The Scotsman

Broadcaste­r tells listeners of his battle against illness

- Red Arrows in Camera robert dex

BROADCASTE­R Clive James has described himself as “getting near the end” after several years of serious illness.

The Australian star, who made his name with the long-running television series Clive James On Television, was diagnosed with leukaemia, kidney failure and lung disease in 2010. He told listeners to the Radio programme Meeting Myself

“I’m getting near I don’t want to cast a an air of doom, over the programme but I’m a man who is approachin­g his terminus.”

In the show, to be broadcast on Saturday, James said he has “been really ill for two and a half years” and “almost died four times in that period”.

James was born in Sydney and came to England in 1961, where he made a career in journalism including a successful stint as a prominent literary critic and then television columnist for the

4 1980s until he defected to the BBC and his wry commentary on programmes, including the Japanese game show Endurance, made him a household name.

The father of two, who is married to academic Prue Shaw.

He said: “I’ve been so sick since January 2010, especially my lung disease, that I’m not allowed to fly. You couldn’t get enough oxygen aboard a plane for me to get me to Sydney.”

James also spoke about the “defining event” of his life – the death of his father when he was a baby.

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