Anthony Leslie "Tony" Bastable was an English television presenter, who was one of the original presenters of the children's magazine programme Magpie.
In the early 1960s, Bastable applied for a job as a television news reporter for Southern Television, but was turned down for being "too young". Instead he was given a job presenting a children's programme. Within 18 months he was working for ATV as a presenter of children's shows, sports magazines and schools' programmes. In 1968 he moved to Thames Television and began presenting Magpie, a new children's programme, with Susan Stranks and Pete Brady. Magpie was effectively a "groovier" version of the BBC's Blue Peter. In 1972, he became Magpie's producer. During his career, Bastable produced and presented many one-off programmes, including historical documentaries and current affairs programmes, and presented and commentated on many outside and sporting events. He presented two series of Problems, a programme on sexual difficulties, screened late, and with Claire Rayner in the first series, and Jenny Conway and Paul Brown for the entire run. For Thames he presented the Drive-In programme with Shaw Taylor from 1973 to 1978, and also its successor Wheels from 1980 to 1981. In 1976 he presented Miss Thames Television; he also wrote and presented 1776, the ITV programme on the US bicentenary, and he provided the commentaries for the award-winning historical series English Garden, which were delivered by Sir John Gielgud. For nine years Bastable presented the consumer protection series Money-Go-Round, and also presented shows such as Mind Over Matter, a programme he devised with Kit Pedler that investigated the paranormal, and the computing series Database as well as 4 Computer Buffs. In addition, he was a panellist on radio shows and he narrated the Channel 4 nature programme Profiles Of Nature.
Bastable was a qualified cricket umpire and founded the Institute of Cricket Umpires and Scorers. In 1972 he founded The Magpies, a wandering cricket team taking its name from the TV programme. He married three times. His first marriage was in 1969 to June Buchan, from whom he was divorced in 1971. In 1974, he married Jackie Colkett. They had a daughter, but divorced in 1992. He married for the third time, to Anita Westwood, in 2001.
Popular culture references
refer to Bastable in their song "I Love You Because ", from the 1985 album Back in the DHSS. He is also referenced in the song "Tony Bastable vs. John Noakes" by The Dentists, from the 1985 album Some People Are on the PitchThey Think It's All Over It Is Now.