Annie St John (born Ann Florence Heywood; 8 September 1954 – 10 December 1990) was a British television broadcaster.

Annie St John
Born(1954-09-08)8 September 1954
Died10 December 1990(1990-12-10) (aged 36)
Bristol, Avon, England
OccupationTelevision presenter
Known for3-2-1, HTV presenter
SpouseMichael St John (m. 1976)

Originally from Blackpool, Lancashire, she attended Blackpool Collegiate Grammar School for Girls and the Rose Bruford Drama School. She worked as a mahout at the Blackpool Tower Circus and in repertory theatre in Bolton, Salisbury and the Young Vic in London.[1]

St John first made her name on television in 1978 as a hostess on the first two series of the networked YTV game show 3-2-1, before joining HTV West in 1981 as a continuity announcer and newsreader. Her popularity in the Westcountry was as such that viewers launched a Save Our Annie campaign when she left the station in 1983 to join Tyne Tees Television in Newcastle. During her time at Tyne Tees, St John continued to freelance for HTV West and also for London Weekend Television.[2] She returned to HTV permanently in 1987.

As well as announcing duties, St. John presented various regional programmes including Ask Oscar, a weekly What's On programme, It's Nearly Saturday and the advice series Problems. By the late 1980s, St John had become one of the main anchors of the nightly regional news programme, HTV News, alongside Bruce Hockin and Richard Wyatt, while continuing her continuity role. She also presented a request show for the independent local radio station Radio West.[3]

Death edit

On Saturday 3 November 1990, St John took a lethal overdose of champagne and drugs at her flat in Baltic Wharf, Bristol. She was found semi-conscious and naked on a bed by HTV director of programming Derek Clark and a staff rigger following concern from colleagues when St John failed to turn up for work.

On Monday 10 December 1990 – 38 days after the overdose - St John died in hospital at the age of 36. She had been married to an HTV colleague, actor Michael St John, for 14 years. The inquest into her death recorded a verdict of suicide.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Who's Who on Television 1982-83, ITV Books Ltd., 1982
  2. ^ "The TV Room Plus - HTV West announcers' profiles". Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 7 February 2009.
  3. ^ "Annie St John". Radio West Tribute. 2011. Archived from the original on 30 March 2014.
  4. ^ 'Watergate-like stink about TV woman's suicide' Daily Telegraph report

External links edit