Bridget Kendall MBE is a British radio correspondent. Her father was David George Kendall, a statistician. Kendall was educated at Perse School for Girls, Cambridge. She read modern languages at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, and spent two years in Russia on British Council scholarships in 1977 and 1982. Her postgraduate Soviet studies took her from St Antony's College, Oxford to Harvard University, where she spent two years as a Harkness Fellow in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

PropertyValue
dbpprop:abstract
  • Bridget Kendall MBE is a British radio correspondent. Her father was David George Kendall, a statistician. Kendall was educated at Perse School for Girls, Cambridge. She read modern languages at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, and spent two years in Russia on British Council scholarships in 1977 and 1982. Her postgraduate Soviet studies took her from St Antony's College, Oxford to Harvard University, where she spent two years as a Harkness Fellow in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Kendall joined the BBC in 1983 as a radio production trainee for BBC World Service. She was the BBC's Moscow correspondent from 1989 to 1995, and developed her background in Russian politics. She was in Moscow to witness the power struggles in the Soviet Communist party as Mikhail Gorbachev tried to introduce reform, reported on the break-up of the Soviet Union and the internal conflicts in Chechnya, Georgia and Tadjikistan. She sent reports of the coup in August 1991 and covered Boris Yeltsin's rise to power. Kendall served as the BBC's Washington correspondent from 1994 to 1998. She has been a diplomatic correspondent for the BBC since November 1998. Kendall has interviewed world leaders including Vladimir Putin live from the Kremlin as part of an internet webcast in March 2001. Later in 2001 she interviewed King Abdullah of Jordan for the BBC and hosted a similar event in Moscow with former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev in 2002. Kendall received the James Cameron Award for journalism in 1992 for reports on events in the former Soviet Union, and was the first woman to receive the Cameron Award. Later that year, she won a Bronze Sony Radio Award for Reporter of the Year and was made an MBE in the 1994 New Year's Honours list.
dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
dbpprop:reference
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Bridget Kendall MBE is a British radio correspondent. Her father was David George Kendall, a statistician. Kendall was educated at Perse School for Girls, Cambridge. She read modern languages at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, and spent two years in Russia on British Council scholarships in 1977 and 1982. Her postgraduate Soviet studies took her from St Antony's College, Oxford to Harvard University, where she spent two years as a Harkness Fellow in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.
rdfs:label
  • Bridget Kendall
owl:sameAs
skos:subject
foaf:page
is dbpprop:disambiguates of
is owl:sameAs of