Michael Christiansen
Michael Robin Christiansen (7 April 1927 – 12 June 1984) was a British newspaper editor.The son of Arthur Christiansen, editor of the ''Daily Express'', Michael followed his father into journalism. He worked first at the ''Daily Mail'', then in 1956 became Deputy Subeditor of the ''Daily Mirror''. He rose to become assistant editor, and in 1962 gave John Pilger his first job in Britain, on the basis that he supposed he would be good at cricket.
In 1963, Christiansen was appointed as editor of the ''Sunday Mirror'', remaining in post until he became deputy editor of the ''Daily Mirror'' in 1972, then editor in 1974. He suffered a stroke the following year, forcing him to retire. In later life, he ran a bookshop in Chelmsford, Essex. He died there on 12 June 1984, aged 57.
In 2013, Christiansen's son Rupert published an account of growing up with his father called ''I Know You're Going to be Happy''. Provided by Wikipedia
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by Koonlawee Nademanee, Hariharan Raju, Sofia V. De Noronha, Michael Papadakis, Laurence Robinson, Stephen Rothery, Naomasa Makita, Shinya Kowase, Nakorn Boonmee, Vorapot Vitayakritsirikul, Samrerng Ratanarapee, Sanjay Sharma, Allard C. Van Der Wal, Michael Christiansen, Hanno L. Tan, Arthur A. Wilde, Akihiko Nogami, Mary N. Sheppard, Gumpanart Veerakul, Elijah R. Behr
Published 2018
Get full textPublished 2018
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