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Peter Dickson (announcer)
Northern Irish voice-over artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Peter Dickson is a Northern Irish voice-over artist. After spending a period working on hospital radio, he became a newsreader at BBC Northern Ireland and worked for Good Morning Ulster. After tiring of covering The Troubles, he moved to BBC Radio 2 in London, spending ten years there before going freelance. He is best known for announcing The X Factor, though has also announced various other talent shows and game shows and the channel E4.
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Born in Knock[1] to a father who had a clerical job at Harland & Wolff and a mother,[2] he attended Belfast Royal Academy, where he sat A-levels in geology, physics, and geography. He moved to Queen's University Belfast in 1975, where he met his future wife; he graduated in 1979, having written his thesis on childhood memory development.[3] He spent a period working as a porter at the Stormont Hotel in Belfast[2] and then time broadcasting on hospital radio.[4]
At some point, he became as a newsreader at BBC Northern Ireland, where he worked on Good Morning Ulster.[5] Several sources claim that he was the youngest newsreader ever and that he got the job aged 17;[6][7][3] however, he has stated that he got the job while studying at university.[1] His first job at BBC Northern Ireland was reading fatstock prices to farmers at 6am;[2] a subsequent job there entailed breaking the news of the assassination of Lord Mountbatten.[7]
After tiring of reporting on The Troubles, he moved to BBC Radio 2 in London in 1982, where he worked with Terry Wogan[7] and presented the comedy series Peter Dickson's Nightcap, which ran for four years.[6] He left the BBC in 1992 to go freelance;[2] around this time, he appeared in Harry Enfield & Chums.[8] Dickson began his voiceover career after providing voices for Steve Wright's radio show, for which he would create characters,[9] and was subsequently hired for Bruce Forsyth's version of The Price Is Right.[9] By 2003, he had developed the nickname "Peter Diction" for his careful enunciation.[10]
Dickson began announcing The X Factor in 2004,[11] where his job was to introduce the contestants to the stage and to shout "It's time to face the music".[11] He has stated that he got the job after a sound supervisor on Test the Nation suggested that he audition.[12] His pronunciation of the name of one series six contestant, Rachel Adedeji, became especially popular.[13][14] Writing in July 2015, The Independent wrote that Dickson's bombastic voiceover was integral to the series' success and that his "over-enunciation of commonplace syllables lent the show a pomp and pageantry which it could never have earned otherwise".[15]
Dickson took over the voiceover for E4 in 2006 following the death of Patrick Allen.[8] Two years later, he narrated Britain's Got the Pop Factor... and Possibly a New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly on Ice, a parody of talent shows such as The X Factor. He stated in his 2020 autobiography Voiceover Man that The X Factor's creator Simon Cowell had been initially annoyed by Dickson's involvement in the latter but cooled after seeing how popular the show was with viewers.[16] In 2011, he provided the voiceover for a Staffordshire University student's masters dissertation on the requirements of successful comedians.[17] Three years later,[18] Dickson produced a relaxation tape for use in a Buttery Brown Monk sketch[19] and appeared on the BBC One Northern Ireland panel show Monumental.[20]
By July 2015, his voice had become synonymous with The X Factor and he had announced Britain's Got Talent, Family Fortunes, All Star Mr & Mrs,[11] and Live at the Apollo.[21] He left The X Factor that month[11] but returned for that year's live finals,[8] leaving the previous week's Judges' Houses for Redd Pepper.[22] In 2017, he played a disgruntled phone-in caller on John Cleese Presents...;[23] by April 2018, he had narrated 100 television shows and 30,000 adverts.[2] His voice has been mimicked by impressionists including Britain's Got Talent contestants[24][25] and Joe Lycett.[26]
Dickson moved next to Chequers in 1991, where he has lived next to several Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom.[2] Around the time he moved in, he launched Melody 105.4 FM, on which he presented the breakfast show for four years.[9] As a member of Peter Dickson & The Shakettes, he released the August 2010 single "Shake It", a promotional vehicle for the milkshake bar Shakeaway.[27] Around this time, a different Peter Dickson bought the firm.[28] In 2013,[2] after tiring of people asking him how to enter the voiceover industry,[29] he and his friend Hugh Edwards co-founded Gravy for the Brain, a training academy based in Banbury.[2][30]
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Works
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Bibliography
- Voiceover Man – The Extraordinary Story of a Professional Voice Actor (Provox Publishing)
Singles
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