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Mark Colvin
Mark Colvin
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Mark Colvin (13 March 1952 – 11 May 2017) was an Australian journalist and radio and television broadcaster for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), and worked on most of the flagship current affairs programs. Notably, based in Sydney, he was the presenter of PM— the radio current affairs program on the ABC Radio network — from 1997 to 2017.

Key Information

Biography

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Career as a journalist and broadcaster

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Colvin graduated from Christ Church, Oxford University, with a Bachelor of Arts (Hons) in English literature and arrived in Australia in 1974.[1][2] With no clear career ambitions and failing as a builder's labourer, being susceptible to heat stroke in the strong Australian sun, the dole office steered him toward journalism.[3] In that year he commenced a traineeship with the ABC but had doubts during the year that he would stick with journalism.[4] Nevertheless, in January 1975 he commenced at the ABC's rock music station Double Jay (2JJ, now known as Triple J) as one of the foundation staff,[5] initially working as a cadet journalist. While at 2JJ, he presented news, conducted interviews, and produced current affairs and documentary specials until 1978. With strong foreign language skills in French, Italian and Spanish,[2] he was posted to the Canberra bureau and was appointed a television news producer. A year later he was one of the first reporters on Nationwide, along with Jenny Brockie, Paul Murphy, and Andrew Olle.[6]

In 1980, at the age of 28, Colvin was appointed foreign correspondent in London, and travelled to cover major stories, including the American hostage crisis in Tehran and the rise of Solidarity in Poland. During his time covering the Middle East, Colvin was deeply affected by the death of his interpreter, Bahram Dehqani-Tafti, a secular Iranian murdered and dumped outside a Tehran prison. Colvin believed that the mullahs had a dispute with Dehqani-Tafti's father, the Anglican bishop of Iran in exile in London.[2]

Colvin returned to Australia in 1983 and was initially a reporter on both AM and PM, before agitating for the establishment of a midday news and current-affairs radio program.[2] Colvin became the founding presenter of The World Today on ABC radio. The following year, Colvin went to Brussels as Europe correspondent, and covered the events across the continent as the Cold War began to thaw and the Gorbachev era started the process that would lead to the lifting of the Iron Curtain.[6]

Between 1988 and 1992, Colvin was a reporter for Four Corners, making programs focused on, inter alia, the French massacre of Kanaks in New Caledonia, the extinction of Australia's fauna and the Cambodian peace process. His feature on the Ethiopian famine won a gold medal at the New York Film Festival and was runner-up for an International Emmy Award.[6] In 1992, Colvin accepted another London posting, this time for television, mainly reporting for Foreign Correspondent, the 7.30 Report and Lateline. His language skills and long European experience paid off in stories such as his series on the relationship between Italian organised crime and government, which culminated in the trial of former Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti.[6]

In 1994, Colvin was deployed by the 7.30 Report to Africa to cover the unfolding tragedy in Rwanda. Travelling via Zaire, he witnessed an extensive human tragedy, in which about a million refugees were living in camps with poor sanitation and hygiene, with cholera and dysentery commonplace. Colvin was diagnosed with granulomatosis with polyangiitis, a rare inflammation of blood vessels,[2] which nearly killed him.[7] After several months in hospital, during his convalescence he became aware of a side effect of the treatment—his hip joints collapsed and both hips had to be replaced.[8] He spent the next 18 months in Europe.

In 1997, Colvin returned to Sydney and started in his role as presenter for ABC Radio's PM.[8] In November 2017 Colvin was inducted into The Australian Media Hall of Fame.[9]

Organ transplant

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On 22 March 2013, Colvin received a kidney transplant from a living donor.[10] Colvin, and the hospital and staff, allowed the process to be recorded for television.[11]

In a televised interview on 1 May 2013, the living donor of Colvin's transplanted kidney was revealed to be Mary-Ellen Field, whom Colvin had met while reporting on victims of the News of the World/News International phone hacking scandal. Field had received unwanted notoriety after details of her working relationship with Elle Macpherson had been revealed through reporting of messages from Field's hacked phone, causing Macpherson to sack Field. It was revealed that Colvin and Field had established a correspondence after the interview, finally meeting in 2011; that Field had decided to become a donor before revealing this to her husband; that the pair had considered naming the kidney "Rupert" (after Rupert Murdoch, chairman and chief executive officer of News Corporation, the parent company of News International that owned News of the World); and, that Colvin had declared a conflict of interest to his employer and ceased reporting on Field.[11]

During 2010, Colvin worked to raise the profile of organ donation through interviews with a number of media agencies including The Sydney Morning Herald,[2] The Australian,[7] The Drum,[12] The 7.30 Report,[13] and Life Matters.[14]

Stage play

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The story of Colvin's kidney donation and the circumstances surrounding it was the subject of a stage play titled Mark Colvin's Kidney by playwright Tommy Murphy. The play was produced by the Sydney theatre company Belvoir with David Berthold as director, and a cast including actor John Howard as Colvin and Sarah Peirse as Mary-Ellen Field.[15]

Autobiography

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In 2016 Colvin released his autobiography, Light and Shadow: Memoirs of a Spy's Son.[16][17]

Family

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The Colvin family had a long history of military and administrative service to Australia, and previously to the British Empire. Colvin's father, John Horace Ragnar Colvin,[18] was a Cold War diplomat, and the grandson of Admiral Sir Ragnar Colvin. He is the great-grandson of the India Office mandarin Clement Sneyd Colvin,[19] whose father was John Russell Colvin. John Russell, son of an East Indies trader, ended up lieutenant-governor of the North-West Provinces of British India during the mutiny of 1857, had ten children and founded a dynasty of Empire-builders. Through this line, Mark Colvin's extended family includes Walter Mytton, Auckland Colvin, also lieutenant-governor of the North-West Provinces and Oudh; the landscape architect Brenda Colvin (1897–1981),[20] and Sidney Colvin, a critic, curator, and great friend of Robert Louis Stevenson.

Through his mother, Elizabeth Anne Manifold,[19] Colvin was the great-great-nephew of a Prime Minister of Australia, Viscount Bruce of Melbourne, who went on to be an international statesman and the first Chancellor of the Australian National University.[21][22] He was also the step-son of Admiral Sir Anthony Synnot.[23] Colvin was married twice. He married his second wife, Michele Francesca McKenzie, in 1987. McKenzie is the mother of his two sons, Nicolas and William.[1][24]

Death

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On 11 May 2017, Colvin died aged 65, at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Randwick, over twenty years after contracting granulomatosis with polyangiitis, the rare auto-immune condition which caused kidney failure in 2011.[8] Colvin survived the kidney transplant only to be diagnosed with melanoma and then just before Easter in 2017 was diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer. He asked that anyone wishing to mark his death or honour his passing donate to the Prince of Wales Hospital Foundation.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mark Colvin was a British-born Australian journalist and broadcaster renowned for his distinguished 43-year career with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), where he became one of the nation's most respected voices in radio and television current affairs. He is best known for presenting the flagship evening radio program PM from 1997 until shortly before his death, delivering incisive interviews and authoritative coverage of national and international news to generations of listeners. Born in London in 1952, Colvin moved to Australia at age 21 after graduating with a BA (Hons) in English from Oxford University and joined the ABC as a cadet in 1974, quickly advancing through roles including early work on the youth station 2JJ (now Triple J), reporting for Nationwide, and founding presenter of The World Today. As a foreign correspondent based in London from 1980 and later in Brussels, Colvin reported from major global events, including the Iranian hostage crisis in Tehran, the rise of Poland's Solidarity movement, the final years of the Cold War, the collapse of the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc, and the build-up to the first Gulf War. He also served as a reporter and documentary-maker for the investigative program Four Corners from 1988 to 1992, producing notable work such as a report on the Ethiopian famine that won a Gold Medal at the New York Film Festival and earned an International Emmy nomination. In 1994, while covering the Rwandan genocide and refugee crisis, Colvin contracted a rare autoimmune disease that led to severe chronic health complications, including kidney failure, bilateral hip replacements, and years of dialysis, yet he continued presenting PM with remarkable resilience and even underwent a successful kidney transplant in 2013 from a donor he first met through an interview on his program. He later reflected on his life in the 2016 memoir Light and Shadow: Memoirs of a Spy’s Son, and his contributions were recognized with induction into the Australian Media Hall of Fame for his professionalism, courage, and influence on public broadcasting. Colvin died on 11 May 2017 after a prolonged battle with illness, leaving a legacy as an elegant, erudite journalist who mentored many in the field and combined traditional reporting with early adoption of digital platforms such as Twitter.

Early life

Birth and family background

Mark Colvin was born in London in 1952 to an Australian-born mother, Anne (née Manifold), and a British father, John Colvin. His father pursued a multifaceted career as a naval officer, diplomat, historian, and high-ranking member of MI6, the British Secret Intelligence Service, which involved numerous overseas postings during the Cold War era. This diplomatic and intelligence work shaped an itinerant family life, with Colvin spending parts of his childhood in cities including London, Oslo, Vienna, and Kuala Lumpur. His parents divorced when he was 11, after which he and his younger sister lived with their mother while his father resided nearby. Colvin was also the grandson of Admiral Sir Ragnar Colvin, a senior Royal Navy officer. His Australian maternal heritage provided early connections to the country where he would later settle permanently.

Education

Mark Colvin studied English literature at Christ Church, Oxford University. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in English. In his memoir, Colvin described achieving a "perfectly respectable 'good second' BA (Hons) in English" after three years at Oxford spent studying the great writers, an experience he found both inspiring and intimidating when reflecting on his own potential as a writer. Following graduation, he arrived in Australia at age 21 armed with his Oxford degree in English literature but with no clear career ambitions.

Career

Joining the ABC and early roles

Mark Colvin joined the Australian Broadcasting Corporation as a cadet in February 1974, shortly after graduating from Oxford University, beginning his career in the ABC Newsroom in Sydney. He described himself at the time as a "half-English dilettante with an arts degree and a pommy accent," yet the ABC recognized potential in his intellect and wit. In January 1975, Colvin moved to the newly established youth music radio station Double Jay (2JJ, later Triple J), where he became one of its founding journalists and cub reporters. Over the next three years, he presented news bulletins, conducted interviews, and produced current affairs segments and documentary specials tailored to young listeners' interests, including Australian music, drugs policy, unemployment, and the environment. He later spent a year as a television news producer in Canberra before joining the ABC's groundbreaking television current affairs program Nationwide in 1979 as one of its first reporters, alongside figures such as Andrew Olle. These early positions across radio and television demonstrated his rapid progression and adaptability within the ABC during his initial years in Australia.

Foreign correspondent period

Mark Colvin began his career as a foreign correspondent in 1980 when, at the age of 28, he was appointed the ABC's London correspondent. During this posting, he covered major international developments including the Iranian hostage crisis in Tehran and the rise of the Solidarity movement in Poland. He returned to Australia in 1983 and worked as a reporter for the radio current affairs programs AM and PM. In 1984, Colvin was instrumental in launching ABC Radio's midday current affairs program The World Today and became its founding presenter. He subsequently took up a posting in Brussels as the ABC's Europe correspondent, where he reported on the early thawing of the Cold War under Mikhail Gorbachev and related events leading to the eventual fall of the Iron Curtain. Between 1988 and 1992, Colvin served as a reporter for the ABC's investigative program Four Corners, producing documentaries on international issues such as the French actions against Kanaks in New Caledonia and the Cambodian peace process. His 1990 film "The Forgotten Famine" on the Ethiopian famine won a Gold Medal at the New York Film Festival and received an International Emmy nomination. In 1992, Colvin was posted again to London, this time as the ABC's television current affairs correspondent, primarily contributing to programs including Foreign Correspondent, The 7.30 Report, and Lateline. His reporting included an examination of ties between Italian organised crime and government figures, which extended to coverage of the trial of former Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti. Colvin's foreign correspondent assignments also encompassed coverage of African famines and the break-up of the Soviet Union. In 1994, while reporting on the Rwandan genocide and the ensuing refugee crisis in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo), he contracted the rare autoimmune disease Wegener’s granulomatosis (granulomatosis with polyangiitis), which nearly killed him and caused severe long-term complications including kidney failure and the need for hip replacements. This illness effectively ended his active period as a foreign correspondent.

Presenting PM on ABC Radio

Mark Colvin served as presenter of ABC Radio's flagship evening current affairs program PM from 1997 until shortly before his death in 2017, marking a tenure of two decades during which the program became synonymous with his voice for many Australian listeners. His familiar opening line—“Good evening and welcome to PM, I’m Mark Colvin”—was widely regarded as instantly reassuring, delivered in a distinctive, authoritative yet gentle tone that anchored the program each weekday evening. ABC Managing Director Michelle Guthrie described his steady and measured voice as bringing essential news of national and international importance to audiences with clarity and reliability. Colvin's presenting style combined charm with sharp intellect, making him one of Australian journalism's most authoritative and incisive interviewers. Colleagues praised his polite, fearless, and analytical approach, often characterising his interviews as exhilarating tests of knowledge that allowed no room for superficial answers or pre-prepared question lists. He maintained Zen-like calm under pressure, as demonstrated in a 2011 live cross during the Bahrain protests when gunshots were audible on the line; Colvin continued questioning with composure and compassion, extracting precise details while steadying the contributor's anxiety in a performance described as a masterclass in journalism. His intellectual rigour extended to an insistence on accuracy and depth, questioning everything, mastering details across diverse topics, and pushing reporters for firsthand perspectives—driven partly by his own past as a foreign correspondent and his longing to return to fieldwork. Through PM, Colvin upheld the program's reputation for rigorous, truth-seeking current affairs, mentoring younger journalists with constructive feedback and high standards while elevating the contributions of correspondents through his humanity and knowledge. His leadership ensured the program remained a trusted source of informed analysis, reflecting an elegant, erudite, and honest approach that earned him recognition as a national treasure of broadcasting.

Television contributions and writing

Mark Colvin made notable contributions to Australian television through his work as a reporter, documentary filmmaker, and writer for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's current affairs programs. He began his television career in 1979 as one of the first reporters on the groundbreaking ABC program Nationwide, collaborating with prominent journalists including Andrew Olle and Paul Murphy. From 1988 to 1992, Colvin served as a Sydney-based reporter for Four Corners, the ABC's flagship investigative current affairs series, during which he also worked as a documentary filmmaker for approximately five years. One of his significant contributions during this period was the 1990 Four Corners report titled "The Forgotten Famine," which examined how political instability hindered food relief distribution in famine-affected areas of Ethiopia such as Tigray; the report received a gold medal at the New York Film Festival and an International Emmy nomination. He is credited as a writer for Four Corners. In 1992, Colvin was posted to London as the ABC's TV Current Affairs correspondent, where he mainly reported for Foreign Correspondent, The 7.30 Report, and Lateline. He is also credited as a writer for Foreign Correspondent, and he appeared as a reporter on the program. While his later career focused primarily on radio, he occasionally provided television crosses during foreign assignments, such as during the 2008 US presidential election coverage.

Personal life

Marriages and family

Mark Colvin was married twice. His second marriage was to Michele McKenzie in 1987, and they had two sons together, Nicolas and William. He was survived by his wife Michele McKenzie and their sons Nicolas and William.

Health challenges

Mark Colvin developed kidney failure as a result of Wegener's granulomatosis (now known as granulomatosis with polyangiitis), a rare autoimmune disease he contracted in 1994 while covering the genocide in Rwanda. The condition caused severe inflammation of blood vessels, leading to progressive kidney damage that eventually required long-term dialysis treatment. Colvin underwent dialysis for approximately three years, during which his kidney function was severely impaired, at times operating at around 5 per cent capacity, yet he continued to present the ABC Radio program PM throughout this period, often managing demanding work schedules despite the physical toll. On 22 March 2013, Colvin received a kidney transplant from Mary-Ellen Field, a living donor he had first met through an interview on his program. The procedure was notable enough to inspire a theatrical play, Mark Colvin's Kidney, which explored the personal aspects of the donation and recovery. These kidney-related challenges profoundly affected his daily life and professional routine, requiring careful management of treatment regimens while he remained committed to journalism. Following the transplant, he was diagnosed with melanoma and, in early 2017, with inoperable lung cancer.

Death

Cancer diagnosis and final years

In his later years, Colvin faced significant health challenges beyond his earlier kidney transplant. He was diagnosed with melanoma, undergoing surgery to remove it in 2016, which left a prominent zig-zag scar across his forehead that he publicly shared in a social media post. He took a brief period off from presenting PM to recover from the surgery and associated radiation treatment for the skin cancer. Early in 2017, Colvin received a diagnosis of inoperable lung cancer, marking the onset of his terminal illness. Despite the severity of this condition, he remained committed to his role and continued presenting PM on ABC Radio National for as long as his health permitted, embodying his lifelong dedication to journalism even amid serious illness. In reflections during this period, he expressed a fatalistic outlook on his escalating health issues.

Passing and immediate tributes

Mark Colvin died on 11 May 2017 at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Randwick, Sydney, aged 65, following complications from cancer. His family released a statement expressing profound loss and gratitude, saying "Today we lost our beloved Mark," while thanking the hospital staff, the ABC, his friends, colleagues, and the community for their support over the years. They requested donations to the Prince of Wales Hospital trust in lieu of flowers and noted that he was survived by his sons William and Nicolas. Colvin's final tweet, posted characteristically with wit, read "It's all been bloody marvellous," serving as his last public word. ABC Managing Director Michelle Guthrie paid tribute to his steady voice on PM, stating that he had informed Australians about essential national and international news and would be enormously missed. ABC News Director Gaven Morris described him as "one of Australia's finest journalists," admired for his intellect, wit, and integrity, and a mentor to younger reporters as well as a source of wisdom for veterans in the newsroom. Immediate tributes flowed from political leaders and the media. Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull wrote that in a world of superficiality Colvin was always informed and honest, declaring "We've lost a good man." Opposition Leader Bill Shorten called him "a gentleman of journalism," while Greens leader Richard Di Natale lamented that a fascinating life had ended far too soon. These responses underscored the widespread respect for Colvin among his peers and the public at the time of his passing.

Legacy

Awards and honours

Mark Colvin received notable recognition for his contributions to journalism, including official national honours and prestigious industry awards. On 26 January 2011, Colvin was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the Australia Day Honours list for service to journalism as a reporter and broadcaster, particularly through the PM program on ABC Radio Current Affairs, and to the community through support for people with disabilities. In 2012, he received the Walkley Award for Most Outstanding Contribution to Journalism, honouring his enduring influence and dedication to broadcast reporting and current affairs.

Impact on Australian journalism

Mark Colvin is widely regarded as one of Australia's finest news and current affairs broadcasters, whose work profoundly shaped radio journalism through his 20-year tenure presenting PM on ABC Radio, transforming it into a flagship program for in-depth reporting on international and domestic issues. His mellifluous voice, fierce intellect, insatiable curiosity, and scrupulous impartiality allowed him to deliver authoritative summaries of complex events and conduct penetrating interviews that connected audiences directly to global affairs, earning him the description as "the man who watched the world for Australia." Colvin's commitment to firsthand, on-the-ground reporting set enduring standards in Australian journalism, as he insisted on authentic perspectives from correspondents rather than reliance on agency copy, reflecting his belief that "the view on the ground is never exactly what the pre-digested words of the news agencies or edited pictures off the satellites suggest." Colleagues remembered him as a mentor whose professionalism, courage, resilience, and ethical rigor inspired generations of journalists to pursue excellence, with his example demonstrating how broadcast journalism could inform, move, and foster connections between people. Posthumous tributes portrayed Colvin as a towering giant and lodestar of Australian journalism, whose integrity and dedication embodied the highest standards of public-service broadcasting and made him an acknowledged national treasure. Tony Jones described him as "the greatest broadcaster of the ABC’s modern era," capable of ranging across topics with consistent humanity and knowledge, while his induction into the Australian Media Hall of Fame affirmed the lasting scale of his contribution to the field.

References

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