Paul Clark | |
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Born | Paul Thompson Clark 4 December 1953 Belfast, Northern Ireland |
Occupation | Broadcaster Journalist |
Spouse | Carol |
Paul Thompson Clark MBE [1] [2] (born 4 December 1953, Belfast) [3] is a Northern Irish television presenter and journalist. He is currently a presenter and reporter for UTV Live.
Clark was among the original presenters on RTÉ Radio 2 in 1979 [4] and later presented on BBC Radio Ulster. [5] Other early television programmes Clark presented were Green Rock in 1979 with Caron Keating and Advice Line for the BBC. [6]
Clark moved from presenting and reporting for BBC Northern Ireland's Inside Ulster [4] to Ulster Television in 1989. [3] In his time at UTV, he has been a presenter and reporter on the evening news magazines Six Tonight and UTV Live, [4] Witness Review [6] and UTV School Choir of the Year. [7] He has also contributed to historical and religious documentaries including We Were Brothers, [8] and memorial services for the 10th anniversary of the Remembrance Day bombing in 1997 and Belfast's hosting of Holocaust Memorial Day in 2004. [6]
He was born in Belfast and attended St Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School, Belfast. [9] He is married to Carol and has two children, sons Peter and David. He is a practising Presbyterian, though he was brought up Roman Catholic. [10] Clark is patron of the Northern Ireland Hospice. [11]
In June 2015, Clark was awarded an honorary degree by the Ulster University for services to broadcasting and his charity work with UNICEF. [12]
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cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link)
Paul Clark | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | Paul Thompson Clark 4 December 1953 Belfast, Northern Ireland |
Occupation | Broadcaster Journalist |
Spouse | Carol |
Paul Thompson Clark MBE [1] [2] (born 4 December 1953, Belfast) [3] is a Northern Irish television presenter and journalist. He is currently a presenter and reporter for UTV Live.
Clark was among the original presenters on RTÉ Radio 2 in 1979 [4] and later presented on BBC Radio Ulster. [5] Other early television programmes Clark presented were Green Rock in 1979 with Caron Keating and Advice Line for the BBC. [6]
Clark moved from presenting and reporting for BBC Northern Ireland's Inside Ulster [4] to Ulster Television in 1989. [3] In his time at UTV, he has been a presenter and reporter on the evening news magazines Six Tonight and UTV Live, [4] Witness Review [6] and UTV School Choir of the Year. [7] He has also contributed to historical and religious documentaries including We Were Brothers, [8] and memorial services for the 10th anniversary of the Remembrance Day bombing in 1997 and Belfast's hosting of Holocaust Memorial Day in 2004. [6]
He was born in Belfast and attended St Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School, Belfast. [9] He is married to Carol and has two children, sons Peter and David. He is a practising Presbyterian, though he was brought up Roman Catholic. [10] Clark is patron of the Northern Ireland Hospice. [11]
In June 2015, Clark was awarded an honorary degree by the Ulster University for services to broadcasting and his charity work with UNICEF. [12]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link)