Richard Hammond

|
| Born: |
December 19, 1969 (1969-12-19) (age 37)
Birmingham,
England |
| Occupation: |
Television
presenter |
Richard Mark Hammond (born December
19, 1969 in Birmingham),
nicknamed "Hamster", is an English
television and radio presenter best known for co-presenting the
television programme Top Gear
along with James
May and Jeremy Clarkson from 2002 onwards,
and co-hosting the live annual motoring show, MPH, in Earls
Court and Birmingham NEC, alongside Tiff
Needell and Jeremy Clarkson. He also presented Brainiac: Science Abuse
and writes a weekly column, which can be read in the motoring section
of The Daily Mirror
each Friday. He has recently recovered from a serious brain
injury sustained in a high-speed (288.3 mph, 464.0 km/h) crash during filming for Top
Gear in September 2006. At the end of January 2007, Top
Gear was back on screen in the United
Kingdom and showed the footage of the crash.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Radio
and television career
- 1.2 Top
Gear
- 1.3 Brainiac:
Science Abuse
- 2 Personal
life
- 3 Vampire
dragster crash
- 3.1 Treatment
and recovery
- 4 Works
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
|
Biography
Originally from the West Midlands, in the
mid-1980s Hammond moved with his family (mother Eileen, father Alan,
and younger brothers Andrew and Nicholas) to the North
Yorkshire market town of Ripon where his father ran a probate business
in the market square. A pupil of Ripon
Grammar School and of Solihull School, a fee-paying boys' independent
school in the West Midlands town, from 1987 to 1989 he attended
Harrogate College of Art and Technology and was friends with author and
academic Jonathan Baldwin. He gained a BTEC
National Diploma in Visual Communications but chose not to pursue a
career in this direction.
Radio and television
career
Early in his career, Hammond worked at many radio stations,
including Radio
York, Radio
Cumbria, Radio
Leeds, and Radio Lancashire,
before going on to present a number of daytime lifestyle shows and
motoring programmes on Men & Motors.
He presented the Crufts dog show in
2005, the 2004 and 2005 British Parking Awards, and has appeared on School's
Out, a quiz show on BBC One where celebrities answer questions
about things they learnt at school when they were younger. He has also
presented The
Gunpowder Plot: Exploding The Legend. Along
with his work on Top Gear, he currently presents Should I Worry About...?
on BBC One and Time Commanders
on BBC2, and
presented the first four series of Brainiac: Science Abuse
on Sky
One. He is also a team captain on the BBC2 quiz show, Petrolheads,
in which a memorable part was one where Hammond was tricked into
smashing his classic Ferrari while trying to parallel park blindfolded
in another car.
From January
3, 2006
until February
10, 2006,
Hammond was the eponymous star of Richard Hammond's 5
O'Clock Show with his co-star Mel
Giedroyc of Light Lunch
fame. The programme, which discussed a wide range of topics, was shown
every weekday on ITV1
between 5:00 and 6:00.
In July 2005 Hammond won the dubious accolade of being voted
number one in a heat magazine
poll of top "weird celebrity crushes." Also in 2005 he was voted one of
the top 10 British TV talents.
As part of Red Nose Day 2007, Hammond stood
for nomination via a public telephone vote, along with Andy
Hamilton and Kelvin MacKenzie, to be a one-off
co-presenter of BBC Radio 4's Woman's
Hour on March
16th 2007 [2]. However, he was defeated by Andy
Hamilton.
In April 2007, Hammond presented a one off special on BBC
Radio 2 for Good Friday. He is scheduled to present
more Bank Holiday specials for the station.
Top Gear
Hammond became a presenter on Top Gear in
2002, when the show began its present format. He is sometimes referred
to as "Hamster" by fans and his co-presenters on Top Gear.
His nickname was further reinforced when on three separate occasions in
Series 7, Hammond ate cardboard, mimicking hamster-like behaviour.
Another running gag by co-host Jeremy Clarkson is Hammond's supposed
use of teeth whitener, and it was staged to appear that he was caught
looking at a website on teeth whiteners on Richard Hammond's
5 O'Clock Show.
In the first episode of the new series on 28 January
2007, Hammond returned to a hero's welcome, complete with dancing girls
and fireworks. The show also contained images of his high speed crash,
for which he made national headlines, with Hammond talking through the
events of the day, after which the audience broke into spontaneous
applause. Hammond then requested that the crash never be mentioned on Top
Gear again, though both May and Clarkson have since
referenced it in jokes during the news segment of the program.
Brainiac: Science Abuse
In 2003, Hammond became the first presenter of Brainiac: Science Abuse;
he was joined by Jon Tickle with Charlotte
Hudson joining in series 2. After the fourth series it was announced
that Richard Hammond was no longer going to present the show due to his
signing an exclusive deal with the BBC. Vic Reeves took his place as
main presenter.
Personal life
Hammond married Amanda, also known as Mindy
in 2002, and they have two young daughters, Isabella (born September
2000) and Willow (born 22 July 2003).
The family lives in Payford,
Redmarley, Gloucester
and also have a flat in London They have three horses, four dogs, two
cats, a rabbit and a handful of chickens and sheep. This collection of
pets includes Tee-Gee/TG or Top
Gear Dog. He also plays the bass guitar, on which he accompanied the
other Top Gear presenters when they performed alongside Justin Hawkins
at Comic Relief 2007. Hammond likes to ride his bicycle in cities, for
which he claims to be mocked mercilessly by fellow presenter Jeremy
Clarkson who is known for his hostility to environmentalism.
Hammond further claims that there is no reason to drive a Range
Rover in town- a dig perhaps at Clarkson who is known to do so. Hammond
is also a fan of monster trucks - a fact which can be backed up by his
appearance at Truckfest '07. Hammond
has many fans all over the world and was overwhelmed by well-wishers
following the crash.
On 22nd July 2007, at the height of the Gloucestershire flood
disaster, Hammond left his Porsche 911 - which he had been stuck in
traffic in for 13 hours - to run home for his daughter's birthday. He
ran 16 miles (25 km) in two-and-a-half hours at 3am.
Cars and Bikes
Hammond is a Porsche enthusiast, and particularly likes
the Porsche
911 (which was abandoned in the July 2007 Floods).
He currently owns a left-hand drive Porsche 911 ((which has appeared on
Top
Gear in the studio), a Dodge Charger, two Land
Rovers, a Suzuki GSXR1000, a BMW 1150 GS, a Harley
Davidson, a Ducati 1098, the abandoned Porsche 911,
a Morgan
V6 Roadster, a 1968 Ford Mustang ((This Vehicle has also
appeared on Top
Gear)) and several kit cars.
Vampire dragster crash
Wikinews has
related news:
On
September
20, 2006, Hammond was seriously injured in a car
crash while filming for Top Gear at the former RAF Elvington
airfield near York.
He was driving a jet-powered car, the Vampire
dragster, which is theoretically capable of travelling at speeds of up
to 370mph.
Hammond in the Vampire Drag car moments before the crash.
Sky
News and BBC
News reported that he was driving a Vampire jet car powered by a Bristol-Siddeley
Orpheus Turbo-Jet Engine,
one of a pair built by then driver, Keiran Westman; the same car that
currently holds the British land speed record at 300.3 mph.
Primetime Land Speed Engineering have denied reports that Hammond was
making an attempt to break the land speed record, although telemetry on
one of the runs did suggest that he had reached
314.4mph (506 km/h),
an unofficial British record.
The run was not a land speed record attempt;
this is consistent with there being no official present, and no attempt
at a second run in the opposite direction, as is required for a land
speed record to be officially recognized. In the first episode of the
new series, Clarkson jokingly said "He would have held the record for
fastest crash, but he'd have to crash in the other direction for it to
be official." However this contradicts some sources, including a
statement given by the owner of 'Event Fire Services' which was hired
to provide safety cover.
He was travelling at 288.3mph (464 km/h) at the time of the crash, but
when the jet car overturned and the roll cage dug into the ground he
was still going at 232mph (373.4 km/h), with the top of his helmet
dragging along the ground; it has been speculated that if he were any
taller, he would have been decapitated.
He was then taken to the specialist neurological unit of the Leeds General Infirmary.
According to witnesses, Hammond was
completing a final run to collect extra footage for the programme when
"one of the parachutes had deployed but it went on to the grass and
spun over and over before coming to a rest about 100 yards from us."
When rescuers arrived at the car it was upside down and "dug in" to the
grass. Rescuers felt a pulse and heard Hammond, who was unconscious,
breathing before the car was turned right way up. Hammond was cut free,
put in a neck brace and placed on a stretcher before the air ambulance
arrived. "He was regaining consciousness at that point and said he had
some lower back pain".
ITV
News reported that Hammond had broken the British land speed record and
was on a last run filming extra scenes for Top Gear
when the accident happened. Hammond's family stayed with him at the
hospital along with Top Gear representatives who
were present at the accident site, as well as Top Gear
co-presenters James May and Jeremy Clarkson who has also rushed to his
bedside. Jeremy Clarkson is quoted by the BBC as saying "Both James and
I are looking forward to getting our 'Hamster' back", referring to
Hammond by his nickname.
Dave Ogden from Event Fire Services, present
at the scene of the accident, said on Sky News that evening: "He was
just doing the final run of the day — I don't know quite what happened
— but the parachute deployed. There was quite a lot of smoke and the
car veered off to the right and on to the grass, and it overturned
several times and it came to a halt a couple of hundred yards in front
of us."
The cause of the crash was later determined
to be a blowout of the front right tyre.
The crash was shown on an episode of Top
Gear on the 28
January 2007;
this was the first episode of the new series, which had been postponed
pending Hammond's recovery. Hammond requested at the end of the episode
that his fellow presenters never mention the crash again.
Treatment
and recovery
BBC reports suggest that he was air-lifted
from the crash scene while drifting in and out of consciousness.
North Yorkshire Police said that they "received a report via the fire
service of a male person trapped in an overturned jet car which had
been driven on the airfield."
The doctor treating Hammond announced on September
21, 2006
that he had a "significant brain injury" but he was reasonably
optimistic he would make a good recovery.
Hammond was visited several times in
hospital after the crash by co-presenter Jeremy
Clarkson and responded well to conversations with him. He even managed
a smile after Clarkson jokingly said the reason he crashed was because
he was such a 'crap driver'. It also became clear that Hammond's
co-presenter James May was originally supposed to be driving the car.
May explained later that a leaked shooting schedule made weeks before
the incident was changed due to scheduling conflicts. After visiting
Hammond in the hospital, May remarked:
| “ |
I
was chuffed to see him and although he's muttering, he seems much like
the irritating little shit I know and love. Even when he can't say
much, he seemed to make as much sense as he does when he can talk
normally...Having seen him today I do believe Richard will make a full
recovery from this awful crash and, when he's back on his feet, I'm
looking forward to going down to the pub with him. |
” |
|
—James May
|
Hammond's condition was upgraded from
"serious but stable" to "stable" on September 22, 2006, when he was
moved out of intensive care.
On the same day ITV News reported that Hammond was conscious
and was talking to friends and family. In the early hours of September
22, 2006,
Hammond took his first steps (he got up and went to the toilet), just
30 hours after the crash, according to Jeremy Clarkson, and was moved
to a general ward on 23 September. His severe injury reduced
him to a "child-like state" in which he became obsessed with LEGO bricks, and Top Trumps
which he said helped him recover.
On September 26, 2006 and September
27, 2006
Hammond was reported to be improving so well he would be moved to a
hospital nearer his home in Gloucestershire.
On 28
September 2006
he was airlifted from Leeds General Infirmary to the BUPA hospital in Clifton,
Bristol, to be closer to his home in Gloucestershire. His neurosurgeon,
Stuart Ross, estimated a full-recovery time of 6 months.
It was reported that Hammond wanted the new
series of Top Gear, as scheduled, to go ahead in
October and also that he wished that the footage of the crash/race to
be shown.
Rumours started to circulate after Hammond's
crash that Top Gear was going to be axed, but this
was denied by the BBC when they announced on October
6th 2006
that the show was still in full production for its new series, although
it would only air when Hammond had fully recovered and able to
participate in the program. The BBC also announced on October 6, 2006 that they were
producing a special programme on Hammond's crash that would show the
footage filmed on the day.
A charity appeal in aid of the Yorkshire Air Ambulance was
established shortly after the accident. Initially the money was to be
used to fund day-to-day running costs of the helicopter. However on 24
September 2006,
due to the generosity of the public, the chief executive of the air
ambulance trust announced the money would be used to procure a second
helicopter.
In a series of articles published in the Daily
Mirror on 23 October 2006 Hammond described what he remembered of
the accident, and his recovery so far. At the time, he was preparing to
return home after five weeks, though he had been originally told that
he would be hospitalised for fifteen months.
His wife told her story in an article published on 24 October
2006.
On November 1, 2006, Jeremy Clarkson and James May received
the National Television Award
for best factual programme on behalf of Top Gear
and announced that Richard Hammond is 'back to normal' and made jokes
about his bad driving. "I told you if one of us crashed we'd win this",
Clarkson quipped.
On November 12, 2006 he was back behind the wheel for the first
time after the accident. He chose his Morgan,
the classic British sports car, ahead of the other motors in his
garage, which included a Porsche, vintage Ford
Mustang and a Range Rover, and under doctors orders
took things at a slow pace, not venturing above 50 mph. He has
also since taken his first ride on a motorcycle since the crash, as
publicised in MCN.
On December 7, 2006 he attended his first day filming for the
new series at the annual Top Gear Awards. During
the show, he was presented by Lego with a model of the Vampire jet-car which
he crashed as well as a model of the Top Gear set,
complete with the presenters as well as The Stig. It was during the same night that
the show's presenters confirmed that the new series would premiere on 28 January
2007.
On December 22, 2006 Hammond made his first television
appearance since the crash on Friday Night with
Jonathan Ross,
in which he said that since the crash he has gained a better memory,
particularly with regard to telephone numbers, and a new found liking
for celery.
He is, however, somewhat irritated by the fact that he has been
forbidden to drink any serious quantity of alcohol for a period of two
years, being restricted to, at most, two pints of weak lager. Hammond
revealed that he has a pact with his co-presenters that, should one of
them die in an accident, the following edition of Top Gear
would open with the remaining two presenters solemnly mentioning the
death and then remaining silent for a moment. They would then start a
new sentence, in which the first word would be 'Anyway' and continue to
happily report about cars. (This pact had previously been disclosed in Jeremy
Clarkson's column in The Sun on September
23, 2006).
He also described the first time his children came to see him in
hospital where, in a confused state, he proceeded to take off his
bandages and show his gruesome eye injury to his daughters.
On January 28, 2007, Hammond made a return to Top
Gear. He opened the show walking down a set of airline
boarding-stairs complete with showgirls, because as Clarkson pointed
out Hammond "didn't want any fuss whatsoever", and that "to build a
proper set of Morecambe and Wise steps would
have cost at least £300". Hammond thanked everyone involved with his
accident and who wrote to him wishing him the best. Following the
airing of the crash footage he asked that it never be mentioned on Top
Gear again, which Clarkson and May agreed. On the same
episode it was noted by Clarkson that Hammond would have set the
fastest land crash in history but he "had to repeat it going the other
way" (to make the findings official).
On July 21, 2007, Saturday morning, Hammond manifested a
surprising recovery to his fitness by running 16 miles to his family
home in Gloucester,
for his daughter's birthday. When his 911 got stuck on the way home in
the traffic tie-up created by weekend flooding in Cheltenham,
Gloucestershire,
he abandoned the car in a nearby parking lot, put on his running gear
and a waterproof jacket, then made the journey within 2 hours and 30
minutes.
Footage of the crash, as shown in this
episode, can be seen at the Top Gear website.
Works
TV
shows
- Top Gear
(2002-present)
- Brainiac: Science Abuse
(2003-2006)
- Time
Commanders (2005)
- Crufts (2004-2005)
- Should I Worry About...?
(2004-2005)
- The
Gunpowder Plot: Exploding The Legend (2005)
- Inside Britain's Fattest Man
(2005)
- Richard Hammond's 5
O'Clock Show (2006)
- Petrolheads
(2006)
- School's Out (as a
contestant, 2006)
- Richard Hammond's Would you
believe it? (2006)
- Richard Hammond and The Holy
Grail (2006)
- Battle of the Geeks
(2006)
- Last Man Standing
(2007) (Narrator)
Books
- What Not to Drive
(2005), ISBN
0-297-84800-3
- Can You Feel the Force?
(2006), ISBN
1-4053-1543-1
- Richard Hammond's Car
Confidential (2006), ISBN
0-297-84445-8
- Life On The Edge
(2007), ISBN
0-297-85327-9
References
-
BBC News — Profile: Richard Hammond
Accessed 21 September 2006.
-
BBC News — New Doctor Who tops talent list
-
The Sun Online — Vic lands mad science show
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/5372890.stm
-
http://www.topgear.com/content/news/stories/1112/
-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6605717.stm
-
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-1276474,00.html
Article reporting on Hammond's car abandonment
-
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-1276474,00.html
-
BBC
news
-
BBC
News — Speed king breaks 300mph barrier
-
[1]
-
Sky News — TV Star's Horror Crash
-
In pictures: Richard Hammond's crash
(second image) - BBC News - Obtained January
18, 2007.
-
Sky News — Top Gear Man
In Crash
-
Sky News: Presenter 'Swapped Cars'
-
Telegraph.co.uk — Richard is a bit bashed in
but still the irritating guy I love
-
Hammond
'has taken first steps'
-
'Very
good progress' for Hammond
-
Top
Gear star moved from hospital
-
Daily Mail — Top Gear star begs BBC to show
280mph car crash
-
Sky News — Top Gear Revs Up
-
Sky News — Plans to show horror crash
-
Hammond appeal will help to buy helicopter
-
Clare Raymond, Victoria Ward. "'My nose and ears were full of earth ..I was
inhaling a field'", Daily Mirror, October
23, 2006.
Retrieved on 2006-10-23.
-
Victoria Ward, Clare Raymond. "'I felt mad as a bag of snakes. My mind was
like a foreign place, nothing in it but blankness'", Daily
Mirror, October 23, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-10-23.
-
Victoria Ward, Clare Raymond. "Richard: LEGO saved my life", Daily
Mirror, 23 October 2006. Retrieved on 2006-10-23.
-
Clare Raymond, Victoria Ward. "'I had this incredible physical longing to
see the kids..They have been so brave'", Daily
Mirror, October 23, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-10-23.
-
Clare Raymond, Victoria Ward. "'Richard Hammond Exclusive: The wife's story'",
Daily Mirror, October 24, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-10-24.
-
Hamster attends TG Awards
-
Digital Spy reporting on Hammond's scheduled
appearance on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross
-
Footage of Hammond's crash
External
links
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edit
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Woollard
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