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1 Early life and education  





2 Career  





3 Family life  





4 Bibliography  





5 References  














Vanessa Collingridge






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Vanessa Jane Collingridge[1] (born 12 January 1968)[2][3] is a British author and broadcaster.

Early life and education[edit]

Youngest of the five children of Gordon Ernest Collingridge (1927-2007)[4] and his wife Irene (born Irene Keeping), Collingridge was born and brought up in Woking, Surrey in England. She read GeographyatHertford College, Oxford, where she earned a first class MA in 1990,[5] despite contracting viral encephalitis in her second year which caused an almost fatal swelling of her brain.[6] It was also at Oxford that she met her husband Allan Watt.[7]

Career[edit]

After graduating, Collingridge moved immediately to a career in television, first as a question checker on game shows Wheel of Fortune and Win, Lose or Draw, and then for 14 months as a weathergirlonBBC Scotland.[6] In the early to mid-1990s she appeared from time to time on BBC television's Gardeners' World. She worked on Spanish public television in 1993 as a co-presenter of "That's English!", an english learning program for spanish people.[8] She has since worked as a producer and presenter on all five British national terrestrial television channels, as well as BBC national radio.[5]

In 2000 she quit her job as a television presenteronTonight with Trevor McDonald to author two biographies, one of 18th-century explorer James Cook and one of Celtic warrior queen Boudica.[7] During her research for the former, she discovered she shared ancestry with controversial Australian writer and illustrator George Collingridge, who asserted in 1895 that Australia was discovered by the Portuguese.[7][9][10]

She has described her very early interest in feminism in the introduction to her book on Boudica in 2005: "What started as a strong-willed desire for independence became a fully-fledged, bra-burning (if only I had been old enough to wear one) mentality... Certainly, I cannot remember a time when I wasn't acutely aware of the inherently political nature of woman's position in society and – much to my father's disgust and my now extreme embarrassment – by the grand old age of twelve, I would proudly read Cosmopolitan magazine and proclaim myself a feminist!"[11]

She returned to television in 2007 as writer and narrator of the four-part miniseries Captain Cook: Obsession and Discovery.[12]

Family life[edit]

Collingridge has lived in Scotland since 1989, and resides in a converted farmhouse on the shore of Castle Semple Loch near Lochwinnoch with her husband Alan Watt, and sons Archie, Angus, Finn and Dougal.[6][7][13] In 2017 she completed her PhD in historical cartography at the University of Glasgow, having worked as a broadcaster for BBC Radio Scotland's Buried Treasure and BBC Radio 4's Making History whilst studying.[1][5][6][14]

Bibliography[edit]

References[edit]

  • ^ "Vanessa Jane COLLINGRIDGE – Personal Appointments (Free information from Companies House)".
  • ^ "Gordon Ernest Collingridge".
  • ^ a b c "Biography at Take 3 Management". Archived from the original on 30 December 2006. Retrieved 19 November 2006.
  • ^ a b c d "You can't pigeonhole me ... because of my magpie brain" Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, interview with Stephen Phelan, Sunday Herald
  • ^ a b c d "Fancy meeting you here ...", The Scotsman, 4 March 2002
  • ^ "That's English! [Previous version] – YouTube". Retrieved 5 August 2023 – via YouTube.
  • ^ Video clip of Collingridge describing her biography of James Cook (RealPlayer video)
  • ^ "The captain and the deflater", Sara Wheeler, The Spectator, 9 March 2002
  • ^ p.6, Boudica (2005), Ebury Press, ISBN 0-09-189819-6
  • ^ Captain Cook: Obsession and Discovery. Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Film Australia, 2007
  • ^ "Weather girl and now author Vanessa Collingridge at home in Lochwinnoch" Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Stephenpics.co.uk, 2002
  • ^ "PhD candidates", Department of Geographical and Earth Sciences, University of Glasgow

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vanessa_Collingridge&oldid=1195614049"

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