Anne Robinson has opened up about having an abortion aged 23, describing it as a ‘terrifying, confusing and very, very lonely’ experience.
The TV presenter had the procedure as a newlywed in 1968, and said it left her feeling depressed with the ‘most terrible black doom’.
The 73-year-old, who at the time was married to her first husband, journalist Charles Wilson, said she refused to speak to anyone about the ordeal because of the shame.
Anne Robinson said she felt it was right to share her experience of having an abortion in a Q&A ahead of the show. She is pictured in 1968, when she had the abortion
Discussing the incident in detail for the first time, she said: ‘At the beginning of 1968, I was newly married, very, very unhappy and I found I was pregnant.
‘I was terrified, confused and very, very lonely because I didn’t think I could talk to anyone.
‘I came from a Catholic family and I was well aware of what Catholicism thought of abortion and it was a really isolated place.
‘So much so that the only way I felt I could go through with an abortion was if I didn’t think about … what I was doing. It was like someone who was shutting their eyes and jumping from a cliff.’ Despite her resulting depression, Miss Robinson – who has one daughter, TV director Emma Wilson – said she has not allowed herself to regret her decision.
‘Fear makes you behave in a very odd way,’ she said. ‘What I remember is, unexpectedly, the most terrible black doom came over me and it lasted for months.
Ahead of BBC Two’s Abortion on Trial, Anne Robinson recalled the circumstances under which she had one 50 years ago
‘Again I didn’t talk about it because I was ashamed of what I’d done, and how could I explain that I felt so depressed.
‘I haven’t allowed myself to regret it.’ Miss Robinson made the comments in BBC2 documentary Abortion On Trial, in which she discusses the issue of terminations with nine others with conflicting views to mark 50 years since the passing of the Abortion Act. Statistics show one in three women will have an abortion in their lifetime.
Despite saying she did not regret her decision, the former Weakest Link host admitted she still feels ‘inherent shame’ about it. ‘It was quite a hard question to ask what I thought about it since, and the truth is that I have tried very hard not the think about it,’ she said.
‘I can see that a lot of that is inherent shame in me and after all these years and it’s nearly 50 years ago, so it runs very deep.’
The Watchdog presenter, who has two grandchildren, said she was still in ‘skip over mode’ after previously only briefly mentioning her abortion in her 2001 autobiography, Memoirs Of An Unfit Mother.
The former Weakest Link host said that her attitude is totally different now to when she had the abortion 50 years ago
Some of those featured in the documentary, which discusses whether abortion laws are still fit for purpose in 2017, also share their experiences.
One woman describes how she had a miscarriage on the train after having to take the abortion pill miles from her home, while another says she resorted to using coat hangers to abort her baby.
Speaking after a screening of the documentary, Miss Robinson said the subject was still as much a taboo as it was 50 years ago, saying: ‘Why is it that we talk about everything else, but this act has been there for fifty years and we are still ashamed?’ She added: ‘It’s one thing at the age I was then and shutting my eyes, but you know I am 73 and I had Emma … but of course your attitude is totally totally different then. It would be unthinkable for me now, absolutely unthinkable.’
Commenting on what she learned from participating in the documentary, Miss Robinson said: ‘I didn’t know anything about non-surgical abortions, I had absolutely no idea of women miscarrying in a loo in a bus terminal … and how much little sense that made in relation to the law made 50 years ago.’
Abortion On Trial will air on BBC2 at 9pm on October 16.