Michael Parkinson occupies a unique place in the
public consciousness. Through his perceptive onscreen
interviews over the past five decades, he has introduced
millions of people to the personalities of major
international figures in sport, showbiz, politics, the
arts and journalism. In Parky's People, Parkinson sets
down on record the highlights of his interviews which
provide an intimate insight into the private lives and
personal characters of great celebrities from around the
world, from Tony Blair and Henry Kissinger, John
Betjeman and WH Auden, to Ken Dodd and Elton John. Now
an international celebrity himself, the man from a
humble but colourful Yorkshire mining family has teased
the secerets out of even the most reticent star guests,
such as Fred Astaire and Ingrid Bergman, and he has
drawn fascinating new information and insights from even
the most frequently interviewed subjects like Peter
Ustinov, David Niven and Stephen Fry. Remarkable
interviews with Edith Evans and Ben Travers demonstrate
that Parkinson's empathy with the old is as evident as
his easy familiarity with sportsmen like George Best,
Muhammad Ali and David Beckham.Great comics such as
Billy Connolly, Bob Hope, and Morecambe and Wise prove
as funny on the page as on screen and it seems that the
star of every Hollywood legend shines brightly under
Parkinson's subtle questioning. With a little help from
his friends, Parky's People is witty, always perceptive,
often wise, and never less than compulsive
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