Half of Eurythmics |
ibiza classifieds |
Former Governor Bank of England |
Little-known skiffle-cum-jug band |
Heavy Metal Band |
Singer |
Joined GMTV in August 2000 as co-presenter of the Friday show, Entertainment Today. |
Impresario Raymond Gubbay has brought classical music and ballet at reasonable prices to thousands of people |
Former Economics editor of the BBC and Ambassador to Washington |
Former Assistant England Manager |
Former Tory MP for Tatton who fell from grace in a legal battle with Mohamed Al Fayed, owner of Harrods |
A self-taught chef, Alastair Little is widely considered to be a major player in the evolution of modern British cuisine |
After Dinner Speakers: Salman Rushdie, Nathan Lane, Tamzin Outhwaite
Salman Rushdie is one of the world's most respected writers. In both fiction and non-fiction, Rushdie uses his unique upbringing and personal history to make bold statements about life on earth. His 1989 book The Satanic Verses, was a huge popular and critical success.
Rushdie's most recent book is Step Across This Line: Collected Non-fiction, 1992-2002. Among other topics, the pieces in this collection explore the reaction of the media, various governments, and the writer himself to what he calls the "unfunny Valentine" he received on February 14, 1989, from the Ayatollah Khomeini: the fatwa calling for his death.
It was while living under constant threat of violence that Rushdie produced some of the most sincere and beautiful work. The Moor's Last Sigh and Midnight's Children were especially well received, as were his frequent essays on intellectual freedom. The government of Iran lifted the fatwa in 1998.
A prominent lecturer as well as writer, Rushdie has been a guest of some of the world's finest educational institutions. He has spoken at Yale, Harvard, and Oxford among others, and is an honorary professor of the Humanities at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.