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Natasha Margaret Kaplinsky〔General Register Office Birth Index 1972 Q2 Kaplinsky, Natasha Margaret CHARLEWOOD Brighton 5h 89〕 (born 9 September 1972)〔The Donor, News and information for blood donors, Winter 2009, National Blood Service, England, page 55〕 is an English newsreader and television presenter, best known for her roles as a newsreader on Sky News, BBC News, Channel 5 and ITV News where she is the current presenter . After two years at Sky News, Kaplinsky joined BBC News in 2002 where she co-hosted ''Breakfast'' until 2005, when she became one of the hosts of the ''Six O'Clock News''. In October 2007, the BBC announced that Kaplinsky was to leave the corporation to join Five (now known as Channel 5), where she presented a new look, retitled ''Five News with Natasha Kaplinsky'' for three years. After leaving Channel 5, she went on to join ITV to present talent show ''Born to Shine'' and ITV News as a presenter. Kaplinsky won the first series of BBC's ''Strictly Come Dancing'' in 2004. ==Early life== Kaplinsky was born to Raphael Kaplinsky, an exiled Jewish South African〔(Who Do You Think You Are? – Natasha Kaplinsky ) The National Archives〕 professor of international development at the Open University, and his wife, Catherine Kaplinsky (née Charlewood), a psychotherapist. Kaplinsky's paternal grandparents were Polish Jews〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Natasha Kaplinsky cries for family Nazi deaths )〕 originating from the town of Slonim (then in Poland, now located in Western Belarus), and migrated to South Africa in 1929. Kaplinsky was born in Brighton, Sussex, but spent her early life in Kenya, where she claims to have been fluent in Swahili,〔Claim made by Kaplinsky herself on ''Friday Night with Jonathan Ross'' on 28 March 2008〕 although she later returned to the United Kingdom, where she was brought up in Barcombe, East Sussex. She attended Ringmer Community College, until the age of sixteen when she moved to Varndean College in Brighton. After graduating in English from Hertford College, Oxford in 1995,〔 one of Kaplinsky's first jobs was working in the press offices of Labour leaders Neil Kinnock and John Smith. Kaplinsky was the subject of an episode of the BBC's ''Who Do You Think You Are?'', in which well-known people trace their family trees. Kaplinsky's programme was broadcast on 6 September 2007.〔 (Shot and pushed in a ditch...how the Nazis slaughtered all but one of Natasha's family ) Mail Online, 28 January 2007〕 She followed her paternal line to Slonim and was shown official documentation relating to her cousin's family. This included the death of family members during the "liquidation" – massacre – of the Slonim ghetto by the Nazis and another's escape to the partisans and eventual immigration to Australia. Her maternal line included an apothecary to King George III. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Natasha Kaplinsky」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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