Background
Leslie was born in Rawalpindi, British India, where she spent her early years, attending an English-language school and "witnessed the killing trains of Partition".
Leslie was born in Rawalpindi, British India, where she spent her early years, attending an English-language school and "witnessed the killing trains of Partition".
Leslie was born in Rawalpindi, British India, where she spent her early years, attending an English-language school and "witnessed the killing trains of Partition". In 1950, her parents sent her away to boarding school in England, where she attended the Presentation Convent School in Matlock, Derbyshire, and Street Leonards-Mayfield School, East Sussex. She went on, two years later, to attend, Oxford.
Her first job in journalism was at the Daily Express in Manchester in 1962. Leslie moved to the Daily Mail in 1967. At the Reuters/Press Gazette launch of the Newspaper Hall of Fame she was named as one of the most influential journalists of the last forty years.
In David Randall’s The Great Reporters (celebrating the 13 best British and American journalists of all time) she is profiled as "the most versatile reporter ever".
She is a regular current affairs broadcaster on the British Broadcasting Corporation (Question Time, Any Questions?, Dateline London), Sky News, and international broadcasting organisations. Episodes in reporting Significant events on which she reported include the fall of the Berlin Wall, the failed coup against Mikhail Gorbachev, and Nelson Mandela"s final walk to freedom.
She has made secret interviews in Iran and North of Korea. After a dangerous experience at a Zimbabwean ZANU farm, Leslie went back to the press hotel in Harare where other reporters sent back stories without venturing out of the hotel.
She called them Avon ladies.
Only interested in make-up (as in made up stories). Her memoir, "Killing My Own Snakes", was published in 2008.
Leslie has won nine British Press and has won two Lifetime Achievement In 1999, she was awarded the James Cameron Award for international reporting. She was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire on 30 December 2006 for her "services to journalism". In 2012, Leslie won the Outstanding Contribution to Journalism Award at the eighth annual International Media in London on 5 May 2012.
She has interviewed major film stars, entertainers and political figures and has reported on numerous wars, civil conflicts and political stories in around 70 countries. Leslie was interviewed in the 2012 documentary The Diamond Queen, about Queen Elizabeth World War II