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The Richard Dimbleby Lecture (also known as the Dimbleby Lecture) is an annual television lecture founded in memory of Richard Dimbleby (1913—1965), the BBC broadcaster. It has been delivered by an influential business, scientific or political figure almost every year since 1972 (with gaps in 1981, 1991, 1993, 2008, 2020 and 2022).
YearTitleSpeakerSpeaker's Position202375th anniversary of the Empire Windrush ...Actor2021Vaccine Vs Virus: This Race - and the ...Co-developer of Oxford–AstraZeneca ...2019The World Wide Web - A Mid-Course ...Inventor of the World Wide Web2018Don't Protect Me - Respect MeWriter and broadcaster20 giu 2023 · Actor David Harewood OBE delivers the 2023 Richard Dimbleby Lecture, exploring the challenges overcome by his parents' generation and his own personal journey of self-identity. Show more.
Annual lecture by an influential and distinguished speaker, delivered in honour of the veteran journalist and broadcaster Richard Dimbleby.
7 dic 2021 · Professor Dame Sarah Gilbert, Saïd Professorship of Vaccinology, Jenner Institute & Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, delivered the 44th Richard Dimbleby Lecture, named after the late broadcaster, Richard Dimbleby.
Richard Dimbleby became a household name as the BBC’s first frontline radio reporter in 1936. With the arrival of postwar television, he led the coverage of all major events on the new medium. As ‘the Voice of the Nation’, his death from cancer in 1965 at the age of 52 shocked the British people.
6 dic 2021 · Professor Dame Sarah Gilbert, delivers the 44th Richard Dimbleby lecture from Oxford to talk about creating an Covid-19 vaccine in less than a year.