Bill Steel

For other people of the same name, see William Steel (disambiguation).
For the baseball pitcher, see William Steele.

Bill Steel is a television and radio broadcaster from North East England. He has also acted, briefly appearing in Coronation Street. Also starring in 'The Rag Nymph" as 'Mr. Sponge' the night school teacher. (See: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118443/fullcredits/)

Career

Early career

He began his working life at the General Electric as a trainee accountant, and moved into television in the 1960s, first working in the Tyne Tees Television Presentation Department as an assistant Transmission controller and at the age of 23, a presentation director. Later he progressed into the advertising section, which involved doing voice over work for over 10,000 local adverts produced by Tyne Tees.[1]

In 1967 he left his native North East England and moved to Manchester where he presented the ABC Weekend News. Bill later moved to ABC's Midlands operation and became its chief announcer until 1968 when the station's staff were redeployed to the company's brand new London broadcaster Thames Television. There, Steel worked in various departments, most of which he had previous experience, such as commercial voice overs, newsreading and transmission control. Bill, also through the voice overs, ended up doing a short spell of continuity announcing for Thames, before returning to the north in 1971.

Tyne Tees Television

Employed once again by Tyne Tees, Steel worked as one of a number of presenters for the station's regional news programming and anchored the flagship 20-minute evening programme, Today At Six.

Today At Six was axed, however Steel was kept on, this time as the main anchor of the station's new flagship news programme, Northern Life from 1976. Four years later, he switched back to continuity announcing, taking over as Chief Announcer and Head of Presentation in 1988, when he inherited that role from Neville Wanless. Despite returning to announcing, Bill continued to read regular local news bulletins until the late 1980s. He remained as the senior continuity announcer until March 1996 when the stations owners, Yorkshire-Tyne Tees Television, moved the department to their own studios in Leeds. Bill signed off from continuity announcing on 16 March 1996 - one of his colleagues, the late Allan Cartner made the final announcement from Newcastle later that night.

At Tyne Tees he had also presented many programmes including Songs of the Sixties and Lookaround. He also appeared on many local programmes as a features reporter during the late 1980s and 1990s; including the regional magazine shows Tyne Tees Weekend and Tonight. Bill continued to work for the company as a features reporter until the end of 1996, when his contract with Tyne Tees was not renewed.

After Tyne Tees

In 1997 he returned to television with an eight-month stint as Bernard McKenna in the ITV soap Coronation Street.

Steel has also had plenty of experience as a radio presenter. He was the first breakfast show DJ for the North East's first commercial radio station, Metro FM in 1973, working simultaneously for the station and Tyne Tees Television until leaving Metro in the early 1980s.

Prior to discovering his Tyne Tees Television contract was ending, Steel accepted an offer to present a weekly Sunday afternoon request programme for Gateshead-based Century FM in 1994. After leaving Tyne Tees his work expanded into other weekend and evening slots.[2] Bill continued to present overnight shows at the weekend for Century until these were replaced with networked material from Real Radio North West in 2008.

He still enjoys occasional work as an actor.[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.