Gabrielle Hinsliff | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1971-07-04)4 July 1971 (age 54) |
| Alma mater | Queens' College, Cambridge |
| Occupation | Journalist |
| Years active | 1994–present |
| Spouse | James Clark |
| Father | Geoffrey Hinsliff |
Gabrielle Seal Hinsliff (born 4 July 1971)[1][2] is an English journalist and columnist forThe Guardian.[3]
Born inChelmsford[4] she is one of the daughters of the actorGeoffrey Hinsliff. She attendedQueens' College, Cambridge, graduating with a first-class degree in English.[5]
After two years at theGrimsby Evening Telegraph from 1994 to 1996, Hinsliff joined theDaily Mail, where she was successively a news reporter and health reporter, before becoming a political reporter in 1997,[5] and finally chief political correspondent the following year. She joinedThe Observer in March 2000, initially in the same post, followingAndy McSmith, who had joinedThe Daily Telegraph.[6] Hinsliff was the youngest political editor of a national newspaper when she was promoted in December 2004, this time succeedingKamal Ahmed, who had been her immediate superior atThe Observer since her original appointment.[5][6][7]
Although Hinsliff loved the job, she resigned in late September 2009 "to get a life", to move "out of London to write, think, do some projects I never had time for" and "to spend more time with her husband and son".[2][7]
Hinsliff's bookHalf a Wife (Chatto & Windus) was published in 2012.Eleanor Mills inThe Sunday Times wrote that it is elevated "from the normal middle-class whinge" by "the rigorous analysis she brings to the wider forces that have shaped modern family life and how they might be re-sliced so that families can live differently". Hinsliff, Mills writes, "calls for a non-gender-aligned sharing out of domestic tasks".[8]
Hinsliff spent a period atThe Times until July 2014, before becoming a columnist onThe Guardian the following September.[9]
In July 2012, she began as editor-at-large ofGrazia magazine contributing interviews and columns.[10] Hinsliff contributes to BBC and Sky programmes.
Hinsliff is married to James Clark, a public relations professional.[11]