Gerald "Gerry" Kelly (born 20 September 1948) is a Northern Irish broadcaster and journalist, best known for his presenting career at UTV where he presented the Friday night talk and variety show Kelly from 1989 until 2005.
Gerry Kelly | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation(s) | Broadcaster and journalist |
Known for | Kelly |
Spouse | Helena |
Children | 2 daughters |
He is currently a presenter on BBC Radio Ulster, where he presents on Fridays from 3.00pm to 5.00pm and on Saturdays from 12.00pm to 1.30pm.
Early life
editKelly was born on Thomas Street in Ballymena on 20 September 1948. His parents were originally from Derry, where his father worked in the shirt industry. He, along the rest of his family moved to Downpatrick in the early 1950s and much of Kelly's early childhood was overshadowed by his father's alcohol problem. In the early 1960s, his father left the family on the pretext of going to Scotland for work, after which Kelly never heard from his father again.[1]
Kelly later went on to work as a teacher and a lecturer at St. Mary's College in Belfast.[2] He also worked as a leisure development officer for Belfast City Council, before going into broadcasting and journalism.
Broadcasting career
editKelly's broadcasting career began at Ulster Television as a part-time GAA reporter, but left the station quickly after being blacklisted by the National Union of Journalists.[3] Following a year's work experience at the Down Recorder, he returned to UTV in 1979 as a reporter, and later presenter, of its evening magazine programme, Good Evening Ulster,.[2]
Kelly also presented the series Lifestyle, Kelly's People, Kelly on Tour, Kelly on the Road,[2] What Next?,[4] Get It Right Next Time[5] and Pick of the Six for Ulster Television.[6] He also presented a radio show called Kelly on the Radio on Downtown Radio.
In September 1989, he began presenting the popular talk and variety show, Kelly, which aired for 571 episodes. Famous guests included a 9-year-old Rory McIlroy who appeared on the show in 1999 after he had won the world under 10s championship and George Best (who appeared in a special edition in 2000, which was the highest-rated edition at 367,000 viewers).[7]
In May 1999, there was speculation that Kelly was one of the few names who were tipped to succeed Gay Byrne as the host of The Late Late Show that aired on RTÉ One in the Republic of Ireland. However, Kelly did not get the position which went to Pat Kenny.[8]
In September 2005, UTV announced that Kelly would end. Kelly said that UTV were unhappy with the show airing in the 9pm slot, as UTV had to opt out of ITV's network schedule. Instead of moving the show to a new different timeslot, UTV took the decision to axe it completely. The final episode of Kelly aired on the 16 December 2005.[9][10][11]
After the cancellation of Kelly in 2005, a new series, Gerry Meets... was launched in March 2006.[12] The series concentrated on one-to-one interviews with guests.[13] One 2006 episode, during which Kelly interviewed the DJ Jimmy Savile, received widespread coverage in the national press six years later after the Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal first broke. Particular attention was paid to comments Savile made to Kelly that were interpreted as clues to Savile's history as a predatory sex offender.[14][15][16][17]
In January 2008, it was reported that Kelly had left UTV. In an interview with the Belfast Telegraph, Kelly said, "I'm leaving UTV on amicable terms and I have nothing but the highest regard for them. As far as I'm concerned, they gave me one of the best jobs in the world and I'm grateful to them for that."[18]
In March 2009, it was announced that Kelly would be joining BBC Radio Ulster to present a Saturday afternoon programme, commencing in April.[19] Kelly replaced the Alan Simpson show on BBC Radio Ulster he is on air from 15:00 - 17:00 on Friday Afternoons.
In November 2023, it was announced that Kelly would become the presenter of a new series, Conversations with Gerry Kelly. Kelly clarified that the show would not be a rival series to RTÉ's The Late Late Show as it was thought that both shows could inevitably be broadcast around the same time.[20] In January 2024, it was announced that Kelly's new ten-part series will be broadcast on Monday nights from 29 January 2024 on Belfast-based television channel NVTV.[21]
Awards
editIn 1993 he received the Sony Gold Award for a special programme following the Shankill Road bombing. In 1998 Kelly was installed in the Royal Television Society Hall of Fame in recognition of his lifelong contribution to broadcasting. He also received two Entertainment and Media Awards and his show Kelly was twice been voted the most entertaining programme in Northern Ireland.
Personal life
editKelly currently[when?] lives in Ardglass in County Down with his wife Helena and has two daughters, where he is a member of Ardglass Golf Club.[22] He is also the brother of former Down GAA goalkeeper Danny Kelly.[3]
In February 2018, Kelly announced that he had been diagnosed with cancer two years earlier and had the tumour successfully removed and went through six chemotherapy sessions to tackle the cancer.[23]
References
edit- ^ "Sunday Life: "My father was dead to me day he walked out" - Gerry Kelly". 5 October 2008.
- ^ a b c Belfast Telegraph: "Kelly: The man who talked the talk with celebrities": dated 9 January 2008; accessed 18 January 2009
- ^ a b Sunday Life: "Oh brother! Big TV break was a complete fluke...": dated 8 October 2008; accessed 18 January 2008
- ^ BFI Film & TV Database: What Next?: accessed 19 January 2009
- ^ BFI Film & TV Database: Get It Right Next Time: accessed 19 January 2009
- ^ UK Game Shows: Pick of the Six: accessed 18 January 2009
- ^ Belfast Telegraph: "By George, Gerry's show scores as the Best attraction"; dated 15 November 2000, retrieved 11 January 2008
- ^ "The Irish Times: "Stepping into the shoes of Uncle Gay"". 8 May 1999.
- ^ Belfast Telegraph: "Curtain falls on the Kelly Show"; dated 1 September 2005, retrieved 11 January 2008
- ^ Belfast Telegraph: "Plea to save programmes from axe"; dated 22 October 2005, retrieved 11 January 2008
- ^ Sunday Life: "Corr! What a line-up as Kelly bows out": dated 11 December 2005, accessed 18 January 2009
- ^ Belfast Telegraph: "Friday night comeback for TV host Gerry": dated 1 March 2006; accessed 18 January 2009
- ^ Belfast Telegraph: "Let's talk": dated 25 February 2006; accessed 18 January 2009
- ^ "Jimmy Savile told interviewer, 'I don't do underage sex'". www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^ Mackay, Don (26 October 2012). ""All children should be eaten at birth": Jimmy Savile denied sex abuse in 2006 interview". mirror.
- ^ "I don't do under-age sex: Savile". Express.co.uk. 25 October 2012.
- ^ "Unearthed: Jimmy Savile tells journalist 'children should be eaten at birth'" – via www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk.
- ^ Belfast Telegraph: "It's time to move on, says UTV's Kelly: dated 8 January 2008
- ^ BBC Press Officer: "Radio Ulster welcomes Gerry Kelly to its Saturday schedule": dated 5 March 2009; accessed 6 March 2009
- ^ Little, Ivan (19 November 2023). "Gerry Kelly: My new chat show isn't a rival to the Late Late". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 27 January 2024.
- ^ McGurk, Helen (25 January 2024). "Broadcaster Gerry Kelly gets personal with new series - and first up is former UTV colleague Eamonn Holmes". News Letter. Retrieved 27 January 2024.
- ^ u.tv: Gerry Kelly profile (archived version)
- ^ "Irish News: "Broadcaster Gerry Kelly urges men to seek medical help when needed"". 26 February 2018.
External links
edit- Gerry Kelly at BBC Radio Ulster
- Gerry Kelly at IMDb