Anneka Rice

TV Show Host

Anneka Rice was born in Cowbridge, Wales, United Kingdom on October 4th, 1958 and is the TV Show Host. At the age of 65, Anneka Rice biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
October 4, 1958
Nationality
Wales, United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Cowbridge, Wales, United Kingdom
Age
65 years old
Zodiac Sign
Libra
Profession
Television Presenter
Anneka Rice Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 65 years old, Anneka Rice physical status not available right now. We will update Anneka Rice's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Anneka Rice Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Anneka Rice Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Anneka Rice Career

Rice began her broadcasting career as a trainee for the BBC World Service, working on The World Today and Twenty-Four Hours. She then moved to BBC children's TV, where she worked for Monica Sims and as a production assistant on Lucky Numbers. At 19, she moved to Hong Kong, where she worked as a news sub-editor for TVB Pearl, the English-language TV station. She later became the regular evening news-reader. She also produced Wheelbase, a weekly drive-time radio show, for RTHK and worked as an account executive for PR company Corporate Communications. She published a book called A Children's Guide to Hong Kong. She dubbed kung fu films into English for Run Run Shaw late into the night and was a fittings model for Gloria Vanderbilt jeans during her lunch hours.

In 1982 she returned to the UK and worked as a reporter on CBTV for Thames Television. She then landed her first-high profile job, as the jump-suited "skyrunner" of Channel 4's Treasure Hunt, co-hosted by former BBC newsman Kenneth Kendall. The show remains one of Channel 4's highest-rated programmes ever, regularly getting over 7 million viewers. It was nominated for a BAFTA in 1986.

Rice hosted the BBC's Children in Need appeal in 1987 and tested an early version of her next project, Challenge Anneka. This had been devised by Rice herself and was launched in 1989 on BBC1. It ran for six series. Projects included the renovation of a Romanian orphanage in Siret, equipping a Malawi refugee camp, and over 60 UK projects, most of which are still going strong.

As the owner of the rights to Challenge Anneka, Rice remained involved with the format as it was sold to other European territories, which produced their own versions. in 2001 she co-produced an American version with ABC called Challenge America with Erin Brockovich: The Miracle in Manhattan, hosted by Erin Brockovich, a post-9/11 project to rebuild an amphitheater and soccer field in New York City.

Through the '80s and '90s Rice presented Wish You Were Here...? for ITV. Taking over as main presenter on BBC1's Holiday in 1999, she travelled to over 50 countries. She was a regular part-time presenter on TVAM with Nick Ross, hosting one week a month, and also hosted Sporting Chance on BBC2, inviting celebrities to take up a new sport. She took part in BBC's Driving Force, teaming up with rally-cross driver Barry Lee to win the otherwise all-male competition in races driving Chieftain tanks, off-road cars, trucks and JCB diggers. She co-presented Combat for ITV with Emlyn Hughes, pitting regiments of the British forces against each other. She presented Capital Woman, a weekly women's magazine programme for ITV in the '90s. She was the host of Passport, which saw contestants taken to Botswana, Hong Kong, Los Angeles and Egypt to compete in gruelling local activities to win a glamorous holiday at the end. She also hosted the Children's Royal Variety Show and guested on numerous other shows.

During this time Madame Tussaud's created a waxwork of her in her famous jumpsuit which hung in the entrance hall from a rope ladder. When Rice moved from Treasure Hunt to Challenge Anneka they threw on a jacket and put a paint pot in her hand. She also had a Spitting Image puppet made of her. She 'gave birth' to her first son, with Kenneth Kendall directing proceedings.

Rice took a sabbatical to bring up her young family in 1995 and enrolled at Chelsea College of Art for two years. She has painted ever since.

In the 2000s she returned to work as a regular on The Wright Stuff and as host for Channel 5 series Dinner Doctors. In 2006 Challenge Anneka returned to ITV for two specials, the first broadcast on Boxing Day. This was a post-tsunami project in Sri Lanka. The second project, in 2007, was to produce an album to raise money for the Children's Hospice Association.

In 2006 she co-hosted ITV Sunday-morning cookery show Sunday Feast. She also took part in the ITV programme Extinct, presented by Sir Trevor McDonald and Zoë Ball, which saw Rice and seven other celebrities visit endangered animals in their natural habitat. Rice travelled to the North Pole to track polar bears by helicopter and fit them with tracking collars.

In September 2007 she appeared on Hell's Kitchen and was also a contestant on Celebrity Mastermind (broadcast 1 January 2010). She chose the life and career of Jean Rhys as her specialist subject.

In June 2012, Rice co-hosted BBC1 programme Rolf Paints... Diamond Jubilee with Rolf Harris in celebration of Queen Elizabeth II's jubilee. In August 2012, she was named co-presenter of The Flowerpot Gang on BBC 1 with Joe Swift (TV garden presenter) and Phil Tufnell. She was a presenter on Secrets of the National Trust for Channel 5 in 2016.

In 2017, she appeared as a contestant on Richard Osman's House of Games and participated in Channel 4's Celebrity Hunted for Stand Up to Cancer.

In 2019 she took part in Celebrity Antiques Road Trip for BBC2 with friend Liz Carr. She was a contestant for Kirstie Allsopp's Celebrity Craft Masters; and on BBC 1's Strictly Come Dancing, partnered with Kevin Clifton and featuring regularly on It Takes 2. She was also a guest on Channel 4's Bake Off, An Extra Slice and Children in Need 2019.

In 2020 she took part in Joe Lycett's Got Your Back and ran with her Radio 2 colleagues for BBC 1's Sport Relief.

Rice's radio career started as a BBC trainee for the World Service, where she worked on The World Today and Twenty-Four Hours.

In Hong Kong she produced a weekly drive-time show for RTHK.

In the 80s in the UK she was a regular stand-in for Gloria Hunniford on Radio 2 and presented The Waiting Game for Radio 4 in 1990, a nine-week series on pregnancy. She was also a regular guest on Loose Ends and presented Inside the Life Drawing Class, a documentary for Radio 4 about life drawing.

She was asked by Lynda Snell to renovate the Ambridge Village Hall in the early 90s, joining Princess Margaret as the only other person to play themselves. She returned to Ambridge again to re-open it in 2016 after Lynda's campaign to redecorate it.

In 2012 Rice and Patrick Kielty filled in for Alan Carr and Melanie Sykes on BBC Radio 2 which led to her confirmation in February 2012 as the successor to Zoe Ball on the Weekend Breakfast Show, live from 6am. After five years she took over the late night Saturday slot, presenting Pick of Radio 2. She has presented specials for Friday Night is Music Night including one celebrating the music of Rogers and Hammerstein. She also presented the Arts Show, taking over from Jonathan Ross, often taking it to the Edinburgh Festival. She was the regular Radio 2 host for the Olivier Awards and the Evening Standard Awards. Since 2017 she has presented Junior Choice on Christmas Day morning, following the death of long time host Ed Stewart. She takes part in Radio 2's yearly Festival in a Day in Hyde Park.

In 2017 she wrote and presented a two-hour Christmas special about Ronnie Wood, his art and music, called Paint it Black.

In 2018 she was a guest on My Teenage Diary for Radio 4 and in 2020 she presented Anneka's 80s TV Treasure Hunt for Radio 2.

Source

Battle for the soul of Burnham Market? After wealthy second-home owners raised prices, locals in the Norfolk village known as 'Chelsea' say they can't afford to buy a house. However, employers continue to be dependent on the incomers

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 11, 2024
The pharmacy on Market Place in Burnham Market had been part of the local community for almost 200 years, and was gaining notoriety for selling arsenic to murderesses Frances Billing and Catherine Frary, who murdered three people and were hanged at Norwich Castle in 1835. When Sue and Brian Symonds, the pharmacy's previous owners, died in December 2018, their children tried to sell the store in vain, with locals hoping that another pharmacist would step in. However, house prices in the tiny village, which has only 724 people, have risen, spiraling by 23% in two decades, so no one was found, which was surprising. Locals who have been enraged by the influx of wealthy second-home owners, who have dubbed their village 'Chelsea-on-Sea,' have decided to make their opinions known by erecting a fake English Heritage blue plaque on the former pharmacy's brick façade.

EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: How Princess Anne turned down a £40,000 private jet to fly with BA instead

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 21, 2023
EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: After her British Airways plane was diverted by fog, Gibraltar governor Sir David Steel was forced to call all outstanding favours for Princess Anne's land trip from Malaga to Gibraltar. According to a whispering source, 'Sir David had no leverage left with the Spanish to convince them not to allow her to drive across the border.' For the Princess Royal and her husband Tim, he had to hire a £40,000 private jet.' The fog lifted just before her departure, allowing her to land on her first British Airways flight. "I have a return ticket and I'd like to fly BA," she told a distraught Sir David.'

More than 80% of people in a seaside haven, where the average house price is £1 million back measures to reduce holiday lets, have been voted in favor of 'Chelsea on sea.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 26, 2023
Residents in a seaside town named 'Chelsea on sea,' and where the average house price is £1 million, have voted to prohibit people from buying second homes. Burnham Market in Norfolk has been given the name because of the large number of Londoners with property there. Locals have overwhelmingly supported a call to limit the number of second homes and holiday lets in the coastal town following a recent referendum. By placing conditions on all new constructions, more than 80% of voters favor the introduction of new steps to curb such properties. These must be 'principal residences,' and they must be banned from being turned into holiday retreats.