a household name as the BBCs first frontline radio reporter in 1936. With the arrival of postwar television, he led the coverage of all major events on the new medium. As ‘the Voice of the Nation’, his death from cancer in 1965 at the age of 52 shocked the British people.

  10. Jun 5, 2014 · In this audio clip, and in the script below, Richard Dimbleby, the BBC's war correspondent and one of its most famous journalists, witnessed the very first aircraft take off from southern...

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