Lady Lucinda Lambton

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Lady Lucinda Lambton (born 10 May 1943), also known as Lady Lucinda Worsthorne, is an English writer, photographer, and broadcaster on architectural subjects.

Early life

Lucinda Lambton was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, the eldest child of the Conservative defence minister Lord Lambton.<ref name=CP>Durham, Earl of (UK, 1833), cracroftspeerage.co.uk, accessed 7 October 2020</ref> The family lived in County Durham and London, where her sister Anne Lambton, later to become an actress, was born in 1954.

Lambton spent six years at Queen's Gate School, London, then went to a finishing school in Florence, but she ended her education without gaining any qualifications and became a professional photographer working for various newspapers,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> including the Evening Standard.<ref name="glowmagazine1">Template:Cite web</ref> Her first assignment was working for the historian Frank Atkinson, who was collecting artefacts to form the basis of Beamish Museum in County Durham.<ref name="hudsonsheritage1">Template:Cite web</ref>

Marriages

On 16 January 1965, Lambton married Henry Mark Harrod, eldest son of Sir Roy Harrod. They were divorced in 1973. In January 1986, she married secondly Sir Edmund Cameron-Ramsay-Fairfax-Lucy, 6th Baronet, and divorced him in 1989. In May 1991, she married thirdly the journalist Sir Peregrine Worsthorne,<ref name=CP/><ref>Hester Lacey, Lucinda Lambton and Peregrine Worsthorne: How We Met in The Independent (London), 29 January 1995, accessed 21 January 2014</ref> and they stayed together until his death in October 2020.

Career

Lambton has researched, written and presented 55 films for the BBC and 25 films for ITV. They include On The Throne – The History of the Lavatory, The Great North Road, A Cabinet of Curiosities and The Other House of Windsor. Sublime Suburbia, her series of four films for ITV about the architectural and historic delights of London's suburbs, won the Regional Television award for the best documentary series of 2003. A further series of Sublime Suburbia in six parts, followed in 2004.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

She has written and taken the photographs for 14 books including: Temples of Convenience, a history of the lavatory; Beastly Buildings, about architecture for animals; Vanishing Victoriana; An Album of Curious Houses and Lucinda Lambton's A-Z of Britain, a companion to the 26-part television series for the BBC.<ref name="hudsonsheritage1"/>

Lambton has made presentations, often illustrated with her own slides, throughout the British Isles, and in America.<ref name="glowmagazine1"/> She has been sponsored by the National Art Collections Fund at the Royal Geographical Society, and provided several of the annual talks for the National Trust at The Royal Festival Hall. She has also travelled on board the QE2 to speak for the National Trust and the Royal Oak Foundation and she has spoken at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. She sometimes opens new buildings and museums, and hosts architectural and canine prize giving events.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

She has made several series for BBC Radio 4, including Bringing the House Down, Elevations and Revelations, Pride of Place, an argument against modern architecture, Hidden Treasures and Listed, illuminating efforts of the Twentieth Century Society to save notable post-World War II buildings. She has been a castaway on Desert Island Discs.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Lambton is a regular contributor to newspapers and magazines, including The Oldie,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Daily Telegraph, The Times, Country Life, and the Daily Mail.

She is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects and an honorary member of the Chelsea Arts Club, as well as President of the Avoncroft Museum of Historic Buildings. She is a patron of the Cinema Theatre Association. She is an Honorary Vice President of The Crossness Engines Trust. She is president of the Garden History Society.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

References

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