John Diamond | |
---|---|
Born |
Hackney, London, England |
10 May 1953
Died | 2 March 2001 Westminster, London, England |
(aged 47)
Occupation | Journalist |
Notable credit(s) | Sunday Times, Daily Mirror |
Spouse(s) |
Nigella Lawson (m. 1992–2001; his death) |
Children | Cosima Diamond Bruno Diamond |
John Diamond (10 May 1953 – 2 March 2001) was a British journalist and broadcaster.
Diamond was the son of a biochemist and a fashion designer, and had a secular Jewish upbringing. He grew up in Upper Clapton and Woodford Green, he then attended the City of London School and trained as an English teacher at Trent Park College of Education, now part of Middlesex University. Later he taught at an all-girls school Dalston Mount Comprehensive, before switching to journalism.
He wrote a regular column for the Saturday edition of The Times from 1992 onwards called "Something for the Weekend", and worked as a presenter on BBC radio and television. He met his second wife, then journalist Nigella Lawson, when they were both writing for The Sunday Times. They married in Venice in 1992.
In 1997, Diamond was diagnosed with throat cancer. He wrote about his experiences with cancer in his newspaper column, for which he won a prestigious What The Papers Say award. In 1999 he was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize for his book C: Because Cowards Get Cancer Too.... A BBC documentary was filmed for Inside Story which followed him through various treatments, and showed his frustration with his speech difficulties following throat, and later tongue, surgery.
C: Because Cowards Get Cancer Too... was adapted into a play by Victoria Coren called A Lump In My Throat, which was itself later adapted for television. Diamond's second book, Snake Oil and Other Preoccupations, was edited by his brother-in-law Dominic Lawson, editor of The Sunday Telegraph, and published posthumously (with a foreword by Richard Dawkins). It contained the six chapters of his "uncomplimentary look at the world of complementary medicine" which he had completed before his death, and some of his columns from The Times and the Jewish Chronicle.