Len Martin

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Len_Martin an entity of type: Thing

Leonard Martin (17 April 1919 – 21 August 1995) was an Australian results reader. He was known in the UK for reading out the football results, associated football pools statistics and horse-racing results on the BBC's Saturday afternoon sports programme, Grandstand. In addition to his role on Grandstand, Martin was a voice-over artist heard on Movietone newsreels. He also used to run four flights of stairs at Lime Grove Studios in the late 1960s after Grandstand to introduce Simon Dee's programme, with 'Simon' elongated, in the distinctive manner. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Len Martin
rdf:langString Len Martin
rdf:langString Len Martin
rdf:langString Northwood, London, England
xsd:date 1995-08-21
rdf:langString Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia
xsd:date 1919-04-17
xsd:integer 3566004
xsd:integer 1105872726
xsd:date 1919-04-17
rdf:langString Leonard Martin
xsd:date 1995-08-21
rdf:langString Classified results reader
xsd:integer 1958
rdf:langString Grandstand
rdf:langString Leonard Martin (17 April 1919 – 21 August 1995) was an Australian results reader. He was known in the UK for reading out the football results, associated football pools statistics and horse-racing results on the BBC's Saturday afternoon sports programme, Grandstand. Martin was born in Australia where he began his broadcasting career. He came to England on holiday in 1953 for the Coronation and received a call from the BBC the day before he was due to sail for Australia. He never used his return ticket home, and only twice went back to Australia in 1983 and 1993, on holiday. He performed his role on Grandstand from the programme's very first edition in 1958 until his death in 1995. Martin was well known for his intonation when reading the scores. It was clear from the way in which he presented the home or away team name, followed by number of goals, whether the result was a home win, an away win, a no-score draw or a score draw; this was important for the football pools results. He was succeeded by Tim Gudgin who also used the distinct BBC intonation. In addition to his role on Grandstand, Martin was a voice-over artist heard on Movietone newsreels. He also used to run four flights of stairs at Lime Grove Studios in the late 1960s after Grandstand to introduce Simon Dee's programme, with 'Simon' elongated, in the distinctive manner.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2859
xsd:gYear 1995
xsd:gYear 1958
rdf:langString Leonard Martin
xsd:gYear 1919
xsd:gYear 1995

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