Alan Dedicoat
Alan Dedicoat | |
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Born |
Hollywood, Worcestershire, England | 1 December 1954
Residence | Harrow, United Kingdom |
Other names | Deadly, Deadly Alancoat, The Voice of the Balls |
Occupation | Announcer, Newsreader |
Years active | 1979-present |
Employer | BBC |
Website | |
Official Website |
Alan Dedicoat (born 1 December 1954) is an English announcer for programmes on BBC One and BBC Radio 2; he is probably best known as the "Voice of the Balls" on the National Lottery programmes on BBC One. He also reads the news on BBC Radio 2 where he is nicknamed Deadly Alancoat.
Early life
He was born on 1 December 1954 in Hollywood, Worcestershire. The son of a newsagent, Dedicoat was educated at King Edward VI Camp Hill School for Boys in Birmingham, and the University of Birmingham. Dedicoat originally worked in the Civil Service as an Executive Officer before joining the BBC.
Career
Dedicoat joined BBC Radio Birmingham at Pebble Mill in 1979 as a presenter, before moving to BBC Radio Devon four years later. After his time in the West Country, he moved to London to join the Presentation Department of BBC Radio 2 at Broadcasting House, and later became its head, a position he retained until his semi-retirement on Friday 27 March 2015. As part of this job, he read the news on BBC Radio 2's weekday breakfast programme, Wake Up to Wogan, before its demise in December 2009, as well as on Sarah Kennedy's show until she left the station in 2010. He then became the newsreader for Vanessa Feltz and on Sundays, but following a reshuffle of newsreaders in late 2012, his final shift was reading the news on weekdays between 10am and 5pm. He is also the voices of Radio 2's "emergency CD" (played when there is a fire alarm or other unforeseen break in programming) and their multiple choice automatic phone menu.
After 28 years at the station, Dedicoat's final news bulletin on BBC Radio 2 was at 5pm on Friday 27 March 2015. He will however continue voicing on the Lottery and Strictly Come Dancing.
It was as part of Wake up to Wogan that Dedicoat acquired the nicknames "Voice of the Balls" and "Deadly" from Terry Wogan, the latter by way of a deliberate Spoonerism - "Deadly Alancoat".
On television, as well as his role on the National Lottery programmes, he also takes part in the BBC's telethons such as Children in Need, announcing the totals at certain intervals and also voicing previews and the voice-overs in Strictly Come Dancing on BBC One. Since 2005, Dedicoat has been the voice-over for Dancing with the Stars, the American version of Strictly Come Dancing.[1] Since 2009 he has been the voice-over for the CBBC show Copycats.
Dedicoat also works as an after dinner speaker.[2]
Personal life
He is the co-owner of a Routemaster (one of London's famous red buses) with Charles Nove, Ken Bruce, Steve Madden and David Sheppard.[3]
He is Patron of the Hospital Broadcasting Association and has taken part in the National Hospital Radio Awards both as the voiceover and in person.
He is also the President of Hospital Radio Bedside, a hospital radio station that broadcasts to hospitals in Bournemouth, Poole, Christchurch and Wimborne in the UK.[4][5]
Dedicoat lives in Harrow.
References
- ↑ Alan Dedicoat Credits TV.com
- ↑ Jla Alan Dedicoat
- ↑ The red brigade, The Guardian 9 April 2005
- ↑ Hospital Radio Bedside Charity
- ↑ Durkin, Jim (1 March 2014). "Poole Hospital radio staff walking on air after four decade milestone". Bournemouth Daily Echo. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
External links
- Official website
- BBC Radio 2 biography
- BBC Radio News Biography
- Alan Dedicoat at the Internet Movie Database
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