|
Nisha
Pillai was born in Calcutta but spent her childhood in Bombay. Her parents
returned to India on their retirement where they now keep an eye on their
daughter by turning on the television. She attended a girls school in
Birmingham where she found herself the only Asian pupil in her year at a
school where there were few Asians at all. She attended the London School
of Economics and as she puts it: ‘spent most of my time as a theatre
impresario, putting on plays, rather than in the economics library’.
Her
first job after leaving university was at Schroders Investment Bank as a
graduate trainee but soon found this was not her calling in life. The
Investors Chronicle, her next position, gave her the training in
journalism that led to being a reporter on the Money Programme for the
BBC. She then spent 9 month investigating the financial empire of Robert
Maxwell and the programme ‘The Max Factor’ won a Royal Television
Society award in London.
Nisha
followed this by reporting for Panorama, the BBC current affairs programme
for 5 years from 1990 to 1995. She then joined BBC World in October 1995
and lists some of the highlights of her career on the channel so far. Live
coverage of 50th anniversary of Independence from Pakistan. Nisha was
‘bowled over’ by the hospitality and generosity of the Pakistani
people. Presenting BBC World’s coverage of Israel’s 50th anniversary
of independence. Presenting Hardtalk, BBC World’s daily interview
programme, when Tim Sebastian is away. Among the notable interviewees she
has questioned on this programme include: Sir Yehudi Menuhin, V.S. Naipaul
and Phil Collins.
(BBC NEWS
Publicity)
|
 BBC NEWS with Nisha Pillai Titles and
Headlines
(60s/3.59 Mb)
 BBC NEWS with Nisha Pillai End of the news bulletin
(17s/1.10 Mb)
|