Steve Hamilton (broadcaster)
Roland James Hamilton, known as Steve Hamilton (24 February 1950 – 1 August 2009) was a Scottish broadcaster. He was best known for DJing and presenting on Radio Forth and announcing on Wheel of Fortune.
Steve Hamilton | |
---|---|
Born | Roland James Hamilton 24 February 1950 Dumfries, Scotland |
Died | 1 August 2009 59) | (aged
Nationality | Scottish |
Occupation | Broadcaster |
Years active | 1975–2009 |
Known for | Wheel of Fortune game show announcer |
Children | 2 |
Biography
Hamilton was born on 24 February 1950 in Dumfries but grew up in Ayr owing to his father's operation of a motor car dealership there. He went to Carrick Academy, Ayr Academy, and the Royal School of Music and Drama, where the diploma in speech and drama he graduated with failed to rescue him from a job at Austin Reed in Princes Street. A later job as a props man at BBC TV in Glasgow brought his voice to the attention of the place's broadcasters who gave him his job at Radio Forth, which he began on 22 January 1975; at this point he changed his name to Steve from Roland James on the grounds that Roland didn't suit a DJ. In 1977, he joined STV as a newscaster and continuity announcer, remaining with both until 1988, the year in which he took a job narrating Wheel of Fortune.[1] He kept this job for its entire 13-year run, being the only original cast member to stay with the show until the end.[2]
Until 1998 Hamilton was based in Edinburgh, at which point he relocated to Newtongrange, Midlothian "to see a bit of sky";[1] he would four years later launch the voice-coaching firm "Hamilton Agency" with his wife.[3] His final years were spent doing voice-overs for television and radio adverts – at the time of his death he was the voice advertising King Robert II whisky in Mauritius – as an occasional actor (including bit parts Taggart, Take the High Road, and Monarch of the Glen), and training students for broadcasting jobs at a voice-coaching school.[1]
Personal life
Hamilton was married three times; first to Maggie, his second wife Joan died of breast cancer in 1985, then to Jilly from 1988 until his death on 1 August 2009. He has a brother, Campbell, and two children Debbie and Nick.[1]
References
- Davison, Phil (12 August 2009). "Steve Hamilton". Herald Scotland.
- Holmes, Jeff (November 2009). This Is Scotland: The First Fifty Years Of Scottish Television. Lulu.com. ISBN 9780955335211.
- "Steve's finding a voice in the market". The Scotsman.