Harry Gration: My 40 years in broadcasting

Look North news presenter Harry Gration has been in broadcasting for 40 years. He talks to Neil Hudson about how it all began.
Harry Gration.Harry Gration.
Harry Gration.

News presenter Harry Gration has to be one of the most down to earth people you could ever hope to meet. Although we have met previously, when I catch up with him on the phone to talk about his 40 years in broadcasting, he is walking into Leeds and in between questions, he keeps having to stop to say hello to people.

“It’s something I’ve got used to,” says the 67-year-old. “I get recognised all the time but sometimes it’s by people who don’t know why they know me. I think it’s one of the great things about regional TV, in that we have access to people, whereas the network superstars do not. We meet them at charity events or just walking into town like this, we talk to them all the time. I hope it’s never gone to my head, I’ve always been very grateful for the job I have. I love doing it and I will hopefully do it for a little while longer.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

His career as a broadcaster can be traced right back to his youth, when, as a cricket-mad youngster, he would invent matches in his back garden and then commentate on them.

Born in Bradford to parents Morris, a chemist, and Nina, he attended half a dozen schools before he age of 11, moving whenever his father got new work.

“My dad was manager of the Boots store in Darley Lane, Bradford but then he was moved to the all night store, as it was then, on Boar Lane, in 1959 and later to York. We moved house a lot, I think I went to five or six schools before I was 11.”

The former Leeds Grammar School pupil trained as a teacher and was head of history at Rodillion School, which is also where his broadcasting career began.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“I started teaching in 1973 but my move into broadcasting began with Radio Leeds, I was given a chance to start presenting through a friend of mine, Doug Lupton, who used to cover Leeds United matches. He said why don’t you have a go. Cricket was my love, so I went to do a a game between Yorkshire and Somerset. On my first day, I was so excited and my mum, who was very protective, was at home panicking because I had’t taken my lunch - she rang up to say she had left it on the gate outside… and they announced that over the radio.

“Eventually, the presenting just got bigger, I was doing stints on Radio Leeds, not just at weekends but also covering events.

“I remember covering the Leeds Market Fire, which happened on Saturday evening just after I had finished a rugby league programme, so we stayed on air until the early hours. That started to get me noticed in the minds of my editors, because there was always a thing that I had not been trained as a journalist in the traditional way. The other big story I recall was when they caught the Yorkshire Ripper - that happened on a Sunday night and they took him to Dewsbury Police Station. John Cundy was my news editor at the time and we both covered it, remaining on air until the small hours.”

Incidentally, Mr Cundy retired on Friday after 50 years in journalism and in March, Look North will mark its own half century, an event Harry is very much involved in.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“We have worked on all kinds of stories over the years and we will be doing a special programme to mark the half century, showing some of the stories we have covered down the years. One of those which springs to mind involved a vicar who liked to shoot moles in his back garden. We heard about him and went to cover the story and he had his rifle with him and while we were on air, he shot two moles. It seemed perfectly normal then but things like that would not happen today.”

Another interview which sticks in his mind came shortly after he joined Look North and was co-presenting with Judith Stamper.

“It was an interview with Dennis Skinner MP and we had a technical fault, in that the microphone failed. I was new to presenting and didn’t really know how to deal with it but Dennis hit the roof over it. Then a producer literally crawled onto the set, went under the desk where Dennis was sat and put his hand up to attach a new microphone. If you imagine the sword of Excalibur coming out of the lake, it looked a bit like that and we both just carried on as if nothing had happened.”

Harry has three grown up children - a daughter and two sons - is also father to twins, now 14, with wife Helen. The pair got together while working in London. After presenting Look North for 13 years, Harry decided to try his hand at something new and went to work for the Rugby League but was later offered a presenting job on South Today, Southampton, which he did for five years.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“When I first went down there, I was presenting with a very sophisticated southern lady called Sally Taylor and here I was, this Northern oik. To begin with, it didn’t work but then it suddenly took off because we started to have a bit of banter and people began to tune in for that.

“I was very happy down there, very settled and then I got call asking me to come back to Look North. My initial reaction was to say no, because I thought it wouldn’t be the right thing to go back to a job I used to do but then my boss down south was also leaned on and so, in the end, I came back.”

Returning to his Yorkshire roots has worked out well and it’s a move he says he is happy about. Harry’s ability to fill a silence has done him proud over the years but there have been occasions when he’s almost been caught out.

“You learn to talk gibberish,” says Harry almost self-mockingly. “I had to put that to the test in 1998, covering the Winter Olympics. I was asked to step in to cover the 50km cross country ski event but it meant me talking for two hours and I didn’t really know anything about it. I had a lot of statistics and so I basically went through them. The next day Des Lynam, who is a good friend of mine, phoned me up and the first thing he said was, ‘What a load of codswallop’, which made me laugh.”