Hubbry Logo
Bill PeachBill PeachMain
Open search
Bill Peach
Community hub
Bill Peach
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Bill Peach
Bill Peach
from Wikipedia

William Norman Peach AM (15 May 1935 – 27 August 2013[1]) known as Bill Peach, was an Australian television journalist who hosted the ABC current affairs program This Day Tonight from 1967 to 1975.

Key Information

Early life and education

[edit]

Peach was born in 1935 in the Riverina town of Lockhart, New South Wales, his father was a stock agent, whilst his mum came from a family of graziers.[2] He was educated at a Roman Catholic boarding school, St Stanislaus College in Bathurst, and then studied a master of arts degree at St John's College, University of Sydney, where he met his future wife, Shirley.[3]

Media career

[edit]

Peach joined the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) in 1958, as a specialist trainee in the talks department. In 1960, he joined the Sydney office of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) where he worked in program sales. In 1962, he and his wife moved to the United Kingdom, where he worked for three years for the BBC overseas service, based in London and later New York City.[3]

Returning to Australia in 1965, Peach joined Network Ten, where he co-produced and presented Australia's first current affairs program, Telescope, with Tanya Halesworth. In 1966, he returned to the ABC as a reporter for Four Corners.[2] In 1967, he was appointed as the presenter of ABC's new evening current affairs series, This Day Tonight, which he hosted for eight years.[3]

In 1975, Peach left This Day Tonight and was awarded a Logie in that year for Outstanding Contribution to Television in recognition of his eight years of service on the program. He then hosted a travel series called Peach's Australia and wrote two books in the Ginger Meggs series. Bill Peach also wrote The Explorers, published in 1984, dealing with the early European explorers of Australia during the colonial era and presented the eponymous TV show.[4]

Tourism career

[edit]

After leaving the ABC, Peach started a travel and tourism company, Bill Peach Journeys.[5]

In the 1991 Queen's Birthday Honours, Peach was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for service to the media and to tourism.[6]

Death

[edit]

Peach died of cancer at the Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney in the early morning of 27 August 2013.[1]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Bill Peach'' is an Australian television journalist and presenter known for hosting the ABC's pioneering current affairs program This Day Tonight from its launch in 1967. He was a respected figure in Australian broadcasting, recognized for his integrity and contributions as a pioneering journalist and traveller who shaped early television journalism in the country. Born in 1935, Peach began his career in journalism and worked in both radio and television before gaining prominence with This Day Tonight, where he established himself as an award-winning broadcaster. Throughout his career, he earned acclaim for his professional approach and dedication to quality reporting, leaving a lasting impact on Australian media until his death from cancer on 27 August 2013 at the age of 78.

Early life

Birth and childhood

William Norman Peach, known as Bill Peach, was born on 15 May 1935 in Lockhart, New South Wales, Australia. He grew up in the eastern Riverina region in the small rural town of Lockhart, where community life was close-knit. Peach's father worked as a stock and station agent, requiring frequent travel to rural properties, and Peach accompanied him on road trips that sparked his lifelong wanderlust and appreciation for the Australian landscape. He attributed his taste for travel and sense of humour to his father, while his mother's family were graziers, and he later described his parents as "good parents" who gave him an excellent start in life. Peach was educated at St Stanislaus College, a boarding school in Bathurst, and later earned a Master of Arts degree at St John's College, University of Sydney. These early experiences in regional New South Wales fostered an interest in exploration and storytelling that would shape his future pursuits.

Early journalism career

Bill Peach began his journalism career with the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) as a radio cadet in 1958. He undertook this entry-level role, gaining foundational training in radio production and news presentation. In the early 1960s, he worked for the BBC in London. He then joined Network Ten in Australia, where he made his television debut in 1965 presenting the current affairs program Telescope. In 1966, he returned to the ABC as a journalist on the current affairs program Four Corners, where he gained experience in in-depth investigative reporting and television production techniques. This background in radio, international broadcasting, commercial television, and current affairs positioned him for selection as the host of This Day Tonight when the program debuted in 1967.

This Day Tonight

Role and tenure

Bill Peach served as the presenter and anchor of This Day Tonight, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's pioneering nightly current affairs program, from its launch in 1967 until 1975, a tenure of eight years. As the host during the program's formative years, Peach fronted live broadcasts each evening, delivering coverage of major national and international events with an informative yet witty and sarcastic style. This Day Tonight was Australia's first national nightly current affairs program, distinguished by its live format, emphasis on debate and controversy, and willingness to tackle contentious issues, often resulting in intense studio discussions. Peach presented uncompromising reports on topics such as the Vietnam War and maintained a calm, courteous, and unflappable demeanor that suited the program's unpredictable and sometimes chaotic nature. His integrity, natural friendliness, and authority as anchor helped establish him as a trusted and popular figure on Australian television during this groundbreaking period.

Program impact

This Day Tonight pioneered aggressive investigative current affairs journalism on Australian television, establishing a new standard for nightly programming that mixed tough reporting, sharp interviews, and satirical humour. As the ABC's first nightly current affairs program launched in 1967, it broke from traditional sedate news formats by directly confronting powerful interests and holding decision-makers to account across political and social issues. The program became known for its uncompromising coverage of major events and societal debates, often featuring furious studio discussions, verbal confrontations, and a willingness to challenge authority that made it both exciting and controversial. It engaged public discourse through its fearless adversarial style, frequently making friends and enemies while exposing issues that demanded accountability from government and institutions. Bill Peach's calm, authoritative, and unflappable presence as anchor provided a steady counterbalance to the program's unpredictable and energetic tone, contributing significantly to its reputation for intelligent and trustworthy journalism. This Day Tonight set a benchmark for subsequent Australian current affairs television, influencing both ABC and commercial offerings and serving as the direct antecedent to programs such as 7.30. Its success helped pave the way for hosts like Peach to pursue independent productions after leaving the program.

Travel documentaries

Peach's Australia series

Peach's Australia marked Bill Peach's transition from current affairs journalism to travel documentary presentation when it premiered in 1975, shortly after he left This Day Tonight. As writer, presenter, and roving reporter, Peach crafted a 52-episode series of half-hour episodes that explored Australia's diverse landscapes and regions, drawing on his established storytelling skills to engage viewers with personal, on-location narration. The program ranged across the continent, from Western Australian gold fields to Norfolk Island, offering viewers an accessible introduction to remote and iconic Australian places. Among its episodes were segments on the Darling River in 1976, where Peach traveled along the river's banks to highlight its significance and surroundings, and the Flinders Ranges in 1976, in which he meandered through the arid South Australian landscape to reveal its extraordinary beauty and settlement history. Peach's folksy, observational style characterized the series, blending landscape appreciation with historical and cultural insights. It ran into 1976 and was followed that year by Holidays With Bill Peach, which extended his focus on accessible Australian destinations. These early travel programs helped pioneer the modern Australian travel show format.

Later series and documentaries

In the early 1980s, Bill Peach continued his work in television documentaries, producing and presenting series that explored aspects of Australian history and travel in a style consistent with his earlier efforts. That same year he wrote and presented Peach's Gold, a five-episode series that traced the history of gold in Australia from its earliest discoveries, highlighting larger-than-life characters, extraordinary events, and the colour and madness of the gold rush era, including episodes such as Eureka. In 1984 Peach wrote and presented The Explorers, a ten-part series examining the stories of 18th- and 19th-century European explorers of Australia, who confronted an unforgiving environment and Indigenous Australians they feared and distrusted, with the program featuring full-cast re-enactments to bring historical events to life.

Other contributions

Books and writing

Bill Peach authored several books throughout his career, often drawing from his extensive research for television documentaries on Australian history and exploration. His works include Peach's Australia (1976), a companion to his ABC television series of the same name, and The Explorers, published in 1984 by ABC Enterprises as a companion to his ABC television series of the same name. The Explorers provides an overview of Australia's major explorers, chronicling the journeys, successes, failures, and disasters of figures such as Hume and Hovell, Leichhardt, Burke and Wills, Oxley, Mitchell, Sturt, Eyre, the Forrest brothers, the Gregory brothers, Blaxland, Lawson, Wentworth, Kennedy, and Stuart. It includes illustrations and an index.

Personal life

Awards and recognition

Death

Peach died of cancer at the Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney in the early morning of 27 August 2013, aged 78.

Legacy

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.