Meet the team
Saga Magazine is headed up by Katy Bravery, who joined the magazine in 2002. Katy brings with her a wealth of Fleet Street experience and is supported by a talented team committed to developing the UK's biggest subscription-based title.
Katy Bravery, Editor
Katy Bravery joined the Saga Magazine team in April 2002. Previously she was deputy editor of Saga Magazine, editor of the Express on Sunday magazine and the Sunday Mirror magazine. Her experience also includes editorial and journalistic roles working on The Times' Weekend section, the Daily Mail, Sunday Express, Sydney Morning Herald magazine and Today.
Emma Soames, Editor-at-Large
Emma Soames joined Saga Magazine as editor in March 2002. She was editor of the Telegraph Magazine for seven years and before that editor of ES Magazine, Tatler and the Literary Review. Emma is also an occasional columnist for The Daily Telegraph.
Paul Hayes-Watkins, Art Director
Paul joined Saga Magazine in July 2002. Prior to this he worked as a creative director overseeing the design and art direction of Channel 4's sport and film titles, The Antiquarian Book Review and Cheltenham's National Hunt Magazine. Paul also art directed The Telegraph's award-winning Saturday magazine for nine years, the BBC's Clothes Show magazine, and Taste magazine. He was part of the team when British GQ became a monthly title.
Sue Strange, Executive Picture Editor
Sue Strange joined Saga Magazine in December 2004. Prior to Saga she worked on the picture desk for a wide variety of magazines, including women's lifestyle titles such as Woman & Home, Woman and Woman's Realm, and a number of special interest publications, including TV & Satellite Weekly, Practical Parenting and Our Baby.
Phil Dalton, Production Editor
Before joining Saga Magazine in November 2004, Phil had spent several years working for The Sunday Times and The Times as a production editor specialising in the development of colour newspaper sections and associated magazines. His early career was spent working for local newspapers in Kent, Yorkshire and the East Midlands.
Paul Humphreys, Associate Editor
Paul joined Saga Magazine in 2004 after a spell as a freelance editor, mainly at The Times and The Sunday Times. He was previously chief sub-editor (and occasional feature writer) on The Daily Telegraph's supplements desk, producing the Weekend, Gardening, Travel and Motoring sections.
Edna Tromans, Assistant Editor
Before joining Saga Magazine as assistant editor in 1997, Edna Tromans worked in the film business as a unit publicist on major film productions in Britain and America. She was publicity director for Capital Radio London when the station first launched and has also written the humorous book Affair, published by a division of Hamish Hamilton.
David Allsop, Features Editor
David became a journalist after previous careers in law and advertising. He joined Saga Magazine in 2007 having gained editorial experience as deputy editor of the Daily Express Saturday magazine and consultant editor to the John Lewis Partnership. He has also contributed widely to national newspapers and magazines including The Sunday Times, The Sunday Telegraph and the Daily Mail.
Chris McLaughlin, Contributing Editor, Health
Chris McLaughlin joined Saga in November 2000 as health channel editor and currently edits health pages for Saga Magazine and the Saga health website. Prior to joining the company, she was a freelance health journalist, working for a wide range of magazines and newspapers and is the author of around a dozen books. Before that, she was editor of a parenting magazine.
Tiffany Daneff, Contributing Editor, Homes and Gardens
Tiffany joined Saga Magazine in 2006. Previously she was editor of Gardenlife magazine and launched and edited The Daily Telegraph Saturday Gardening supplement. She has also worked on the The Telegraph Weekend section, commissioning the homes and gardens pages. Prior to this she was a freelance journalist for 11 years, contributing to most of the nationals and a wide variety of magazines.
Paul Lewis, Contributing Editor, Money
Paul Lewis has written regularly for Saga Magazine since its launch in 1984, winning awards both for himself and the magazine. He presents BBC Radio 4's personal finance programme Money Box, regularly appears on BBC Breakfast and writes for Community Care among other publications. He chairs and speaks at many financial services conferences throughout the year. Paul is the author of Pay Less Tax and Beat the Banks - annual money guides for older people, and has also edited the complete letters of Victorian writer Wilkie Collins, published in 2005.
George Jones, Contributing Editor, Politics
George Jones joined Saga in September 2007. He was previously political editor of The Daily Telegraph for 21 years. He has worked at Westminister since 1969 - and previously worked for The Sunday Times and The Sunday Telegraph. George Jones currently works for the Press Association, the UK's domestic news agency, reporting politics, mainly on the fast growing internet. He has covered 10 general elections and reported on six Prime Ministers from Harold Wilson to Gordon Brown.
Lesley Ebbetts, Contributing Editor, Fashion
Lesley Ebbetts joined Saga Magazine in 1999 as Fashion Editor. Previously she was fashion editor of the Sunday Mirror, the Daily Mirror and contributor to Woman and Home magazine, Daily Mail and You magazine. In 1988 she wrote 'The Royal Style Wars' with Sidgwick and Jackson and became the fashion expert on Granada Television's This Morning programme for eight years. She also contributes on fashion news and makeovers for the BBC, SKY and GMTV. She has her own personal consultancy for individual women of her generation.
|
 |
 |
 |
<< back to saga magazine
About Saga Magazine
The market-leading Saga Magazine has grown from a simple newsletter to become an award-winning publication that reaches more than one million households each month. more >>
Coverage of important issues
As well being entertaining, Saga Magazine also aims to inform by covering important issues that affect our readership. more >>
A lucrative audience
Currently over 19m strong (some 41% of all adults), people over 50 represent the fastest growing sector of the UK population and control 80% of the wealth. more >>
back to top
|