Clive Anderson
Clive Anderson was born in Stanmore, Middlesex in 1952. After
studying law at Cambridge University, where he was also
President of the Footlights revue group, he practised as
a barrister in London for about 15 years. Meantime he had
written scripts for Frankie Howard, Griff Rhys Jones, Mel
Smith and others, and performed as a stand-up comedian,
which led to presenting radio and television programmes,
in particular Whose line is it anyway? on Radio 4 and then
on Channel 4. He presented ten series of his chat show Clive
Anderson Talks Back, picking up British Comedy Awards in
1991 and 1992, before moving on to BBC One with Clive Anderson
All Talk. In 2003 he also presented The Big Read for BBC
Two.
On radio he chairs Unreliable Evidence, made by Above The Title
Productions for Radio 4, in which Clive cross-examines some
of the most eminent legal figures in the country. He says,
"My personal pleasure from Unreliable Evidence comes from
getting to chair discussions on legal matters involving
the highest level of judges and academics - the sort of
figures who would have terrified me when I was actually
practising as a barrister."