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24 September 2014
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Mark Thompson's address at the Service of Thanksgiving for the life and work of Alistair Cooke KBE


Category: Â鶹Éç

Date: 15.10.2004
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For much of his life, Alistair Cooke's attitude to religion was characteristically open-minded, albeit built on the solid base of his Methodist upbringing in Blackpool.

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He loved to quote his mentor, HL Menken, who said: "If I do fetch up with the twelve apostles, I shall say - 'Gentlemen, I was wrong.'"

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Mind you, the prospect of a weekly Letter from Heaven is so enticing, it's hard to imagine him getting into much trouble.

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For close on 60 years, Alistair Cooke distilled the essence of American life and culture and history and politics with exquisite clarity, week after week.

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The searching but sympathetic light he shone on the wonders and weirdnesses of his adopted homeland enthralled first a British audience, then later through the Â鶹Éç's World Service, millions of people around the world.

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That I think is part of the reason why 150 people have travelled here today, not just from America but from as far afield as Lebanon and Australia.

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Alistair, for his pains, received the highest honours his profession could bestow, and, in 1973, an honorary knighthood from the Queen.

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By the time I met Alistair in the Â鶹Éç's New York office in the 1980s, the Letter from America had made him a broadcasting legend.

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And those 2,869 programmes would be enough of an epitaph for most writers.

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But the Letter was only one of the strings to Alistair's bow.

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He was the Manchester Guardian man, whose despatches stretched from the foundation of the United Nations to Nixon's election campaign nearly a quarter of a century later.

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He was the author of a string of books and one blockbuster - America, a Personal History - which sold nearly two million copies and has just been reprinted.

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He was, as you've heard, a star of American television and the embodiment of British culture for an American audience.

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He was a noted public speaker, an enthusiastic jazz pianist, a cartoonist, and a fanatical golfer, if never perhaps quite as good as he thought he was.

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Alistair was a friend to philosophers and poets, film stars and, of course, golfers.

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He was a familiar of Presidents, too, from Roosevelt and Truman through to Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson, without ever being their firm friend.

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He believed that a journalist should keep his distance from his subjects. As he put it in old age: "I found that I was temperamentally more suited to the profession of a journalist, that is to say of a curious onlooker, than to any other."

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Consequently, he was always a hard man to pigeon-hole, as the best journalists usually are.

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Indeed, he mistrusted dogma and blind faith wherever he found them, unless of course it involved the science of serving a perfect whisky, or the beauty of Gabriella Sabatini's forehand.

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He was genuinely taken aback when age and infirmity caught up with him in his 95th year. He had fully expected to die in harness.

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But in the weeks between his retirement and his death, he had the rare privilege of hearing and reading the glowing tributes of his professional life - and enjoying the outpouring of affection from his fans around the world.

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At the Â鶹Éç, we are profoundly grateful for his contribution.

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People nowadays talk about institutions having their own DNA. I think if you looked deep into the genetic code of the Â鶹Éç - not just today but for as long as the Â鶹Éç exists - one of the things you would find at its heart would be the rich, calm, beguiling, wise voice of Alistair Cooke.



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Category: Â鶹Éç

Date: 15.10.2004
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