Frank Bough was a veteran BBC presenter before scandal ruined his career
The veteran broadcaster enjoyed a long career at the BBC and was well known for hosting programmes such as Grandstand and Breakfast Time.
Frank Bough was one of the most popular faces on TV screens in the 1970s and 1980s until scandal ruined his career.
The veteran broadcaster enjoyed a career lasting more than two decades at the BBC and was well known for hosting programmes such as Grandstand, Nationwide and Breakfast Time.
As a former Oxford soccer Blue, Bough was a keen sporting broadcaster and anchored six World Cups, six Olympics and at least a dozen Five Nations championships for the BBC.
In the seventies, he also presented current affairs programme Nationwide, which made him a household name.
In 1983, Bough switched from Grandstand, having been a regular host of the programme since 1968, to help to launch the Breakfast Time.
Breakfast Time was Britain’s first early-morning TV news programme and Bough presented it along with Selina Scott and Nick Ross.
Bough was pictured in the Sunday Mirror attending what was described as a “sado-masochistic vice den”.
In an interview with Sky News in 1992, Bough later spoke of his regret over the incident and said his behaviour had been “exceedingly stupid”, apologising for the pain it had caused his wife and family.
Following the scandal, he attempted to rebuild his broadcast career on Sky Television and a London Weekend Television show – and also enjoyed a stint on LBC radio in the early 1990s.
The station attracted complaints from listeners, who said that LBC was spending money on high-salaried presenters such as Bough while skimping on journalism.
Bough underwent a successful liver transplant in 2001 after developing cancer.
Bough was born in Stoke-on-Trent on January 15, 1933, and attended Oswestry Boys’ High School in Shropshire before studying Shipping Management at Oxford.
He completed his national service in the Royal Tank Regiment alongside MP Andrea Jenkyns’s father Clifford, who she said always “spoke highly” of Bough when reminiscing about their time during conscription.
He died on October 21.