Jonathan Maitland

Jonathan Maitland

Jonathan Maitland is a British broadcaster and writer.

Early life

He was educated at Epsom College and graduated from King's College London with a degree in law.

Journalism

Maitland started his journalism career as a reporter on a local freesheet, The Sutton Guardian. He reported for BBC Radio Bristol from 1986–88 and BBC Radio 4's Today programme from 1988-94. From 1995-98 he presented and reported BBC 1's Watchdog. One item, about annoying dress codes at golf clubs, saw him take to the fairways in a leather mini skirt with a pair of deer antlers on his head. When challenged he pointed out that neither breached the long list of forbidden clothing. In 1999 he joined ITV to present the BAFTA nominated House Of Horrors, the first show to secretly film and expose dodgy builders. He also hosted The Man In The Van and Vote For Me for ITV. He has presented and reported for the channel's flagship current affairs show Tonight since 1999.

Writing

He has written five books including How to Make your Million from the Internet (and what to do if you don't), which detailed his attempt to make a million from the dot com boom by mortgaging his house for £50,000 – he failed. How to Survive your Mother described his unconventional childhood in suburban Surrey. Aged three he was sent to boarding school and at 13 his mother turned the family hotel in Ewell into a retreat for homosexuals. The rights were bought by ITV but no film was made. He also co-authored the authorised biography of singer Eva Cassidy.

He writes for newspapers and magazines and has written comedy sketches and songs with, or for, Chris Morris, Rory Bremner and Alistair McGowan.

He part funded Morris's debut feature film Four Lions (2010) in which he has a cameo as a newsreader. He has co-written (with Chris England) a feature film script called "Whatever Happened to Stanley Matthews" which has been optioned and is currently in development. His first play, Dead Sheep, about the Geoffrey Howe speech which led to Margaret Thatcher's downfall, is being staged at The Park Theatre in London from 1 April 2015 for six weeks.

Music

Although possessing no musical talent whatsoever Maitland played bass for wedding-cum-pub band Surf N Turf for 8 years. In 2002 the group performed his brother Peter's composition I Give In in the A Song For Europe contest, hoping to represent the UK in the Eurovision Song Contest on BBC1. They failed to qualify, coming fourth out of four entries by a considerable margin.

Other appearances

Maitland has presented several episodes of Profile and two series of Lyrical Journey, both for Radio 4. The latter, which he devised, involves taking musicians to a place they have written a song about. They then perform it in front of people for whom it has special significance. The series featured songs by the Proclaimers ('Sunshine on Leith'), Squeeze ('Up the Junction'), Deacon Blue ('Raintown') and Billy Bragg ('A13 Trunk Road to the Sea'). It was critically acclaimed and featured on the station's Pick of the Week several times but then "rested" after Series #2 by BBC radio executives who were apparently too busy attending meetings to listen to it.

Personal life

Maitland's mother was Jewish and born in Haifa but he describes himself as non-religious. His interests include cricket, curry, Scrabble (he is officially rated as being in the top 300 players in the UK), karaoke, watching rugby union and eating large slices of cake. He runs a cricket team, the Riverbank Ramblers, which he founded in 1989 with friends from Epsom College. He lives in west London with his wife Helena and their son, Manny. He has two stepsons, Ivo and Felix.

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