Peter Woods (journalist)

Peter Holmes Woods (7 November 1930 – 22 March 1995) was a British journalist, reporter and newsreader.

Early life and career

Born in Romford, Essex, Woods was educated at Hull Grammar School and Imperial Service College, Windsor. He began his career in print journalism, writing for newspapers including the Yorkshire Post, the Daily Mail and the Daily Mirror, with a break for military service as a commissioned officer in the Royal Horse Guards.

He is best known for his television work with for BBC News on Newsroom initially as a reporter but also as a newsreader from the 1960s until the early 1980s. He was the first newsreader to broadcast in colour on BBC2, in News Room.[1] In 1976, he slurred his words on the early evening news. Viewers phoned in to complain that Woods was drunk, but his difficulties were blamed on medication for sinus problems.[1]

Woods was readily seen as an archetypal British newsreader, and was used as such in a number of comedy sketches and films throughout the 1970s and 1980s. These included Monty Python, There's a Lot of It About, The New Statesman, and Jonnie Turpie's 1987 film Out of Order. He also appeared (again as a newsreader) in an advertising campaign for KP Cheese Dips in the mid-1980s. Along with all the other BBC newsreaders of the time, Woods participated in the 1977 Christmas edition of the Morecambe and Wise Show. They delivered a rendition of the song "There Is Nothing Like a Dame" (from the musical South Pacific) with Woods getting the deep-voiced last line and using his trademark seriousness to comic effect.

From the mid-1980s up until his death, Woods narrated the "Railscene" videos, a series of videos about Britain's railways. He also narrated a set of five Castle Vision productions about the steam trains of "The Big Four" British railway companies and British Railways.

Personal life

Woods had two children, Susan (born c. 1955) and Guy (c. 1957)[2] with his first wife Kathleen Marian (née Smith). The marriage was dissolved in 1975 and he later married Esma Jean Woods.[2] He died aged 64 on March 22, 1995.[1]

In 2011, BBC journalist Justin Webb revealed that Peter Woods was his natural father. Woods had an affair with Webb's mother who was a secretary at the Daily Mirror when Woods was a star reporter. Woods though was already married and Webb's mother was separated from her first husband.[3] Webb commented that the separation may have been as much his mother's doing as his father's, saying "I do not believe she was abandoned."[4] Woods provided financially for Webb and supported his education at Sidcot School, but saw Webb only once, when he was six months old.[2]

References