Red Robinson

Red Robinson
Born (1937-03-30) March 30, 1937
Comox, British Columbia, Canada
Occupation Radio/Television personality
Years active 1953–present
Website Red Robinson

Dr. Red Robinson (born March 30, 1937 in Comox, British Columbia) is a Canadian disc jockey. He was the first disc jockey to play rock and roll music, in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Early years

While still in high school in 1954, Robinson started working as a disc jockey at the age of 16 at radio station CJOR. His first record 'spun' as a professional DJ was "Marie" by the Four Tunes. He was one of the first DJs to play Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, and other Rock and Roll artists on a regular basis in Canada. In 1956, he won the Disc Jockey of the Northwest award from the Province newspaper in an audience poll, and he appeared frequently as guest host on the CBC Television network program "Cross Canada Hit Parade."

Career

Robinson was emcee for the Elvis Presley show at Empire Stadium in Vancouver in 1957 and for the Beatles in 1964. He also became the program director of two Vancouver radio stations, CFUN from 1962 to 1968 and CJOR from 1968 to 1970. Over the years, he worked at many radio and TV stations in Vancouver and Portland, including CKWX, KGW, KGW-TV, CFUN, and the CBC, CISL (twice) as well as CFUN-FM. He also served in the United States Army until his honourable discharge. He has co-authored two books, Rockbound and Backstage Vancouver. Rockbound is his personal accounts of early rock and roll. Backstage Vancouver looks at the rich history of entertainment in Vancouver.

Robinson hosted the first television quiz show dedicated to trivia, titled Trivia, on Vancouver CBC Television station CBUT for three years. This show inspired three panelists to create Trivial Pursuit. The name Trivia as applied to a board game had already been copyrighted by Red and his business partner Jan Nablo. From 1976 to 1996, he hosted the annual "Timmy's Christmas Telethon" for the B.C. Lions Society for Children with Disabilities on a regional network of CBC affiliates in British Columbia, which helped raise over $75 million during his tenure as host. He hosted Red's Classic Theatre each Sunday at 9 p.m. for over 12 years on KVOS-TV. The program was broadcast from Vancouver to Seattle. On his program, he interviewed Tony Curtis, Charlton Heston, Debbie Reynolds, Mickey Rooney and others. In total he hosted 618 shows. In 1995, Robinson and a host of pioneer deejays were feted at the opening of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio. He was one of a select group elected by his peers in radio and records.

Robinson was a feature writer for 20 years for Vancouver entertainment and television listings magazine TV Week. He was also a partner in the Vancouver advertising agency Vrlak-Robinson. The agency had over $35 million worth of accounts when Robinson retired from the agency business. He had previously worked in the advertising industry in 1967, but when asked to move to CJOR, Jim Pattison insisted that he sell off his business and dedicated his energies to the radio station. At that time, Robinson had become the first agency for McDonald's restaurants first entry into Canada. He became the first agency for the food chain and created their first regional commercial and appeared in it.

Playwright Dean Regan wrote a play about Robinson's early days in rock and roll and titled it Red Rock Diner. It played for a significant run twice in Vancouver as well as in Toronto and Kansas City, plus myriad other cities in Canada. Robinson was recently invited to emcee the Michael Bublé wedding reception held in Vancouver. The prestigious affair was attended by David Foster, Jann Arden, and Russell Peters.

Red's definitive biography "Red Robinson: The Last DJ" by Robin Brunet was published in October 2016 from Harbour Publishing.

Awards and Honors

More Honors

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.