Richard Douglas James BakerOBERD (15 June 1925 – 17 November 2018) was an English broadcaster, best known as a newsreader for BBC News from 1954 to 1982, and as a radio presenter of classical music. He was a contemporary of Kenneth Kendall and Robert Dougall and was the first reader of the BBC Television News (in voiceover) in 1954.[2]
After graduating from Cambridge University, Baker worked as an actor and as a teacher. An approach to the BBC saw him gain his first broadcasting role, presenting classical music on the BBC Third Programme.[6]
He introduced the first BBC television news broadcast on 5 July 1954, although John Snagge read the actual bulletin.[7] A competent pianist,[5] he also became closely associated with classical music broadcasting, and presented many music programmes on both television and radio, including, for many years, the annual live broadcast from the Last Night of the Proms.[8] He was a regular panellist on the classical music quiz show Face the Music.[8] From 1979-1980 he was a columnist for Now! Magazine.[9]
On radio he presented Baker's Dozen, Start the Week on Radio 4 from April 1970 until 1987, Mozart, These You Have Loved (1972–77), and Melodies for You for BBC Radio 2 (1986–1995, 1999–2003).[10] He also presented the long-running Your Hundred Best Tunes for BBC Radio 2 on Sunday nights, taking over from Alan Keith, who died in 2003, and retiring in January 2007 when the programme was dropped by the BBC.[11] In 1995, he made his first foray into independent radio with a move to Classic FM, where he presented the Classic Countdown and Evening Concert programmes.[12][13]
Baker married Margaret Martin, at St Mary The Boltons in Brompton, London, on 2 June 1961,[15][16] while both were in their mid-30s. They had known each other from infancy as their mothers were friends.[17] The couple had two sons; Andrew, a sports columnist at The Daily Telegraph and James, a television executive at Red Arrow Studios.
At the time of his 90th birthday Baker was living with his wife at a retirement village in Oxfordshire.[5] He died on 17 November 2018, at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, aged 93.[4] Following his death, fellow BBC broadcast journalist John Simpson tweeted: "Richard Baker, who has just died, was one of the finest newsreaders of modern times: highly intelligent, thoughtful, gentle, yet tough in defence of his principles."[20]
^"Richard Baker Wedding". BBC newscaster Richard Baker getting married to Margaret Celia Martin at St Mary's Church, as BBC cameraman Gerald Rowley films the occasion, London, 2 June 1961. (Photo by Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images). 9 June 2014. Retrieved 17 November 2018.