NEVILLE WILLOUGHBY: MAY 5, 1937 – DECEMBER 20, 2006
‘He was one of the best news reporters in Jamaica’
- Lindy Delapenha
‘He would just pull you into the whole situation and before you knew it you were doing what you thought you couldn’t do.’
- Marie Garth, former broadcaster RJR
‘His stewardship was characterised by an easy competence coupled with humility’
- Cordel Green, Executive Director, Broadcasting Commission
NEVILLE Willoughby, who died yesterday at the University Hospital of the West Indies, has been celebrated as one of Jamaica’s premier broadcasters whose career spanned almost five decades.
Willoughby, who was 69 years old, succumbed to injuries he sustained in an auto accident along Molynes Road, St. Andrew, Tuesday evening.
Doctors had listed his condition as serious.
Willoughby, a graduate of Jamaica College and the University of Toronto, worked at the rival Radio Jamaica (RJR) and Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation (JBC) for several years.
He started his journalism career at RJR in the late 1950s but moved to the JBC in the 1960s. In the early 1970s, Willoughby returned to RJR where, for many years, he hosted The Evening People Show, a folksy call-in programme.
At the time of his death, he was employed to that company as an announcer.
Alongside Allan Magnus, Don Topping, Marie Garth and Henry Stennett, Willoughby was part of a formidable RJR team during the 1970s.
Topping described his long-time friend as a “quiet, mild-mannered person”.
“His strongest point was his articulation which was clear, his language was always simple and easy to understand,” said Topping. “His knowledge was also broad-based.”
Barbara Gloudon, who also works with RJR, first met Willoughby on a school trip to Haiti in the 1950s. She said he was the “consummate professional”.
“He was one of those persons you could never say a bad word about,” she said. “For a person with so much talent, Neville never blew his own horn.”
Willoughby also tried his hand at singing and had a big hit song in the catchy Yuletide number, ‘Christmas JA’.
Shortly after moving back to RJR, Willoughby snared an exclusive interview with rising star Bob Marley of The Wailers in 1973. The group was in turmoil at the time, with founding members Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingstone on the verge of leaving for solo careers.
Willoughby travelled to the Rasta commune of Bull Bay, St. Andrew where he met Marley and members of his band.
“He (Marley) was very relaxed and willing to talk about anything,” Willoughby said in a 1998 interview. “I knew he was special from I heard ‘Thank You Lord’.”
The interview was later released in album form and remained a popular seller when reissued in compact disc by RAS Records, a Washington DC-based independent label.
Neville Willoughby is survived by two daughters.
SOURCE: Jamaica Gleaner

Raymond Banton said,
I have listened to you for many years, and i am sadden to here of your passing, I will surely missed you on the airwaves.