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Bamber
Gascoigne
Late Grenadier Guards
by Major James Gatehouse
formerly Grenadier Guards
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Bamber Gascoigne CBE, a man of many interests, died on 8th February
2022, aged 87. For many, he will always be associated with
University Challenge, the popular television quiz show
featuring teams of students from different universities
competing against each other, which he launched in 1960 and
hosted for the next 25 years. He was an affable and erudite
presenter, revered across the nation for his faultless charm
and his genially delivered catchphrases – ‘Fingers on
buzzers; starter for ten; I’ll have to hurry you’. He became
one of the most recognisable personalities on British
television.
Born in London on 24th January 1935 and named after one of
his Irish ancestors, he was the son of a soldier and later
businessman in the City. He was educated at Sunningdale from
1943 to 1948 and from there he won a scholarship to Eton,
eventually becoming a member of ‘Pop’ and Keeper of Fives, a
game at which he excelled. Throughout his schooling and then
later in the Army, he met and made many life-long friends
who still fondly remembered those happy days of youth. In
his family there had been a long line of soldiers, the
majority Guardsmen: his grandfather was Brigadier General
Sir Frederick Gascoigne and his uncle Major General Sir
Julian Gascoigne, Major General Commanding the Household
Division from 1950-53, both well-known and influential
Grenadiers in their time, so there was never any doubt about
which regiment Bamber would join during National Service.
Interviewed by Michael Parkinson on Desert Island Discs
many years later, he recounted that his short military
career had consisted of ‘the first six months being bashed
around on the Square’ (at Caterham, then Eaton Hall), which
he described as ‘pretty unpleasant’, ‘then an extraordinary
six months dancing with debs in London, and guarding The
Queen at Buckingham Palace on my off moments’ with the 3rd
Battalion at Chelsea, then recently returned from Egypt,
which he joined in March 1954. After this he was posted to
the 1st Battalion in Berlin (Montgomery Barracks) ‘which was
extremely interesting. The Wall wasn’t yet then built’
although the duties, which included guarding seven Nazi war
criminals in Spandau Jail and patrolling the frontier, soon
became rather monotonous. By February 1955, all were pleased
to leave Berlin, shrouded in deep snow, and the Battalion
moved to Gort Barracks in Hubbelrath, near Dusseldorf,
joining 4th Guards Brigade, ‘which was perfect for weekends
in Paris’!
In Germany Bamber was very popular as, having specialized at
Eton in modern languages and speaking almost fluent German,
he was in great demand by his brother officers when dining
out or going to the many nightclubs in Berlin. Later, in
Hubbelrath, he was given the task of paying all civilian
staff employed by the Battalion each month. A young German,
Otto by name, was charming and had been trusted by all to
collect the money from the bank before handing it over to
Bamber to pay the staff. However, one day Otto disappeared,
leaving behind a letter addressed to Bamber, which read:
Dear Mr Gascoigne
I am so sorry to do this to you as I have always greatly
admired you, but I have used the money to buy two air
tickets. I am taking my girlfriend away to start a new
life in Argentina.
No more was ever heard of him!
Already Bamber had started writing and, before the 1st
Battalion left Berlin, he had produced a revue called Got
any Gum, Chum for Christmas 1954. There were three
performances, with one officer even appearing in drag and
singing several songs to boisterous applause from the
audience. But all good things come to an end and Bamber left
the Army in 1955. He went up to Magdalene College,
Cambridge, and, later, gained a first-class degree in
English.
Whilst at university he hoped, at least initially, to become
an actor but soon found that he was bored with what he
described as ‘standing around on stage while other people
spoke’. Fairly quickly he abandoned those aspirations but
then fared no better as a director. ‘I had far too little
patience with the foibles of the cast’, he recalled. ‘I
tended to lose my temper rather too often’. So, his
attention turned to writing and in 1957, aged 22, he wrote a
sketch which was accepted for a College Footlights revue
directed by Jonathan Miller. It was an immediate success,
and he was asked to produce 12 more; the result was Share my
Lettuce with Kenneth Williams and a then unknown Maggie
Smith. It ran at the Lyric Theatre in the West End for the
last nine months of Gascoigne’s time at Cambridge. ‘I
thought I was made’ he said, ‘I was getting £80 a week in
royalties.’
In 1959 he returned to Cambridge to undertake a year of
postgraduate research into modern theatre. By 1960 he was
working as a theatre critic for both The Spectator and
The Observer. The following year he rather
optimistically auditioned for the job of quizmaster on
University Challenge and with that his career took off.
Recording the programme only took up 40 days a year and
this, and the financial independence it brought him, allowed
Bamber to pursue many other projects and his love of travel.
Over the next three decades the ambition to become a
successful playwright remained unfulfilled and attempts at
writing novels also foundered. However, other projects such
as television series on The Christians, Connoisseur,
and The Great Moghuls, the latter airing in 1990,
were highly acclaimed.
In the late 1950s he had met Christine Ditchburn at
Cambridge; she was studying Arabic and Persian. After
university they briefly shared a house near Sloane Square
with some ‘peculiar’ friends of Bamber’s and a monkey that
‘peed everywhere’. Undaunted, they were married in 1965 and,
for the next 60 or so years, they remained inseparable;
their life together was one of ‘blissful adventure’, much of
it living in a beautiful Georgian house beside the river in
Richmond.
In 2015, he famously acquired West Horsley Place, the
semi-derelict 15th Century ancestral home and 350 acres in
Surrey, from his great aunt, The Duchess of Roxburghe. The
house was in desperate need of major repairs, but an ideal
solution was found when, after raising £8.8m for renovations
by auctioning off his great aunt’s belongings at Sotheby’s,
he gave the house in perpetuity to Grange Park Opera, who
have since built a five-tier, 700-seat opera house on the
site, to rival Glyndebourne. It opened in June 2017, and it
has been building an international reputation ever since.
Otello, the Verdi opera that Bamber loved most, was
performed there this Summer in tribute to him.
Bamber Gascoigne was a man who many would have loved to
meet. He was warm, generous, charming, and he had an
infectious, irresistible, unquenchable enthusiasm for life.
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