Sir Michael Parkinson's son says he would not have been a TV star with out his spouse Mary's 'ethical compass'

Sir Michael Parkinson's son says the chat present king - who interviewed stars together with John Lennon, Muhammad Ali and Madonna - would by no means have achieved such onscreen success with out the love and help of his spouse, Mary.

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Mike Parkinson advised Sky News: "She impressed him. She gave him confidence. She was his mentor.

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"But also, she was his morality. She was his moral core.

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"She advised him when he was making the unsuitable selections. She advised him and he made the appropriate selections."

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Known for his interviews with the world's biggest celebrities, Parkinson died last week aged 88, following a short sickness.

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A journalist and presenter in her personal proper, Mary Parkinson introduced the Nineteen Seventies journal programme Good Afternoon and went on to seem repeatedly as a panellist on Through The Keyhole.

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Now 87, she married Parkinson in 1959 they usually went on to have three sons collectively.

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More on Michael Parkinson

Speaking to Wilfred Frost on Sky News Today, Mike Parkinson joked: "She nearly had to divorce him when he refused to go and have dinner with Clint Eastwood.

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"He turned down the chance and my mom did not communicate to him for about two weeks."

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Following Parkinson's loss of life, tributes poured in from around the world from followers and high-profile figures, a lot of whom had been interviewed by the chat present host.

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Mike defined the "strange experience" of shedding your father when he is a well known public determine, saying: "We knew him as a father and a husband of 64 years.

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"And as a lot as we adored what individuals stated about him and felt immensely proud about it, it does have an odd impact upon you as a non-public individual as a result of it pushes your grief to the aspect.

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"You don't almost feel as if you can properly grieve because you want to allow the public, that knew him in a different way, to grieve [first]."

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He stated his father would have been "shocked" by all of the tributes, including, "he had absolutely no sense of the legacy that people talk about or the iconic status".

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Detailing the challenges of rising up with a well-known dad, he stated: "It's a weird experience… You have this man at home, but he's also public property and you have to share him with the world."

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He stated whereas the household would get pleasure from Sunday lunches collectively, his father's work would typically encroach.

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"We were also acutely aware that when he was doing a show, it was very much the house was quite tense," he stated.

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"He was very nervous beforehand. And we had to sort of take a backseat and let him get on with what he wanted to do. He was quite traditional that way."

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With perks like getting to satisfy Kermit The Frog, Mike stated rising up in a time earlier than cell phones and social media helped hold his childhood "normal".

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He defined: "Because the cult of celebrity hadn't existed then, I wasn't really aware, my friends weren't interested in what my dad did for a living, their parents kind of were a bit more interested, but no one really noticed it because there wasn't a mobile phone, there wasn't the Internet.

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"So, subsequently I had a really regular childhood, however I had this bizarre existence the place I might go and meet these extraordinary individuals."

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Looking again at his father's humble beginnings rising up in a council home in Cudworth, close to Barnsley, he says regardless of his success, Parkinson "had no confidence in himself".

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With a working-class background, he stated Parkinson "constantly felt that he was going to get a tap on the shoulder to say, 'You don't belong here,' because he was amongst people who he thought were his superiors…

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"He all the time felt, to a sure extent, that he needed to show himself, and that made him very insecure. That made him drive himself ahead on a regular basis and query himself."

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Frequently important of the decline of TV and the superstar in his latter years, Mike says Parkinson was foremost a journalist and never a TV star: "He was never interested in fame for fame's sake… He approached every single person, no matter how famous, with a journalistic eye.

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"He wasn't a comic. He did not have a patter. He did not have any form of sketch to throw to.

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"In the end, he was a facilitator, he interviewed, but you had to be able to deliver. And that's what he was about."

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Unable to jot down in his closing years, Mike says it was that loss that brought on his father probably the most disappointment, concluding: "In the end, if you ask him now up there when he went to the pearly gates and they asked him what he did for a living, he would have said journalist because that's what gave him the most pleasure."

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