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Canon Noel Vincent (Read 6967 times)
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Canon Noel Vincent
Aug 2nd, 2009, 2:13pm
 
I have received information that Noel Vincent passed away on Friday last (30th July).

The funeral takes place at St. Peter’s, Formby on Monday 10th August at 1200.

A lovely man with whom most of us worked during his 20 years at the Beeb.
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Re: Canon Noel Vincent
Reply #1 - Aug 17th, 2009, 11:01am
 
This is taken from The Independent:

Noel Vincent: Priest and broadcaster who was a staunch defender of the BBC's religious programming
By Ernie Rea, Head of Religious Broadcasting, BBC 1989-2001
Friday, 14 August 2009


Even a quarter of a century ago there were many in senior positions at the BBC who felt that programmes of Christian worship were anachronistic. They could be replaced by programmes which could "reach a younger audience," one speaker suggested at a conference for the staff of BBC Religious Broadcasting in 1983.

A newcomer to the department spoke up in protest. "Programmes which reflect the worship of believing people must be at the heart of what we do," said Noël Vincent, a man convinced of the unique place of Christianity in the hearts of the majority of the British people, and of its centrality to our historical and cultural life. It was a vision to which he remained true for an entire career. Canon Noël Thomas Vincent, who has died aged 72, was a priest and broadcaster whose mission was to connect with individuals, but whose ministry extended to millions.

He was born in 1936 in Kampala, Uganda, but was forced to flee with his missionary family across Africa on the outbreak of the Second World War. His family settled in Worcestershire, where Vincent attended the King's School Worcester from 1945 to 1955. He had a fine treble voice and served as a chorister at Worcester Cathedral. His love of music, especially the music of the liturgy, was a lifelong inspiration to him.

In August 1955 he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant National Service Officer with the Worcestershire Regiment, serving in Catterick, Worcester, Iserlohn (BAOR) and Jamaica. After finishing National Service in 1957 he read Economics and Theology at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, receiving his MA in 1964. He trained for Ordination at Ridley Hall, Cambridge, and was ordained in the Newcastle upon Tyne diocese in 1963. He served his first incumbency as the vicar of Holbrook, near Belper in Derbyshire.

In 1974 he became diocesan information officer and started working as a contract producer at BBC Radio Derby, co-ordinating interdenominational teams of volunteers and producing worship programmes and talks. He maintained his own parish responsibilities, as priest in charge of Osmaston and Edlaston, two small country parishes near Ashbourne, Derbyshire.

In 1978 Vincent moved on to the staff of Radio Derby, taking on a wide range of production tasks, and in the autumn of 1982 joined the production team of BBC Religious Broadcasting. Vincent's success as a priest undoubtedly lay in his ability to connect individually with every member of a congregation from the pulpit, and this talent translated into his broadcasting. Through the 1980s he produced hundreds of radio and TV programmes across the north of England, including Songs of Praise, Morning Service and Choral Evensong.

Vincent was driven by a determination to make worship accessible. By 1991 he had become editor of worship programmes, reflecting his ability to bring together teams of people with sensitivity and tact, during a period of great upheaval within the BBC. His was not an easy task. There were many in senior management at the BBC who wanted worship programmes replaced by programmes which they felt would attract a wider and younger audience. Vincent fought those battles with the tenacity and stubbornness which he had learnt from his National Service days.

Vincent's final promotion was to become chief assistant to the head of Religious Broadcasting in 1993. He fulfilled the role with great distinction, while offering pastoral care to staff who had been displaced when the BBC moved the Religious Broadcasting department from London to Manchester. In 1995 he retired from the BBC, and in 1996 was appointed Canon Treasurer of Liverpool Cathedral, during the final years of Derrick Walters's dynamic tenure as Dean.

Vincent remained in this role until 2002, when he retired to Formby on the Lancashire coast. During retirement, he kept up an active programme. He found great satisfaction in exercising his remarkable pastoral gifts as a part time chaplain at HMP Altcourse, Fazakerley. He continued to lead the Daily Service on Radio 4, where his became a familiar and much loved voice.

Vincent was diagnosed with cancer in 2007. He died peacefully in Aintree University Hospital on 31 July with his wife Angela at his side. He leaves two children, four grandchildren and a national congregation of people who were touched by his sincere personal ministry and accessible but accomplished broadcasts.

Noël Vincent, priest and broadcaster: born Kampala, Uganda 19 December 1936; married (two children); died Liverpool 31 July 2009.
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Re: Canon Noel Vincent
Reply #2 - Sep 3rd, 2009, 1:34pm
 
This is taken from The Times, September 3, 2009

Canon Noel Vincent: broadcaster on BBC's Daily Service

Noel Vincent spent more than 20 years in the BBC’s religious broadcasting department where he was not only a respected and admired producer, but an outstanding broadcaster himself.

Vincent studied at what was then Fitzwilliam House and then Ridley Hall, a choice that indicated less than total enthusiasm for the radical theology for which 1960s Cambridge was famous.

He was ordained priest in 1964 at St Basil and St James’ in Fenham in the diocese of Newcastle, where he was curate, and met his wife Angela, who taught in the Sunday school and ran the Brownie pack. Later on he was to commend worship in cathedrals because, he said, “people know they won’t be pounced on to run the Brownies”.

In 1967 he became curate at Prudhoe and three years later moved to the diocese of Derby to be vicar of Holbrook. He was an honorary canon of Derby from 1978-85.

In 1974 Vincent became involved in religious broadcasting when he was appointed diocesan information officer for the diocese of Derby and also priest-in-charge of Osmaston with Edlaston. A radio natural, Vincent became a producer with Radio Derby and then went on attachment to the BBC’s religious broadcasting department in Manchester.

He quickly became the senior producer there, then moved to London first to succeed Stephen Oliver, who had left to become vicar of Leeds, as chief producer, and latterly as chief assistant to the head of BBC religious broadcasting, the Rev Ernie Rea.

While in London, Vincent was an honorary curate at St Mary’s Twickenham. Although he never left colleagues in any doubt that he was a loyal Anglican, Vincent was first and foremost a BBC producer.

When in Manchester he oversaw moves away from traditional church-based worship, exploring more innovative and intimate formats. He directed many Songs of Praise programmes, notably one from Hexham Abbey that was one of the first to use coloured lighting; a memorable Remembrance Day edition from Accrington with survivors from the trenches; and the wettest ever open-air programme from Ambleside.

Vincent was also responsible for a series of children’s religious programmes, Knock Knock and Umbrella, about the legends and myths of the world’s faiths.

When it was decided to move the religious broadcasting department to Manchester Vincent played a considerable part in persuading colleagues who regarded this move as a form of Siberian banishment that it was only so if they persisted in believing that.

In 1995 Vincent retired from the BBC staff and became canon treasurer of Liverpool Cathedral, but he continued his important and valued role as a radio religious broadcaster, contributing regularly to the Daily Service on Radio 4 (where he won an appreciative audience), Pause for Thought on Radio 2 and Sunday Worship.

He was someone who was naturally comfortable with worship in cathedrals. As a boy he sang in Worcester Cathedral choir under Sir Ivor Atkins, in the days when Holy Week services were sung by the choir on its knees.

However, he recognised that radio worship often demanded something less formal than the strictly liturgical: in 2005 he co-presented an edition of Sunday Worship which focused on humour and laughter, with the comedian Ken Dodd.

While at Liverpool he produced a guide to the cathedral’s stained glass, was a member of Liverpool John Moore University’s scholarship board and part-time chaplain at Altcourse Fazakerley prison. He continued to lead worship after retiring to Formby in 2005.

Vincent was a gently impressive producer, a fine broadcaster and both inside and outside the BBC a natural pastor.

He is survived by his wife, Angela, a son and a daughter.

Canon Noel Vincent, priest and broadcaster, was born on December 19, 1936. He died of cancer on July 31, 2009, aged 72
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