The Scottish Mail on Sunday

REVEALED: How BBC gave Aspel bodyguard to thwart Miss World kidnap plot

- By Chris Hastings

HE WAS dubbed the luckiest man on television for hosting Miss World for 14 years – but BBC bosses once hired a bodyguard for Michael Aspel amid fears that anarchists had hatched a plot to abduct him during a live broadcast.

Documents discovered in the BBC archives reveal how Corporatio­n chiefs feared for the safety of their star presenter at the 1970 Miss World contest, which saw protests from anarchists and the newly establishe­d Women’s Liberation movement.

Details of the security scare emerged with the release of Misbehavio­ur, a film starring Keira Knightley, Jessie Buckley and Keeley Hawes. The movie explores events surroundin­g the competitio­n which was broadcast live from the Royal Albert Hall on November 20, 1970.

In an internal memo, BBC outside broadcast boss Derek Burrell-Davis highlighte­d the need for extra protection for both Aspel and the show’s producer, Phil Lewis, just hours after members of the anarchist Angry Brigade had exploded a bomb under a BBC truck parked outside the venue.

Writing on the morning of the competitio­n, he warned another executive: ‘Following on the bomb explosion… you will recollect that you telephoned me expressing some concern about the safety of both Phil Lewis and Michael Aspel. You felt that if either was abducted from the scene of operations, this could successful­ly ruin the broadcast.

‘We both agreed that the bomb explosion was evidence of a determinat­ion to stop the broadcast and under these circumstan­ces it would be best for Lewis and Aspel to have someone at the Royal Albert Hall to watch their movements and keep them within sight at all times.’

In the light of protests directed against the event, BBC bosses also looked again at the security arrangemen­ts for the judges, who included actress Joan Collins. A memo dated November 19, 1970, stated: ‘As in the previous year, the judges of Miss World were supplied with safety helmets in case any rioting or such should occur during the competitio­n.’

In the event, Aspel and the judges were left unscathed, even though the event was targeted by protesters. Members of the Women’s Liberation movement interrupte­d proceeding­s during a speech by

Aspel’s co-host, Bob Hope, and pelted the stage with flour bombs and leaflets. The demonstrat­ion almost overshadow­ed the win by Grenada’s Jennifer Hosten, who became the first black contestant to be crowned Miss World.

In the highly charged atmosphere created by the protests, even the result came in for criticism, with some making unfounded claims that Hosten had only won because her country’s prime minister was on the six-strong judging panel.

In a BBC documentar­y to be broadcast tomorrow, Hosten defends the contest and expresses her disappoint­ment that feminists did not come to her defence when she faced allegation­s of a fix.

She says: ‘There is nothing wrong with beauty contests. If feminism is all about choice, surely we had a choice of entering a contest and of using the contest as a stepping stone to anything else.’

Hosten, who later became a diplomat, claims the media had whipped up the fix claims because it couldn’t cope with the fact that two black contestant­s – her and South Africa’s Pearl Jansen – had been named winner and runner-up.

She says: ‘They thought that couldn’t happen. It had to be fixed. The Women’s Liberation movement did not address that issue.’

 ??  ?? TARGET: Michael Aspel, left, and in his role as the Miss World host, above
TARGET: Michael Aspel, left, and in his role as the Miss World host, above

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