|
2000 - The Judges
Profiles
Nigella Lawson (Chair) has
been a successful and prolific journalist and broadcaster
working on the Sunday Times, Evening Standard, Guardian,
Daily Telegraph and in America for Gourmet and Bon
Appetit magazines. She originated the restaurant column
in The Spectator and since 1995 she has been food
writer for Vogue. She writes a column for The
Observer. In 1998 she was a judge of the Booker
Prize. Her bestselling book, How to Eat: The pleasures
and principles of good food was published
to critical acclaim in 1998.
Stephen Fry was educated at Queen’s
College, Cambridge where he joined the Footlights and performed
in the Mayweek Review of 1981 with Emma Thompson and Hugh
Laurie. He now has numerous television and film credits
to his name. Television appearances include The
Young Ones, Blackadders II and III, Jeeves and Wooster,
Cold Comfort Farm, The Thin Blue Line and most recently Gormenghast for
the BBC. Film credits include A Fish Called Wanda,
Peter’s Friends and Wilde, in which he
played the title role. He has written the screenplay
of Evelyn Waugh’s Vile Bodies which he will direct
this year. His first novel, The Liar, was
a bestseller. His other books include, Paperweight,
The Hippopotamus and most recently Moab is my Washpot.
Timothy Garton Ash is
an historian and writer and Fellow of St Antony’s College, Oxford. He
is the author of several books including History of the
Present, The File and We The People. He
is a regular contributor to the Independent and the New York
Review of Books. His television series, Freedom’s
Battle, was screened to coincide with the tenth anniversary
of the 1989 revolutions last autumn.
Susan Greenfield is
Professor of Pharmacology at Oxford, where she heads a multi-disciplinary
group studying non-classical mechanisms underlying neurodegenerative
disorders. 1998
she became Director of the Royal Institution - the first
woman to hold this office in the Royal Institution's 200
year history. She received the Michael Faraday
medal from the Royal Society for making the most significant
contribution in 1998 to the public understanding of science. Susan
has been awarded eleven Honorary Degrees, and received the
CBE in the year 2000 New Year's Honours List. She is
currently preparing a major six-part series on the brain
and mind, to be broadcast on BBC2 in June 2000.
Baroness Helena Kennedy QC practises predominantly
in the criminal law, having acted in many leading British
cases including the Brighton Bombing Trial and the Guildford
Four Appeal. She is Chair of the British Council, the
Human Genetics Commission and is on the Advisory Council
of the World Bank Institute. She is Chair of the London
International Festival of Theatre and a Fellow of the Royal
Society of Arts. A frequent broadcaster and journalist
on law and women’s rights, she created the BBC television
series Blind Justice in 1987. She was the
first female moderator of the BBC’s Hypotheticals and
continues to present them. Her award-winning book on
women in the British criminal justice system, Eve Was
Framed, was published in 1992.
|