Background
After leaving school he became a copy boy with the Lancashire Evening Post, where his father was a printer.
After leaving school he became a copy boy with the Lancashire Evening Post, where his father was a printer.
Born in Clitheroe, Lancashire, he attended Clitheroe Royal Grammar School.
He was Head of Sport for British Broadcasting Corporation Television from 1963 to 1973, Controller of British Broadcasting Corporation 1 from 1973 to 1977, and Managing Director of Thames Television from 1977 to 1985. In 1942 he joined the Royal Marines, and during the next five years he saw service in Southeast Asia. After he was demobbed in 1947, he rejoined the Evening Post as a reporter and feature writer, and then for five years he edited a local weekly paper in Clitheroe.
He joined the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1955 as a production assistant in Outside Broadcasting.
In 1958, he devised the Saturday afternoon sports showcase Grandstand, which was an immediate success and ran for nearly half a century. In 1963 he was promoted to Head of Sport.
In 1964, under his control of the department, the British Broadcasting Corporation introduced the football highlights programme Match of the Day. Also during his tenure the British Broadcasting Corporation covered an increasing number of ambitious sporting events, including organising extensive coverage as host broadcaster of the 1966 World Cup and showing coverage live by satellite from Mexico of both the 1968 Olympic Games and 1970 World Cup.
In 1973, after a decade in charge of the sports department of British Broadcasting Corporation Television, he was promoted to Controller of British Broadcasting Corporation 1, the Corporation’s premier television network.
Despite coming from a sports background, he was able to oversee a successful era of programming across all types and genres, with the introduction of popular new sitcoms and dramas. He was the most successful controller the channel has ever had, winning an average audience share of 45 per cent during his period. In 1977, he accepted an offer to leave the British Broadcasting Corporation after over twenty years to join Thames Television as Managing Director.
In 1984, Cowgill, in a foretaste of changes to come within the industry, successfully resisted demands by the ACTT union for additional payments to use new technology, by maintaining a reduced service while the other Independent Television contractors met demands for a 20% rise in pay.
During his tenure at Thames he tried to acquire the popular 1980s soap opera Dallas which had previously been associated with the British Broadcasting Corporation, abandoning a gentleman"s agreement not to poach purchased programming. Other Independent Television companies refused to show Dallas if Thames retained it, and this led to Cowgill"s resignation in 1985 at the age of 58.
Towards the end of his life, Cowgill argued for the abolition of the Television Licence that finances the British Broadcasting Corporation: "In the context of more than 200 channels how can little green vans going up and down the country saying effectively: "What are you watching and have you got a licence to watch it?" survive?"
His autobiography, Mr Action Replay, was published in 2006 ().