Nick Clarke Award
The Nick Clarke Award is a journalism prize created by the BBC in honour of Nick Clarke, former presenter of BBC Radio 4's The World At One, who died in November 2006. Its aim is to "celebrate and recognise the best broadcast interview of the year".
Background
The Nick Clarke Award was launched by then Radio 4 Controller Mark Damazer at the Cheltenham Literature Festival in October 2007. It is presented at the festival each year, the inaugural prize being awarded in October 2008. The Panellists and judges of the Nick Clarke Award come from the BBC and other media and broadcast organisations. As part of the award, the winner receives a case of claret, a favourite tipple of Clarke's.Award winners
- 2008: Carrie Gracie – for her interview with Alan Johnston
- 2009: Victoria Derbyshire – for her interview of Peter Bacon
- 2010: P.D. James – for her interview with BBC Director Mark Thompson
- 2011: Steve Hewlett – for his interview with Lady Peta Buscombe
- 2012: Stewart White – for his interview with Lord Hanningfield following the peer’s release from prison after his conviction on expenses fraud.
- 2013: Iain Lee – for his interview with Stephen Conroy, acting chief executive of Bedford Hospital NHS Trust
- 2014: Stephen Nolan – for his interview with Pastor James McConnell. The interview dealt with the Belfast preacher's controversial denunciation of Muslims and their faith.
- 2015: Jeremy Bowen – for his interview with Bashar al-Assad. The interview was a wide-ranging talk with al-Assad, covering not least the Syrian President's actions against his own citizens and the changing dynamic of the fight against the Islamic State.
- 2016: Stephen Nolan – for his interview with Michael O'Connor a survivor of the November 2015 Paris attacks at the Bataclan (theatre) music venue.