Mark Tully

EPISODE · Jun 15, 2003 · 36 MIN

Mark Tully

from Desert Island Discs · host BBC Radio 4

Sue Lawley's castaway this week is the veteran broadcaster Mark Tully. Born in Calcutta and with ancestors who were involved in the Indian Mutiny, he has a love of India in his bones and has made his career reporting it. Indeed, in his 30 years as BBC India correspondent his name and the role became synonymous - he has been called a cult figure and his reports were broadcast in English, Hindi, Urdu, Tamil, Nepali and Bengali to as many as 50 million people on the sub-continent.As a young man he considered entering the clergy but he left theology college to begin his career at the BBC. Shortly thereafter he returned to India after an absence of more than a decade and felt like he had come home. He's been there ever since. He has mapped the great events on the sub-continent since the 1960s, including Bangladesh's war of independence, the upheavals in Pakistan, the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, the Union Carbide disaster at Bhopal, the Indian army attack on the Golden Temple at Amritsa and the assassinations of both Indira and Rajiv Gandhi. He has heard a crowd chanting 'death to Tully' as well as being expelled from the country, captured, threatened, imprisoned and even accused of bringing down the government. For his pains he has been awarded the OBE and the Tadma Shre, an Indian honour rarely bestowed on foreigners. These days he spends a couple of months a year in Britain seeing friends and family and recording some of his Radio 4 programmes Something Understood.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]Favourite track: Requiem for Athene by Taverner Book: Major works by Gerard Manley Hopkins Luxury: Modern mini brewery

NOW PLAYING

Mark Tully

0:00 36:18

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Highway 62 Danny Thompson Highway 62, from Morongo Valley, up through Yucca Valley, Joshua Tree and finally Twenty Nine Palms, is home to an eclectic mix of businesses, people and stories. This weekly podcast hosted by Face to Face drummer and resident of Twenty Nine palms, Danny Thompson, brings you their stores and highlights what this famous stretch of desert road has to offer. A Very Different Catholic Podcast Christopher D. Reibold What does science say about the mysterious sword of St. Galgano? Why do snakes on the island of Kefalonia congregate around an icon of the Blessed Mother on the Feast of the Assumption? What role did St. Teresa of Calcutta play in the Beirut ceasefire of 1982? Join host Christopher Reibold, "The Saint Story Guy" as he brings his signature mix of trivia, storytelling, humor, and personal witness to the cool side of Catholic in this very different podcast. Desert Air Nevada Public Radio Desert Air is the best of Desert Companion magazine for your ears — arts and culture coverage, thoughtful commentary, and creative nonfiction. This podcast provides a space for interviews and storytelling unlike any other, connecting Southern Nevadans with each other and their home. Ray Dalio Academy of Achievement Ray Dalio is the founder and owner of Bridgewater Associates, the world's largest and richest hedge fund. The firm manages approximately $130 billion in global investments for institutional clients including foreign governments and central banks, pension funds, university endowments and charitable foundations. The son of a jazz musician, Dalio began investing at the age of 12 when he bought shares of Northeast Airlines for $300, tripling his investment when the airline merged with another company. After completing his education at Long Island University and Harvard Business School, Dalio worked on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and invested in commodity futures. In 1975, at age 26, he founded Bridgewater Associates in his two-bedroom Manhattan apartment. As the firm expanded, he wrote a 100-page essay, 'Principles,' to share his management philosophy with his employees. Dalio believes his team must be 'radically truthful and transparent' to achieve excellence. 'We need to kn
URL copied to clipboard!