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Noel Edmond : ウィキペディア英語版
Noel Edmonds

Noel Ernest Edmonds (born 22 December 1948) is an English television presenter and executive, who made his name as a DJ on BBC Radio 1 in the UK. He has presented light entertainment television programmes, including ''Multi-Coloured Swap Shop'', ''Top of the Pops'', ''The Late, Late Breakfast Show'' and ''Telly Addicts''. He currently presents the Channel 4 game show ''Deal or No Deal'', and formerly the Sunday edition of Sky1's ''Are You Smarter than a Ten Year Old?'' and the topical Sky1 show, ''Noel's HQ''.
==Early life and radio career==
The son of a headmaster who worked in Hainault, Edmonds attended Glade Primary School and Brentwood School.〔Rachel Cooke, The Observer, (Noel Edmonds talks to Rachel Cooke ), 29 January 2006〕 He was offered a place at the University of Surrey but turned it down in favour of a job as a newsreader on Radio Luxembourg, which was offered to him in 1968 after he sent tapes to offshore radio stations. In 1969, he moved to BBC Radio 1 where he began by recording trailers for broadcasts and filling in for absent DJs, such as Kenny Everett.〔 In April 1970, Edmonds began his own two-hour Saturday afternoon programme, broadcasting from 1pm–3pm, before replacing Kenny Everett on Saturday mornings from 10am–12noon in July of that year. In October 1971 he was moved to a Sunday morning slot from 10am–12noon before being promoted to host ''The Radio 1 Breakfast Show'' from June 1973 to April 1978, taking over from Tony Blackburn. Edmonds moved back to Sunday mornings from 10am–1pm in 1978 and also presented ''Talkabout'', an hour-long talk show broadcast on Thursday evenings.
Edmonds was one of the trio Brown Sauce, along with Maggie Philbin and Keith Chegwin, who released the single "I Wanna Be a Winner" in 1981, reaching number 15 in the UK singles chart.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Label and Recording info. )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Sound and Video Gallery:Multi-Coloured Swap Shop )
Edmonds left Radio 1 in March 1983,〔 although he briefly returned in 1985, sitting in for Mike Read for two weeks on the breakfast show, and again in 1992, where he presented a special edition celebrating Radio 1's 25th birthday.
In 2003, Edmonds made a brief radio comeback, taking over the 'drivetime' broadcast on BBC Radio 2 for eight weeks while Johnnie Walker was undergoing treatment for cancer. His stint on Radio 2 lasted from 4 August until 3 October.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Noel Edmonds Returns To His Radio Roots )〕 In December 2004, Edmonds played a detective on a radio murder mystery play on local station BBC Radio Devon.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Noel Edmonds turns detective for BBC Radio Devon's whodunnit. )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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