Sir Gerry Robinson Biography – Sir Gerry Robinson Wiki
Sir Gerry Robinson born Sir Gerrard Jude Robinson was an Irish-born British business executive and television presenter. He was non-executive chairman of Allied Domecq and Chairman/chief executive of Granada.
For a while, he trained to become a Catholic priest at St. Mary’s Seminary of the Holy Ghost Fathers at Castlehead, Grange-over-Sands, Lancashire. He started a career in accounting in 1965 as a clerk with the Matchbox Toys company. While with the firm, he progressed through various accounting roles to become Chief Management Accountant in 1974. He also, during that time, qualified as an Associate Chartered Management Accountant.
In 1974, he left Matchbox to work for Lex Vehicle Leasing as a management accountant. He then rose through the company before being appointed finance director. In 1980, he joined the UK franchise of Coca-Cola, owned at that time by Grand Metropolitan. In 1983 he was appointed managing director of Grand Metropolitan’s international services division. In 1987 he led the successful £163m management buyout of the loss-making contract services and catering division of Compass Group, known as Compass Caterers. He joined Granada as CEO in 1991, and soon ousted Granada’s chairman, David Plowright in 1992, which led John Cleese to call Robinson “an upstart caterer “.
Robinson steered the company through various mergers and hostile takeovers including London Weekend Television (1993) and Forte Group (1996). In 1999 he was the subject of a biography, Lord of the Dance, written by business journalist William Kay, and published by Orion Business Books ISBN 0752810480. In 2005 he made an unsuccessful attempt to oust Doug Flynn as CEO of Rentokil Initial and install himself as Executive chairman for a 5% stake in the company, then valued at £56M.
His first foray into broadcasting was a revival of the BBC’s Troubleshooter show, originally fronted by Sir John Harvey-Jones in the early 1990s. Titled I’ll Show Them Who’s Boss and co-produced by the Open University, in 2004 he went into struggling businesses to try to turn them around by advice and mentoring.
In January 2007 following a similar format, he presented a three-part series, Can Gerry Robinson Fix the NHS? as he attempted to reduce waiting lists at Rotherham General Hospital. He returned a year later for a sequel, Can Gerry Robinson Fix the NHS? One Year On. In December 2009, he presented a programme in a similar format entitled Can Gerry Robinson Fix Dementia Care Homes?.
In June 2009 he presented a special edition of The Money Programme entitled Gerry Robinson’s Car Crash investigating the history and future of the British motor industry. On a regular basis, he featured on British TV as a celebrity businessman. In July 2009 he began a TV series called Gerry’s Big Decision, in which he reviews struggling companies and decides whether it is worth investing his own money to save them. From 14 January – 18 February 2011, he presented the BBC2 show Can’t Take It with You, which helps people to write their wills.
He also served as chairman of the Arts Council England for six years from 1998, in which capacity he was one of the many victims of a spoof by British comedian Ali G.
Although originally a Conservative Party supporter, he supported Tony Blair and starred in a Labour Party election broadcast, saying that “… frankly, there’s only one party that can represent Britain best, getting business right, and that’s New Labour”.
In June 2008, he was one of four Labour donors who expressed their concerns with Gordon Brown’s leadership and stated he would not be contributing any more money to the Labour Party until there was a change of leader. He had donated some £70,000 to the party between 2001 and 2005. He was knighted in the 2004 New Year Honours List.
Sir Gerry Robinson Age
He was born on October 23, 1948, in Dunfanaghy, Ireland and died on October 14, 2021, in Letterkenny University Hospital, Letterkenny, Ireland. He was 72.
Sir Gerry Robinson Wife
He is survived by his wife Heather, and their four children. He returned to Co Donegal in 2006 after acquiring Oakfield House in Raphoe.
He had been divorced and remarried and has four children. He lived at Oakfield Demesne, Raphoe, County Donegal. He established a botanical garden with a narrow-gauge railway – the Difflin Lake Railway – which is open to the public.
Sir Gerry Robinson Children
He has four children, Samantha, Richard, April and Tim.
Sir Gerry Robinson Family
He was born in Dunfanaghy, County Donegal, Ireland as the ninth of 10 children born to Anthony and Elizabeth Robinson, an Irish father and a Scottish mother, Robinson moved with his family to England from County Donegal in his early teens.
Sir Gerry Robinson Death
He died on October 14, 2021, at the age of 72 at the Letterkenny University Hospital in the Republic of Ireland. According to The Irish Times, his funeral takes place on Sunday, October 17, 2021, travelling to Lakelands Crematorium, Cavan for a private family cremation service.
Sir Gerry Robinson Cause of Death
He died on 14 October 2021, at the age of 72. The cause of his death was not stated.