Jamaica Gleaner

National honour for veteran journalist Carmen Tipling

-

THE QUEST of Carmen Evelyn Lyons to become a journalist started at the tender age of nine years. That’s a long time before she later became Carmen Tipling.

The veteran journalist and communicat­or, who has so far given over 56 years to the profession, explains that “the die was cast” following her teacher’s commendati­ons after reading a compositio­n young Carmen had penned at the Central Branch Primary School in Kingston.

“My teacher, Mr Herbert Neita, read one of my compositio­ns, An Imaginary Trip Somewhere, to the class. Then he asked me what I wanted to be when I grow up.

“My response was that I wanted to be a teacher. However, he pointed out that I had a flair for words and that I could be a journalist. Martin Mordecai, who was sitting beside me, looked up the word journalist in the dictionary and whispered: ‘Carmen, you could be a writer and work at The Gleaner,’” she shared.

After primary school, Carmen, who was born in 1942 in the parish of Portland, was enrolled at the Kingston Technical High School (KT). At KT, she said, she was determined to master typing and shorthand in order to equip herself with skills, which she thought would enhance her passion to become a journalist.

“One year after I left KT, while working at the Jamaica Agricultur­al Society as a secretary, I received a foreign student scholarshi­p to attend Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Missouri, in the United States in the 1960s. That scholarshi­p provided me with the opportunit­y to major in English language with a minor in journalism,” she recounted. On graduating, she copped awards for her contributi­ons to The Megaphone, the college newspaper, as well as winning The Washburn Theatre Award for writing and producing plays. The 2021 Government of Jamaica national honour awardee explains in an interview with JIS News that her attraction to the profession of journalism was solidified once she received hands-on experience during her college years.

“I l oved the awe of writing stories, which would become the talk on campus! But, most of all, I liked to inform and educate others,” she shared. Now a distinguis­hed communicat­or and playwright, Tipling has worked in a variety of fields in both the public and private sectors. These include creative stints with the Writers Workshop, founded by American screenwrit­er Bud Schulberg; and at Warner Brothers Studios, i n Burbank, California, as a researcher for television and movie scripts.

On her return to Jamaica in 1965 and with the desire to be a journalist still burning within her, Tipling wrote to The Gleaner applying for a job, like her primarysch­ool classmate had foretold years before. Utilising the preferred communicat­ion medium of that era, The Gleaner, via telegram, called her in for an interview with Theodore Sealy, who later became one of the newspaper’s most noted editors-in-chief. She started the job in 1965, thereby fulfilling her career ambition of becoming a journalist.

In addition to working for The Gleaner, Carmen Tipling taught English briefly at Oberlin High School in St Andrew; was chief executive officer at JIS; and was communicat­ion consultant, building out the communicat­ion operations of the Jamaica National Group, where she still consults. She also taught at the Institute of Management and Production, and the University College of the Caribbean. For several years, she also managed her own public relations firm, Communicat­ions Consultant­s Limited.

Tipling served as CEO of JIS between 2000 and 2007, and as the former head of the government’s communicat­ion agency, was instrument­al i n guiding the transition to a modern executive agency and placing informatio­n and communicat­ions technology at the centre of the organisati­on.

She coordinate­d the merger of JIS and the Jamaica Press (JAMPRESS) News Agency.

“I totally enjoyed working at the Jamaica Informatio­n Service. I liked the idea that the government wanted to create a shift, and had an agency such as the JIS become an executive agency, influencin­g on several different levels how it performed, how it responded to certain things, and how it was funded,” she said.

LEARNING EXPERIENCE

Tipling has also worked with some important political personalit­ies, such as former Prime Minister P.J. Patterson in the 1970s and later during her time as CEO of JIS.

“It was a learning experience working with former Prime Minister P.J. Patterson as a personal assistant when he was the minister of industry and tourism. I came to appreciate that his word was his bond, and that he had the country’s best interest in all that he did. And he did a lot,” she recounted.

Having worked as a communicat­or in both the private and public sectors, Tipling, now retired, explained her approach to the various jobs.

“In the public sector, the focus of my objective was to deliver informatio­n to the population without political nuances; while in the private sector, I wanted to ensure that the company could deliver what it marketed,” she said.

Providing an outlook on the changed journalism profession, Tipling is of the view that computer technology has placed what she described as a major spin on journalism.

“For example, CNN has a reach and command of news that is literally mind-blowing. Locally, radio, television and newspapers can broadcast and print informatio­n from anywhere in the world. I particular­ly enjoy listening to Dionne Jackson Miller’s programme ‘Beyond The Headlines’, which seeks to put informatio­n in its proper context,” she explained.

AWARD-WINNING PLAYWRIGHT

Media and communicat­ions aren’t Tipling’s only areas of expertise and service. She is also an award-winning playwright, having won gold, silver and bronze in the Jamaica Festival’s playwritin­g competitio­n in 1968, 1969 and 1972.

Explaining her involvemen­t in the arts, Tipling pointed out that she studied playwritin­g at CulverStoc­kton College and wrote a few plays and a Jamaican pantomime.

One of her plays, Lunchtime Revolution, was published in the Caribbean Examinatio­n Council textbook for drama, Three Caribbean Plays, she said. However, the jewel in Tipling’s playwritin­g crown was the 1992 writing and production of the musical Arawak Gold, for which she collaborat­ed with fellow playwright, Ted Dwyer.

“That production ran at the Ward Theatre for about three months. In addition, the local production was performed in Miami and New York, while Yvonne Jones Brewster produced a version of Arawak Gold in London. The musical won three top Jamaican theatre awards in 1992,” she shared.

For her service in the fields of communicat­ion and the arts, Carmen Evelyn Lyons Tipling has been conferred with the Order of Distinctio­n i n the rank of Commander (CD).

She will be among the more than 140 persons who will be honoured at the virtual National Honours and Awards Ceremony today.

“It is a pleasant surprise and most welcomed. I am pleased to be able to write CD after my name and for it to be positioned in the area of communicat­ions and the arts,” Tipling said of the award.

She has been commended for the achievemen­t by Patterson. “He wished me continued success in all my endeavours and said that I should slow down, but never stop,” Tipling shared.

Chief Executive Officer of JN Group Earl Jarrett described Tipling as a profession­al, a Jamaican at heart with broad knowledge on various subject matters.

“She also helped us to frame how we communicat­e with the diaspora in terms of not just the attraction of increase remittance flows, but also how we leverage the Jamaican diaspora to improve the outcomes for Jamaicans,” Jarrett said of her contributi­on to the company.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Veteran journalist and communicat­or Carmen Tipling (left), shares a light moment with the current chief executive officer of the Jamaica Informatio­n Service, Donna-Marie Rowe.
CONTRIBUTE­D Veteran journalist and communicat­or Carmen Tipling (left), shares a light moment with the current chief executive officer of the Jamaica Informatio­n Service, Donna-Marie Rowe.
 ?? ?? CARMEN TIPLING
CARMEN TIPLING

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica