Michael Parkinson, veteran British journalist and host of his own long-running TV chat show, has died aged 88.
The national treasure affectionately nicknamed “Parky” passed away peacefully at home on Wednesday night following a brief illness, his agent said.
He became one of British TV’s most recognisable faces with “Parkinson”, which ran on the BBC from 1971 to 1982, relaunched in 1998 and then moved to ITV in 2004.
Parky finally hung up his interviewer boots in 2007, after more than 800 shows and 2,000 interviews with some of the world’s most high-profile figures, including Madonna, Tom Cruise and Sir Elton John.
“He was the greatest interviewer of our age,” tweeted BBC Radio 4 presenter Nick Robinson, while the corporation’s director-general, Tim Davie, described him as “truly one of a kind”, the “king of the chat show” who “defined the format” for all presenters and shows to come.
“Nobody has replaced him” on British television, wrote Ed Cumming for The Independent. “The man talked to absolutely everyone,” including Dame Edna Everage, Marlon Brando, Lauren Bacall, Fred Astaire, Bette Midler and, notably, Miss Piggy. Even with “the glitziest Hollywood stars”, his style was “underpinned by a certain professional gravitas”.
Although not all of his interviews went smoothly, noted The Associated Press. “His 2003 encounter with actor Meg Ryan was arguably his frostiest, after she took offense at a question about her risque film ‘In the Cut’.” When Parkinson asked “in desperation” what she would do if she were the interviewer, she snapped: “Wrap it up.”
He was also criticised for an interview with Helen Mirren in 1975, in which he asked whether her “equipment” distracted audiences and if serious actresses can have “big bosoms”. The Oscar-winner later called him “sexist” and described the interview as “enraging”, said the Daily Express. Parkinson said in 2019 that the interview was “of its time” but “embarrassing”.