
Dame Jenni Murray, the formidable and pioneering broadcaster who served as the heartbeat of BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour for over three decades, has died at the age of 75.
The BBC confirmed the news on Friday, following a statement from her family. Dame Jenni passed away on March 12, leaving behind a legacy that transformed the landscape of British radio. From 1987 until her departure in 2020, she reigned as the longest-serving presenter in the history of Woman’s Hour, a programme she defined with her signature blend of intellectual rigour, warmth, and an uncompromising pursuit of the truth.
Tributes have poured in from across the media and political spectrum. BBC Director-General Tim Davie described her as “a broadcasting icon” who created a “safe space” for listeners. Baroness Harriet Harman hailed her as the “broadcasting wing of the women’s movement,” noting that “we all owe her” for the way she shifted national conversations on gender, health, and policy.
A Career of Fearless Inquiry
Born in Barnsley and educated at the University of Hull, Dame Jenni’s career began in local radio before she moved into the national spotlight on BBC Two’s Newsnight and Radio 4’s Today programme. However, it was on Woman’s Hour where she became a household name.
She was famously “whip-smart” and “cut through the BS,” as former colleagues recalled. Her interview roster was a who’s who of 20th and 21st-century history: from the flirtatious charm of Jack Nicholson to the steely interrogation of Margaret Thatcher over childcare. She famously asked Hillary Clinton how she could forgive her husband’s infidelity and confronted every British Prime Minister of the last 30 years with the same relentless poise.
Personal Courage and Advocacy
Dame Jenni’s connection with her audience was forged not just through her journalism, but through her radical honesty. In 2006, she announced her breast cancer diagnosis live on air, choosing to bring her listeners along on her journey through surgery and recovery.
Even after leaving her daily radio post in 2020, her commitment to health awareness remained steadfast. That same year, she took part in ITV’s The Real Full Monty to encourage women to check for signs of cancer. More recently, in late 2025, she shared her experiences with a severe bout of Covid-19, continuing to use her platform to highlight the realities of the healthcare system.
An Indelible Legacy
Beyond the microphone, Dame Jenni was a prolific author and columnist, writing candidly about the menopause, weight loss, and her own “not so dutiful” life. Her final broadcast in October 2020 concluded with Helen Reddy’s anthem I Am Woman, a fitting coda for a woman who spent 33 years ensuring that women’s voices were not just heard, but understood.
Dame Jenni is survived by her husband, David Forgham-Bailey, and their two sons.
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