Patrick Ensor
Patrick Ensor was a British newspaper journalist. He was the editor of Guardian Weekly from 1993 until his death in 2007.
Early life and career
Patrick Ensor was born in December 1946 in Bournemouth. His father, Michael de Normann Ensor, was a civil servant in Gold Coast, whose mother was the theosophical educationist Beatrice Ensor. He was educated at St George's school in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, until he was 10, then at Bryanston School in Dorset. He studied philosophy and economics at the University of Bristol.Ensor's early journalism posts were at The Yorkshire Post, Oxford Mail, Times Higher Education Supplement, Screen International and the Tower community newspaper. He joined The Guardian in 1974 as a features subeditor and he became the Arts Editor in 1980. He was associate/features editor of the Wellington, New Zealand newspaper The Dominion from 1985 to 1991, where he helped editor Geoff Bayliss "rejuvenate" the paper. While at The Dominion he trained the poet Andrew Johnston as a subeditor. He returned to the UK in 1992 to rejoin The Guardian as a features subeditor before becoming the editor of Guardian Weekly in 1993, in succession to John Perkin.
Ensor wrote for the Pacific Journalism Review in 2003, and contributed once a fortnight to Radio New Zealand.
Alan Rusbridger said of Ensor: "He was a punctilious editor of the old school as well as a quick-witted, tireless and kind colleague." Roger Alton said he was "a ferociously sharp journalist, clever, dedicated, hugely industrious - shamingly so to many of his colleagues like me - and hugely creative." Ensor's deputy editor, Natalie Bennett, became editor after he died.