Mavis Nicholson is a Welsh writer and radio and television broadcaster, born in Wales, her career has been based in England
Early life
She was born Mavis Mainwaring and spent her childhood in Briton Ferry. She became a student at Swansea University. There in 1949 she met the writer and journalist, Geoffrey Nicholson, whom she married in 1952, and with whom she had three sons. In 1951, at the end of her undergraduate career at Swansea University, Nicholson won a scholarship to train as an advertising copywriter and with this moved to London. There she and her husband were at the centre of a lively social circle, including the journalist and broadcaster John Morgan and the novelist Kingsley Amis. According to Peter Corrigan's obituary of her husband, Mavis and Geoff Nicholson "...became a much-loved double-act. Amis did not always approve of their views and claimed to have invented the word 'lefties' during one little set-to with them. While it was true that the Nicholsons didn't have dinner parties as such – they invited people for an argument and threw some food in – they were by no means belligerent but had in abundance the Welsh love of debate."
Early career
Nicholson stopped her work as an advertising copywriter when she had her children, but her second career as a broadcaster began when, because of her probing and engaging conversational style at the dinner table, she was asked by Thames Television to host a programme on newly launched daytime television.
Broadcasting
Her first presenting job was on the 1971-72 show Tea Break. By April 1972 this had become Good Afternoon, after which her TV career spanned the next 25 years. She then presented British television programmes such as After Noon, After Noon Plus and Mavis on 4 from the 1970s to 1990s, on which she interviewed celebrities of the stature of Elizabeth Taylor, Kenneth Williams, David Bowie, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. Her February 1979 interview with David Bowie is widely regarded as one of the best interviews ever done with him. Nicholson presented the Channel 4 programme A Plus 4, which ran from 1984 to 1986. In 1983, she presented the discussion series Predicaments, also a Thames production for Channel 4; she dismissed the view that the programme was "voyeuristic" as "middle-class queasiness". For the BBC, she appeared on Start the Week regularly in the 1970s, presented You and Yours in 1976 and hosted a number of interview and discussion series, including Open Air from 1988 to 1989 and Welsh editions of the Radio 2 Arts Programme in the 1990s. In the 1980s she and her husband returned to Wales to live in a farmhouse in Powys. In the early 1990s she fronted a number of Channel 4 series produced by YoYo Films, such as Third Wave, In with Mavis, Moments of Crisis and Faces of the Family. She also presented the discussion show Right or Wrong, made by Central Television and taken by some other regions including Meridian. Her last work for television was Oldie TV in 1997, a television version of The Oldie magazine. However, in 2005 she returned to interview Elaine Morgan in an On Show programme for BBC One Wales, broadcast on 13 March that year. On 25 August 2016, BBC One Wales broadcast a profile called Being Mavis Nicholson: the Greatest TV Interviewer of All Time? in a peak 9pm slot.
Writing
She writes for The Oldie, and is its resident agony aunt.
Radio
She has also presented several radio shows, including a history of the department store and a look back at her childhood.
Publication
She is the author of the 1992 book Martha Jane & Me: A Girlhood In Wales.