Tomorrow
morning BBC Radio 4 will, for the last time, broadcast the early morning News Briefing. A fixture of Radio 4’s
schedule for nearly half a century it’s yet another victim of financial cuts.
News Briefing is a 13 minute round-up of
international and national news, a full weather forecast, sports news, review
of the newspapers, business news, sports news and ending with a on this day in
history feature.
The cuts in
the news division means not only the end of News
Briefing but also, from next month, that World Service bulletins will be
carried overnight on Radio 2, Radio 5 Live and BBC local stations.
Radio Times billing 3 July 1978
News Briefing, read by Eugene Fraser, was first broadcast as a 10-minute
bulletin at 6 am on Monday 3 July 1978 as part of a refresh which saw Today start at 6.30 am and the dropping
of the two editions of the notorious Up
to the Hour sequences.
The weekday
edition was dropped from 3 April 1998 leaving just the Saturday and Sunday
briefings. From that date on weekdays Radio 4 opened at 5.30 am with a World News bulletin followed by the Shipping Forecast. The World News is dropped at the end of
April 2000 and Radio 4 starts the day at 5.35 with the Shipping and Inshore Forecast. Meanwhile, from March 2003, the
Sunday edition, now reduced to 5 minutes, is just described as a news summary.
Radio Times billing 2 May 2006
On 2 May
2006 News Briefing returned as a
seven days a week programme of 13 minutes with a 5.30 start, after the Shipping Forecast, where it has, until
this week, remained. There was a brief hiatus during the Covid-19 pandemic when
it was dropped from 30 March 2020 and Radio 4 started to leave the World
Service at the slightly later time of 5.32 for the Shipping Forecast. News
Briefing returned on Monday 13 July 2020.
The last News Briefing airs tomorrow at 5.30 am.
From Monday (24th) Radio 4 will leave the World Service at 5.00 am
for a news bulletin followed by Yesterday
in Parliament which moves back over from Radio 4 Extra where it has been
for the last year. There’ll be repeats at times when Parliament isn’t in
session. The Shipping Forecast moves
to 5.34 am followed by, as usual on weekdays, Prayer for the Day and Farming
Today.
Some audio
now, and the earliest News Briefing I
can lay my hands on comes from Tuesday 3 February 1998 where the lead story
centres on the libel suit by Richard Branson against GTech in the bid to run
the National Lottery. The reader is Andrew Crawford and there are correspondent
reports from Torin Douglas, Jon Silverman and Paul Reynolds. The weather
forecast is delivered by Sarah Wilmshurst and with the sports news it’s Garry
Richardson.
The second
edition dates from Saturday 29 September 2012 and is read by Corrie Corfield.
The weather forecaster is Chris Fawkes and the sports news read by Seth Bennett
with a report from golf correspondent Ian Carter.
After News Briefing was dropped during the
2020 lockdown it was, in the world of announcer Jane Steel an “auspicious date”
when it returned on 13 July. Here’s how the full morning sequence panned out
with the World Service handover, the Shipping Forecast read by Ben Rich and
then Jane with News Briefing. The business
report is by Andrew Wood and the sports report by Paul Sarahs.
The final News Briefing on 23 March 2025 was read by Jane Steel.
Conch (noun) a thick heavy spiral shell occasionally bearing long
projections of various marine gastropod molluscs of the family Strombidae.
Give Us A Conch
(later The Conch Quiz) was a
light-hearted natural history quiz that ran on BBC Radio 2 between 1984 and
1987. Teams wrestled with “animal sounds, songs and riddles” in an attempt to
win the (virtual) “glittering Conch Shell”.
Given its subject matter it’s perhaps not surprising that it was
produced by the Bristol-based Natural History Unit, with programmes recorded at
the city’s Watershed Theatre.
Chairing every edition was Paddy Feeny (pictured with conch above), at the time
co-chairing Top of the Form and
presenter of the World Service sports service Saturday Special. Paddy told the Radio Times: “We’re so surrounded by scientific hardware these days
that I get the impression people just can’t hear enough about natural history”.
He later confessed that chairing the quiz has “turned me into a real enthusiast.
I now read books on the subject just so that I can suggest a few questions.”
The panellists were a mix of zoologists, botanists and so
on, and showbiz guests chosen for their particular interest in the subject such
as Frank Thornton, Eric Morecambe, Spike Milligan, Bill Oddie, Bernard Cribbins
and Andrew Sachs. (They had all previously appeared as guests on Sounds Natural with Derek Jones,
episodes of which have been repeated on BBC Radio 4 Extra). Folk that regularly worked for the Natural
History Unit also popped up, names such as Derek Jones, Tony Soper and Johnny
Morris. For later episodes they split into two teams captained by Pam Ayres
(sometimes Don Maclean) and marine biologist Dr Sheila Anderson.
The questions were set by Kate Tiffin and later Tess Lemmon,
both of the Natural History Unit. Kate went on to write natural history books
and contribute to the BBC Wildlife
magazine. The producers were Melinda Barker (for series one and two) who also
produced Radio 4’s The Living World.
She later married wildlife film director and producer Alastair Fothergill.
Producing series three and four was John Harrison who was with the BBC in
Bristol for 18 years from 1973, working mainly on The Living World with Derek Jones
Give Us A Conch
ran for 20 episodes in 1984 and 1985 and came back in late 1985 for a further
18 episodes as The Conch Quiz. Other
than the last series being aired on the BBC World Service the quiz has never been
repeated, so this is a rare opportunity to hear what it was all about. From 1st
January 1985 this is the first programme in series two with Don Maclean, Derek
Jones, Sheila Anderson and zoologist Professor Mike Stoddart. The continuity
announcer is Jean Challis.
It’s a week later, 8th January 1985, for the
second episode with Pam Ayres, Johnny Morris, Sheila Anderson and Mike
Stoddart. The announcer at the end of the recording is Nick Page.
Give Us A Conch series details
Series 1: 25 January to 28 March 1984 (10 episodes)
Windsor Davies, Andrew Sachs, Pat Morris, Chris Mead, Frank
Windsor, David Shepherd, Mike Stoddart, Wilma George, Carol Drinkwater, Derek
Jones, Michael Clegg, Sheila Anderson, Bill Oddie, Tony Soper, Penny Anderson,
Malcolm Coe, Eric Morecambe, Pam Ayres and David Bellamy
Series 2: 1 January to 5 March 1985 (10)
Don Mclean, Derek Jones, Sheila Anderson, Mike Stoddart, Pam
Ayres, Johnny Morris, Tom Baker, Michael Clegg, Judy Geeson, Jeremy Cherfas,
Jeffrey Boswell, Frank Thornton and Andrew Sachs
Name changed to The Conch Quiz
Series 3: 25 November 1985 to 13 January 1986 (8)
Don Maclean, Sheila Anderson, Irene Christie, Malcolm Coe,
Pam Ayres, Bernard Cribbins, Michael Clegg, Roger Lovegrove, Bill Oddie, Johnny
Morris and Joe Henson
Series 4: 24 January to 28 March 1987 (10)
Pam Ayres, Sheila Anderson, Don Maclean, Roger Lovegrove,
Johnny Morris, Michael Clegg, Joe Henson, Bernard Cribbins, Peter France, Spike
Milligan and Lionel Kelleway
This series was repeated on the BBC World Service August to
October 1987
The answers to the picture quiz are (l-r) a slug, a North American salamander, a furry armadillo
When Winston Churchill died on 24 January 1965 the BBC went
into full obit mode, a special Radio
Times supplement printed and plans made to broadcast the state funeral on
Saturday 30th (1) But the relationship between the former Prime
Minister and the Corporation had always been problematic to say the least, even
during their ‘finest hour’ in World War II.
The antagonism stemmed from, on one hand, Churchill’s belief
that the Government should be able to commandeer the BBC to broadcast whatever
messages the Government decreed and, on the other, the BBC’s (both as a company
and a corporation) battle to retain its hard-won independence. A continuing
story of our times, of course.
During the war Churchill was intent on clipping the wings of
the BBC and issued a memo that stated that “the Ministry of Information will
take full day-to-day editorial control of the BBC and will be responsible for
both initiative and censorship.”Back in
1933 he told the Commons that “these well-meaning gentlemen of the British
Broadcasting Corporation have absolutely no qualification and no claim to
represent British public opinion.”
But the first run-in between the politician and the BBC was
during the nine-day General Strike of May 1926 when it fell to managing
director John Reith to ward off any takeover.
David Low cartoon on the General Strike
The BBC was only dragged into the political mire of the
General Strike because the printing of all newspapers, save for The Times, had come to a halt and both
the government and the TUC were keen to put forward their side of the argument.
The government, under the premiership of Stanley Baldwin, saw the dissemination
of news and official communiqués as falling to the BBC and its own hastily
produced newspaper, TheBritish Gazette. Meanwhile, the TUC
produced The British Worker, the
‘official strike news bulletin’.
Baldwin had given the job of editing The British Gazette to his then Chancellor, Winston Churchill, a
former journalist himself, of course, as a war correspondent for a number of
newspapers around the turn of the century. Churchill viewed the strike as some
form of Bolshevik revolution and was “prepared to resort to extreme measures”
to put it down.
One positive outcome for the BBC was the dropping, albeit
temporary, of the requirement to only broadcast evening news bulletins, so as
not to adversely affect newspaper circulation. During the strike bulletins went
out at 10 am, 1 pm, 4 pm, 7 pm and 9.30pm each day. (2) The news, put together
by a hastily formed team, was sourced from Reuters and from the Admiralty and
many of the bulletins were read by Reith himself, his deputy, Rear-Admiral
Charles Carpendale and chief engineer Peter Eckersley. It is claimed that
senior management went on air as the announcers sounded ‘nervous’, though
announcer Stuart Hibberd claims that is was just due to the increased frequency
and length of each bulletin. Reith himself was at the microphone both when the
strike was officially announced and when it was called off.
Whilst Churchill was keen to invoke the emergency provisions
on the BBC, this was not the opinion of the majority of the Government,
including Baldwin who was more emollient. In a meeting with the Reith, Baldwin
and John Davidson (Deputy Chief Civil Commissioner acting as vice-chairman of
the Emergency Committee and liaison between the PM, Churchill and the BBC)
Reith noted in his diary that the PM “said he entirely agreed with us that it
would be far better to leave the BBC with a considerable measure of autonomy and
independence. He was most pleasant.”
The General Strike and the battle lines between Churchill
and Reith have been explored in three dramas, one for the stage and two radio
productions. The most recent radio programme to explore the working
relationship between the two men is the 2022 Drama on 3 production Churchill
versus Reith. Aware that most of the main protagonists that lock horns are
male, writer Mike Harris decided to give Reith’s trusted secretary Isobel
Shields (played by Emily Pithon) a voice and make her the narrator, “because secretary’s
know everything”. This helps to lend lightness and humour to what would
otherwise be a dry subject. There is also focus on Labour MP Ellen Wilkinson,
‘Red Ellen’ (played by Helen O’Hara) who, writing in the Radio Times in late May 1926, accused the BBC of causing “pain and
indignation” and that she “felt like asking the Postmaster-General for my
licence fee back”. She might well have added #DefundtheBBC! Playing Reith is
Tom Goodman-Hill whilst Christian McKay is Churchill. That end sequence with
Reith quoting Blake’s Jerusalem is not poetic licence, this did happen on the
night of 12th May, Reith offered thanks to God for ending the strike
and, on the BBC’s role said “we hope your confidence in and goodwill to us have
not suffered. We have laboured under certain difficulties, the full story of
which may be told someday.”
Churchill versus Reith
can be found on BBC Sounds here.
Photo credit Manuel Harlan
At London’s Donmar Warehouse in the summer of 2023 there was
a production of Jack Thorne’s When
Winston Went to War with the Wireless. This starred Adrian Scarborough as
Churchill, Stephen Campbell Moore as Reith and, in a piece of gender-blind
casting, the late Haydn Gwynne as Baldwin. Much like Churchill versus Reith we get glimpses of the men behind the story
in scenes with their respective spouses and mention of Reith’s earlier
infatuation with the young Charlie Bowser. It’s mainly set at the BBC’s HQ at
Savoy Hill (and an impressive set by all accounts with various sound effects
and microphones visible at the back of the stage) with the drama and news
bulletins interspersed with variety acts of the day. No recordings exist but
you can hear the cast, crew and author speaking about When Winston Went to War with the Wireless on the Donmar Warehouse
YouTube channel.
The second radio offering is from the 1990 BBC Radio 4
six-part drama series The Churchill Years
written by David Wheeler. The series focused on “six turning points in his
career” and in this fourth episode it’s the General Strike. The emphasis is
more on events rather than personalities with the story starting with
discussions between Baldwin and the mineworkers - “Not a penny off the pay, not
a second on the day” – and rallying speeches from the likes of Labour leader
Ramsey MacDonald (Hugh Fraser). Churchill is charged with setting up The British Gazette which, in the eyes
of the PM “puts him in a corner and stops him doing worse things” whilst Reith
has a microphone set up at his Barton Street residence so that he can broadcast
at a moment’s notice. Baldwin’s speech for which Reith famously wrote the final
words about not compromising for “the safety and security of the British
constitution” were broadcast from Reith’s study.
Amongst the
illustrious cast are Nigel Davenport as Baldwin and John Moffatt as
Chamberlain. Taking on the role of Reith is the wonderful Graham Crowden (an
actor who was just a couple of weeks older than the BBC itself).Doing his best, if rather distracting,
Churchill impression is Daniel Massey. He told the Radio Times “I remember hearing him on the radio during the
blackout when I was about 7 or 8 – it was like a vitamin injection”. And on
getting the rumbling tones right: “the voice has become a bit of a cliché
though Churchill didn’t talk in clichés but in wonderfully rounded sentences
that reflected his imagination and vision.
Episode 4 of The
Churchill Years titled Class Wars was first broadcast on Wednesday 28 March
1990 and repeated on Sunday 1 April 1990. It was directed by Louise Purslow.
You can hear more about the BBC and the General Strike in
Nick Robinson’s series Battle for the Airwaves.
(1) The funeral was broadcast on BBC1, the Home Service, the
Light Programme, the Third Programme and the General Overseas Service. Read
more about the BBC tv coverage on the History of the BBC pages. The radio commentary for the funeral service is on the Internet Archive here.
(2) After the strike the bulletins returned to their normal
times for 7pm and 10pm. They were moved forward to 6.30 pm and 9.00 pm in early
1927 when the BBC was now Corporation. News was part of the Talks Department
until December 1929 and again between February 1932 and August 1934 when it
finally became a separate department under its first editor Professor John
Coatman.
It’s the final Sarah
Ward Collection on Jazz FM this evening as Sarah ‘steps back’ from the
weekly show after seven decades in broadcasting. It marks the end of a career
for British radio’s longest-serving female presenter, a feat which deservedly is
being recognised. After tonight’s usual show there’s an hour long special The Sarah Ward Celebration in which Sarah talks about her career and we hear from some of the colleagues she worked with. [Note 1]
Ahead of that interview I thought I’d fill in as much as I
can about Sarah’s broadcasting career. It’s one that stretches back to the end
of the 1950s and would go on to include television roles in the 60s and, from
the 70s onwards, radio jobs with both the BBC and commercial radio. But it all
starts in Africa.
Sarah was born in Kenya into what she affectionately
describes as a colonial family – her grandparents were coffee farmers, her
stepfather in the King’s African Rifles. “I’ve heard a lot of people say that
Africa’s in your blood”, she told London
Calling in 1988. “For me, that’s certainly true. I went there for a visit
in the 70s-the homecoming as I arrived at the airport! The colour, the smell,
the rhythm. I have very emotional feelings about Africa”.
Staff at FBS Nairobi in 1960. Sarah is on the front row, second in from the right. Photo Alan Grace in The Link with Home-Sixty Years of Forces Radio
It was in Africa that Sarah got her first taste of radio
broadcasting. Aged just 15 it was at the Forces Broadcasting Service in Nairobi
that she helped out as tea-maker and general skivvy before getting the chance
to do some presenting because “the early hours made it difficult to recruit
people”. About a week in she arrived for a dawn shift, switched on the station
and saw, coiled round the mic, a snake. She fled the studio screaming – the mic
still open. The engineers had beefed up a snakeskin to look like the real thing
and made sure the raw recruit got some effective on-the-job training.
After spending some time with the Voice of Kenya English language
service, in 1964 Sarah decided to pursue her broadcasting career in the UK.
After just six months she landed a job as an in-vision BBC television
continuity announcer, presumably they were looking for the next Judith
Chalmers. The BBC also appointed two other ‘continuity girls’, Meryl O’Keeffe
and Maggie Clews. Sarah was also booked to present the weekly Junior Points of View which she
continued to appear on until June 1967. [Note 2]
The Daily Herald
of 11 September 1964 reported on Sarah’s arrival:
SARAH—THE NEW FACE ON
TV A 23-YEAR-OLD girl who has been working as a waitress and a theatre
programme seller is to be an announcer on BBC television. She is Sarah Ward,
who came to Britain six months ago from Kenya, where she has worked on TV.
Sarah took jobs as a waitress and programme seller while waiting for a ‘break’
with the BBC. Viewers first saw her last Sunday. She appeared in Junior Points of View last night.
Part of her role was to do interview spots at the end of the
evening programmes. Her most famous interviewee was undoubtedly Bob Dylan, but
it was a bizarre experience. Dylan was at the BBC to record a concert series
(shown on BBC1 in June 1965). The interview was live and possibly the first to
be done in the UK. Sarah recalls “It was a peculiar interview. He kept spinning
round in his chair, sometimes turning his back on me. He’d just been to the BBC
canteen and was still eating a biscuit, which he kept waving in my face. He
seemed to be fixated by the biscuit, ignoring most of my questions about the
pressures of life as a superstar. The only time he really came alive was when I
started asking him about the money he was making and he suddenly became very
shrewd and on the ball.”
Sarah with Come Here Often co-host Cliff Morgan
Sarah left the BBC in June 1967 and a month later popped up
on ‘the other side’ as co-host, alongside Cliff Morgan, on Come Here Often. Produced by Rediffusion, Come Here Often, was a twice –weekly (Tuesday and Friday tea-time)
‘topical magazine programme dealing with news and interesting events for
children aged between nine and fourteen’.
Producer Elizabeth Cowley described it as a ‘junior Tonight’ but it was probably closer to Blue Peter. It can be seen as a forerunner of Thames TV’s Magpie and indeed just before the series
ended on 23 July 1968 (as Rediffusion’s lost the franchise to Thames) future Magpie host Mick Robertson had been co-presenting
the last few shows with Sarah. [Note 3] Come
Here Often wasn’t without controversy as Sarah recalls: “one lively
programme [in August 1967] featured a debate between the British Power movement
and an opposing group of young blacks. One of the debaters became especially
overheated and pulled a knife, which led to the immediate blacking out of the
screen and the programme hitting the headlines in the British press the next
morning.”
By the early 1970s Sarah was working for the BBC World
Service appearing on the request spot at the end of The Merchant Navy Programme with Malcolm Billings, where she ‘built
up a huge fan-club of sailors’. Her ambitions to expand into general presentation
were initially thwarted, as whilst her boss at Bush House was “very sympathetic
towards her programme ideas ...unfortunately Radios One and Two just didn’t
want to know”.
Undeterred, Sarah went for an audition with commercial
rivals Capital Radio that was due to launch in October 1973. The audition was
for the job of record reviewer on Nicky Horne’s nightly rock show You’re Mother Wouldn’t Like It. “I did a
lovely late night audition with Nicky which was relaxed and nice”, she
remembers, “and apparently they liked my voice and said let’s use it for
something else.”
When Capital started director of programmes Michael Bukht
offered Sarah a role as one of the presenters (with ex-BBC radio’s Sean Kelly)
of Night Flight ‘late night music
that’s easy on the ear, open line for night owls to air problems, ask advice,
have a chat’. Later she gained her own show Sarah
and Friends. “It was always what I’d wanted to do, in fact ... I was saying
to myself and also to one or two people at the BBC that I would like to do a
late night show, a combination of music and chat.”
Of those Capital days Nicky Horne recalls that “there were
quite a few of us who were the more sort of leftfield thinkers, and Sarah was
really part of that gang. She was at the time a bit of a rock chick and loved
her rock. I remember in those early days there was chaos all round but that
Sarah always had a calmness and a serenity about her”. He describes her as
having a real love for the medium of
radio and, unlike a few others, she was unencumbered by ego. A magnificent
voice and a beautiful soul.” Sarah also expressed
her preference for radio: “there’s less emphasis on being the polished pretty
product. There’s more scope to be genuinely yourself and I enjoy the teamwork
which radio demands.”
Sarah left Capital in 1975 but would return at the end of
the 70s and continued to appear on the station presenting London Tonight for a while and latterly, until 1986, a Sunday
afternoon show. When Capital Gold was launched Sarah presented the late-night
show in 1988 and 1989.
Recalling her time at Capital, Sarah was doing a “fairly
hard-hitting interview with a journalist about Idi Amin’s Uganda. He was extremely
nervous and I was doing everything possible to help him and put him at his
ease. Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed the studio door slowly open and
someone- who shall remain nameless- crawling across the studio floor towards
us. To my horror, he grabbed hold of my interviewee’s foot and started to take
off his shoe. The interviewee was absolutely transfixed. It was just like
watching a rabbit freeze. We had to terminate the interview abruptly and go
into a commercial break.”
Back to 1975 ahead of the launch of Portsmouth’s Radio
Victory, head of programmes David Symonds recruited the “silky smooth” Sarah to
join the team. At first she was on late nights – playing quite a bit of album
rock - but was also involved in the Saturday lunchtime kid’s show Up 2 U and then devise, and for a while (in
1977/78) present The Wonderful Wobbly
Wireless Show. Both programmes featured significant involvement from local
children including two aspiring broadcasters: John Terrett and David Dunning.
At any one time about ten kids would be invited into the studio to present
reports, choose the music and interview guests, all under the supervision of
Sarah. As a reward they were allowed to raid the record box and grab any spare
promotional discs – John’s first pick was Springsteen’s Born to Run – but later they were offered expenses for turning up. On one occasion David remembers interviewing a
family friend who was a Solent shipping pilot based at Ryde Pier. Off we went
with a UHER tape recorder but “I had no concept of actually arranging it in
advance but gave the impression Uncle Sammy would be delighted to talk to us.
He wasn’t in the office when we arrived and lovely kind Sarah gave the
impression that ‘these things happen’ ...but even a naive 10 year old knew it
was my first big broadcasting cock up and she was a tad annoyed.”
London Calling April 1980
Meanwhile back at Bush House Sarah started to be offered
more work. In 1977 she had a daily 15-minute show of ‘music and chat’ as well
as being on the rota of presenters of the Request
Show. Between 1979 and the summer of
1986 she hosted a weekly 30 minute show of music and guests called Sarah and Company. When that came to end
Sarah was given the opportunity to ‘exploit her broad interest in all kinds of
popular music’ in the World Service’s Multitrack
3. This would feature ‘interviews with the more off-beat pop bands, new to
the music scene and unlikely to reach the charts but producing a brand of
non-mainstream music of interest to the programme’s young audience’. Multitrack
3 ran until August 1994. [Note 4]
In 1989 and early 1990 Sarah co-presented the weekend breakfast with Ed Boyle on LBC's short-lived Crown FM service.
1990 proved to be a significant year for Sarah, with the
start of her involvement in what was to become Jazz FM and presenting her first
national breakfast show. That breakfast show was on the newly launched BBC Radio 5, the education and sports channel, which came on-air in August 1990. Sarah
co-presented Morning Edition with Jon
Briggs (ex-Radio Oxford and future Voice of Siri and The Weakest Link) until February 1992.
From Wednesday 29 August 1990 here’s Sarah and Jon with Morning Edition.
In 1993 Sarah started to cover some shows on Classic FM and,
from February 1994, took over from Margaret Howard to present the nightly
weekday news and arts magazine show Classic
Reports. Sarah remained with Classic FM until early 1997 by which time she
was presenting the weekend breakfast shows.
Profile from the Radio Times in 1991
Sarah has long shared a passion for jazz with her life
partner Ken, himself a jazz saxophonist and composer. She remembers the time they
both visited Ronnie Scott’s Club when Charles Mingus was there “and Ken was
left in awe after briefly meeting him. Later in the evening, Mingus spotted Ken
smoking a pipe and asked him to swap tobacco. The ice was broken after this and
they chewed stories, mostly about Eric Dolphy.” She would broadcast on the
various incarnations of Jazz FM (Jazz 102.2, ejazz.fm, jazzfm.com) starting
shortly after it went on air in 1990 and again from 1997 onwards. Sarah is
mostly associated with three programmes: Dinner
Jazz that she first presented in 2004 (taking over from Helen Mayhew), and
again from the 2008 re-launch as Jazz FM. There’s also Jazz Travels – ‘a musical spin of the globe’ - that started in 2011
and, for almost a decade, The Sarah Ward
Collection.
For many years home for Sarah and Ken has been on the edge of
Dartmoor. In December 1998 and again in August 1999 she supported and broadcast
on the 28 day licence station Palm 106.2 in Torquay. Her shows for Jazz FM have
either been recorded at local radio studios in Devon and, more recently, from
her home studio.
From 19 December 2011 here’s part of that evening’s Dinner Jazz.
The final edition of The
Sarah Ward Collection is tonight at 6pm followed by The Sarah Ward Celebration at 9.pm.
Note 1: UK radio’s oldest broadcaster with a regular show is
David Hamilton, daily on Boom Radio. Until her death earlier this year the
second-longest serving female radio DJ would’ve been Annie Nightingale who was
a friend of Sarah’s.
Note2: Junior Points of View had started in
January 1963 as a spin-off from the main Points
of View programme but aimed at “younger viewers”. Initially presented by
Robert Robinson and then young tv announcer June Imray. June’s Scottish accent
was itself a cause of some controversy and she left the BBC in September 1964,
eventually returning to Grampian Television as an announcer.
Note3: Come Here Often had some stiff competition
on the BBC. On Tuesday it was up against Tom
Tom and on Friday Crackerjack and
(ironically) Junior Points of View. All episodes are missing.
Note 4: The BBC World Service Pop Music Unit produced three
editions of Multitrack each week. Multitrack
1 (Mons) was the top 20 show, Multitrack
2 (Weds) new releases, interviews and news and Multitrack 3 (Fris) on the ‘alternative’ scene.
Most of the quotes from this post come from Record and Radio Mirror (30 March 1974)
and London Calling (October 1988).
With thanks to David Dunning, John Terrett, Nicky Horne and
David Symonds
This coming Saturday (28 December) BBC Radio 4 Extra is
going to party like its 1964. For day only, all the programmes between 6am and
10pm are what you would’ve heard on the BBC Home Service in December 1964. Most
are getting their first repeat broadcast in sixty years.
Guiding listeners through the day will be Wes Butters. Of
the Home Service Day he says:
“It’s an extraordinary privilege to take the helm of BBC
Radio 4 Extra for Home Service Day! This is not just any regular Saturday; it’s
an opportunity to step back in time and relive the magic of Christmas 1964. The
schedule is a treasure trove of radio history, featuring a comic operetta that
includes an early performance from Dame Patricia Routledge, a drama starring
the acclaimed Shakespearean actor Sir Donald Wolfit, and an anarchic comedy by
my hero Spike Milligan, alongside an up-and-coming Barry Humphries! We’ve
rooted around in all the nooks and crannies in the BBC Archive to uncover lots
of hidden gems, and pieced together a day that will truly capture the spirit of
Christmas exactly 60 years ago."
The day starts with the comic operetta The Duenna. The three part operetta by Richard Brinsley Sheridan
was first performed in 1775 and had been revived in 1924. It was updated and
adapted in the 1950s by musical theatre writer Julian Slade, best known for Salad Days (1954), and theatre director
Lionel Harris and it’s their version that’s used here. Producer Peter Bryant
thought that rather than perform it in the studio it would be best recorded
before an invited audience at the Camden Theatre. Amongst the cast are Patricia
Routledge, Andrew Sachs and Denis Quilley. Music is performed by the Sinfonia
of London conducted by Marcus Dods with the John McCarthy Singers (stalwarts of
many Friday Night is Music Night
concerts). The Duenna was broadcast
at 8pm on Christmas Eve 1964.
The Silver King is
based on the 1882 Victorian melodrama by Henry Arthur Jones and Henry Herman
that tells of a gambler who, after losing all his money, escapes to America. The play had been broadcast on BBC radio three
times previously: in December 1930, June 1945 and in December 1954. That ’54
production had starred the actor-manager Donald Wolfit in the lead as Wilfred
Denver, a role he reprised in this 1964 production. The play was produced for
radio again in December 1991 with John Duttine as Denver. The Silver King was broadcast in the Afternoon Theatre slot at 3.15pm on Monday 28 December 1964 though the recording survives as it was issued by BBC Transcription Services under their World Theatre titles.
Next up is comedy from Spike Milligan in The GPO Show. This has been repeated
before in December 2014 as part of a lost comedy gems season on 4 Extra. As I
wrote then:
the Radio Times
unhelpfully describes it as follows: “Spike Milligan takes a benevolent but
distinctly Milligoonish look at the work of that mighty institution the British
Post Office. In fact he braves the hallowed precincts of Mount Pleasant itself,
to report the merry, festive scene. With the stalwart shape of Harry Secombe
and John Bluthal, to name but six, he will be giving listeners a seasonal view
of Operation Mailbag in full swing.”The GPO Show was recorded just five days
before transmission and by then the Post Office had objected to the title on
the grounds that GPO was a registered trademark so it was hastily changed to The Grand Piano Orchestra Show. The
script, in part, was a re-working of an earlier Goon Show from 1954 titled The
History of Communications.
The GPO
Show was first broadcast after the Queen’s message at 1.10pm on Christmas Day
1964.
We Don’t Often Lose a Boffin was a comedy written by actor and writer John Graham. John was in
100s of radio plays and series including the role of Roddy MacKenzie in The Dales. You’ll likely hear him in
repeats of The Men from the Ministry.
The ‘boffin’ in question is top government scientist Dr Grebe played by Patrick
Barr. Playing the ‘top brass’ at M.I.5 is Frederick Treves and at Whitehall its
John Graham himself. This play was an Afternoon
Theatre production broadcast at 3.00pm on 23 December 1964.
Radio 4 Extra then schedules a couple of Sherlock Holmes
mysteries starring Carleton Hobbs and Norman Shelley as Holmes and Watson. In 1964 both these stories, The Three Garridebs and The Norwood Builder, had first been
heard on the Light Programme in September but did get a Home Service repeat in
December. They’ve been heard on 4 Extra a number of times before.
For fans of Henry Cecil’s Brothers in Law – the 1970s radio versions starring Richard Briers
have been aired many times on 4 Extra – there’s an adaptation of his 1961 novelDaughters in Law. The plot summary reads: ‘Major Claude Buttonstep has two sons who
fall in love with a judge's attractive twin daughters - one is a barrister and
the other a solicitor. But Major Buttonstep, normally a mild, kindly rural
Squire, has a pathological aversion to lawyers’. It stars Cecil Parker as the
major and Naunton Wayne as Mr Trotter. The daughters are played by Gudrun Ure
(tv’s Super Gran) and Diana Olsson (a
long term member of the BBC dram rep). This production of Daughters in Law was first broadcast in Saturday-Night Theatre on 2 September 1961 but qualifies for this
repeat as it was heard again on the Home Service at 2.30pm on Sunday 27
December 1964.
Although we inevitably associate Johnny Morris with Animal Magic he had an even longer radio
career of over four decades as a storyteller, narrator and panellist. His
longest running series was the travelogue Johnny’s
Jaunt that ran from 1954 to 1975. At first Johnny and his travelling
companions George and Leslie would visit areas of Great Britain but by 1958
they were off around the world. These fifteen minute talks were produced by
Brian Patten (a Bristol-based producer not to be confused with the Merseyside
poet) and it is he that produced this Christmas broadcast of Knock Up Ginger. The unlikely subject is
doors with “childhood memories of doors he has faced, knocked on – and swiftly
run away from. Knock Up Ginger was
first broadcast at 9.40pm on Tuesday 22 December 1964.
As well as these programmes Wes will also be playing other
archive clips from 1964 including some from the daily afternoon magazine show Home this Afternoon which had started in March that year and the daily topical programme This Time of Day. There
are also new interviews with Dame Patricia Routledge and Spike’s daughter Jane
Milligan.
The Home Service Day programmes will be broadcast on
Saturday between 6am and 2pm and then again between 2pm and 10pm. They will be
available on BBC Sounds for 30 days, except for the Sherlock Holmes programmes
that are available all the time.
Whilst BBC Sounds has the programmes available most of Wes’s
links are missing, as are the interviews and extra archive clips. To rectify
this here’s some of what isn’t online.
Firstly the interview with Dame Patricia Routledge:
Secondly the interview with Jane Milligan:
Thirdly Scottish comedian Jack Radcliffe talking to Howard
Lockhart about ‘the art of making the season festive’ taken from Home this Afternoon. This comes from a
Scottish produced edition broadcast on Friday 1 January 1965:
Ninety years ago on Christmas Day 1934, King George V was at
Sandringham House preparing to make his broadcast to Britain and the Empire.
Just before three o’clock his message was introduced not by a BBC announcer or
the director-general Sir John Reith, but by a Cotswold shepherd by the name of
Walton Handy.
The King had delivered his first Christmas Day message in
1932 in a broadcast heard not just in the UK on the National and Regional
Programmes but around the world on the recently opened Empire Service (now the
World Service). That Royal Message to the Empire was preceded by an hour of
‘greetings to and from British citizens wherever they may be’ in a feature
called All the World Over. This
format was repeated in 1933 in a programme titled Absent Friends, with listeners advised that ‘this broadcast will be
considerably more interesting if they have an atlas ready before it begins.’
For Christmas Day 1935 producer Lawrence Gilliam devised Empire Exchange. But there was a radical
departure from the previous round-ups in
which items from overseas were from ‘anonymous broadcasting or Government
officials’, This time ‘the sound pictures or informal messages’ were from
‘ordinary individuals or commentaries describing events actually in progress at
the time of the broadcast’.
The Ilmington locals that took part in the Christmas Day broadcast. Walton Handy is pictured with his shepherd's crook and dog Sam. Standing beside him is Spenser Flower. (Credit: Ilmington Images)
For Empire Exchange
the programme started at 1.55 with the bells of the Church of the Nativity in
Bethlehem, followed by bells from Bombay, Wellington, Ottawa, Armagh and then
St Paul’s. At 2.00 after the Big Ben chimes there was the technical challenge
of link-ups starting with Mr A Patterson, a superintendent of the milk supply
in Wellington, New Zealand followed by Canada, Australia, India, some Chelsea
pensioners, Ireland, South Africa, Glasgow, Southern Rhodesia and Liverpool.
After a final port of call, to a Xhosa settlement in South Africa, attention
swung to ‘a quiet village in the heart of England – to the Manor House of
Ilmington, Warwickshire.
What was to happen next was previewed in the local Stratford-upon-Avon Herald (21 December
1934):
A great compliment has been paid to Ilmington—and
Warwickshire—by reason of the fact that the village is to take part in the
Empire broadcast on Christmas Day. It is the only English place to be so
honoured in a broadcast which the BBC estimate will be heard by several hundred
million people. The Ilmington programme is intended to provide a peaceful
English background for the King's speech after the necessarily disjointed items
from the various parts of the Empire. The arrangements have been entrusted to
Mr. Spenser Flower, who, as our readers will recollect, scored an undoubted
success on the occasion of Ilmington’s first broadcast in the early part of the
year. The broadcast from Ilmington will open with some introductory remarks and
messages to the Empire, after which an old Christmas carol will be sung. Mr.
Spenser Flower will then introduce an old shepherd (Mr. Walton Handy), who will
speak. Then will come an old harvest song, after which Ilmington, representing
the Empire, will send a loyal message to the King. The King will then speak,
and immediately afterwards Ilmington will sing the first three lines of an
Empire National Anthem, which will be taken up in turn (three lines each) by
Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, &c., the finale being sung by
a full choir in London. This is a wonderful technical feat which must be a
source of great worry to the BBC engineers responsible for the timing. The
Ilmington broadcast will occupy only six or seven minutes. Special lines have
been laid and apparatus installed at the Old Tithe Barn at Ilmington Manor,
from which the broadcast will be given.
Sure enough, just before 3pm Walton Handy’s voice was heard
across the Empire as he proclaimed “in the name of Ilmington, Merry Christmas
to you all. And in the name of the Empire, God bless our gracious King”’ The
King’s broadcast followed immediately without a further announcement. Here's that part of Empire Exchange:
Major Spenser Flower (a member of the Stratford-based
Flowers brewing family) was the Squire of Ilmington Manor. Writing to the Stratford-upon-Avon Herald he seemed
well pleased with the day’s events:
May I ask you to extend to me the courtesy of your columns
to express my gratitude to everyone of my Christmas Day Empire Broadcasting
party for the wonderful help they gave me in a not too easy undertaking. To get
simplicity into a programme is not necessarily simple. I could not have made a
success of this item in the Empire broadcast without a good deal of rehearsal
and the loyal co-operation of the party. Of many kind and congratulatory
messages I have received is one from the London BBC, in which they ask me to
convey ‘their heartfelt thanks to all for a truly magnificent programme.’ I
have received a telegram from as far away as New Zealand, where we were
apparently very clearly heard. Mr. Walton Handy has rightly and deservedly
received widespread notice, and I am deeply grateful to him; but the minor
members of the party, viz., the bell-ringers and the carol singers, also
contributed to the success of the programme. The following are their names :—
Mrs. Bessie Faulkner, Miss Gwennie Smith, Mrs. Bennett, Mrs. Freeman, Mrs.
Robotham, Mr. George Hands, Mr. Venables, Mr. Cook, Mr. Cook, Jr., Mr. Boswell,
and Mr. Mayo. The actual arrangements were a little nerve racking, as, owing to
the Empire programme running late, cuts had to be made up to the last moment,
including a complete carol.— Yours, &c.,
Why was Ilmington chosen by the BBC for that Empire
Exchange? As that first newspaper article says this wasn’t the first broadcast
from the village that year, so it is possible that the technical issues of
broadcasting from that location and the availability of the Manor House were
addressed in that earlier transmission. It also seems likely that Flower himself
may have been influential in negotiating the return visit. Aside from his
brewing interests he was an amateur actor, public speaker, Rotarian, president
of the local Conservative Association, governor of the Stratford-upon-Avon Memorial
Theatre, an electrical engineer and member of the I.E.E.
Sam Bennett pictured in the Radio Times for the Ilmington Meets the Microphone programme
That earlier broadcast was Ilmington Meets the Microphone heard on the Midland Regional
Programme on 2 June. It was part of a series intended to give a glimpse into
the life of villagers in various parts of the country. Acting as compère
was the Squire himself Spenser Flower with ‘local colour’ provided by villagers.
Those locals included Samuel Bennett – who performed in his attire of smock,
bells, ribbon-trimmed hat and white breeches – who’s ‘fiddling, singing or
recounting numerous anecdotes...provided rare entertainment”. There was singing
from the duet of Mrs Bennett and Mrs Faulkner and the Terry family of hand-bell
ringers.
The Radio Times
billing set the scene:
The village of Ilmington lies to the west of the
Stratford-Oxford main road. Ilmington is in Warwickshire. An attempt was
recently made to have it transferred from Warwickshire to Gloucestershire. The
story goes that at the height of the controversy, a resident was asked which he
preferred, and plumped for Warwickshire ' because it's so mortal cold on top of
they Glahstersheer hills '. It has an interesting old church, and fine old
manor-house. Simon de Montfort , who was killed at the Battle of Evesham, lived
there; several of the de Montforts were Rectors. The manor-house is now the
residence of Mr. Spenser Flower, who compères this village feature.
Inhabitants will describe the life of the village, and the talk will be broken
up with music and snatches of song.
Back to that 1934 Christmas Day transmission, for behind the
picture of bucolic charm trouble was brewing (no pun intended). What the above
reports don’t mention is that the handover to the King was originally supposed
to have been performed by the village’s oldest inhabitant, 95 year old Richard Long.
But, as the Daily Express reported
three days after the broadcast, Long had been dropped because his photograph
had appeared in the newspaper before Christmas (see article above). Spenser Flower is quoted as
saying that the ban was imposed on the instructions of the BBC ‘as an
undertaking was said to have been given on behalf of the villagers that no
detail of the broadcast would be divulged.’ However, the BBC stated that Mr
Long had been unable to broadcast as he was ‘bed-ridden’. There was further
village unrest as Sam Bennett, already something of a local celebrity and described
in the report as the local ‘fruiterer, bramble merchant and fiddler’ [Note 1]
was also excluded and wrote to Flower “It was my broadcasting party, and you
threw me out”, to which the Squire replied “If you want a fight, I can fight
too”. There are no reports of aggro on the village green so presumably some
kind of peace was restored.
Walton Handy and Sam pictured in 1940
There is, however, a heart-warming postscript to this story.
In his Christmas Day message Walton Handy had mentioned his brother Josh who’d
emigrated to New Zealand in 1907. He asked that if his brother happened to be
listening to write to him as he’d not heard from him for many years and had
lost his address. By the following
February Walton had that letter from Josh in Papakura, Auckland. The Daily News reported: “We were sitting
round the radio,” wrote Josh, “as we knew Ilmington was going to broadcast, but
never dreamed it was you. When you began I said to my wife, ‘That’s our Walt,’
but she ridiculed me. As you went on it proved I was right. To hear you 12,000 miles
away gave me the biggest thrill of my life.”
The story doesn’t end there. On Christmas Day 1939 Laurence
Gilliam was yet again charged with producing the pre-Royal message programme The Empire’s Greeting and billed in the Radio Times under Christmas in the British Isles is ‘a Shepherd in the Cotswolds’. Yes,
it’s our old friend Walton Handy who yet again took the honour of greeting the
King, this time George VI. Such was Walton’s fame that theatre impresario George
Black offered him an engagement to appear at a London music hall, an invitation
that he declined. Walton Handy died in January 1951 aged 81.
The story of the 1934 broadcast from Ilmington was told in a
2020 drama Voices Out of the Air
produced by the Stratford-based Run Home Productions and broadcast on BBC CWR
on 23 December 2020. Written by Mark Carey it tells the story through the eyes
of a young radio engineer and some of the scenes were recorded at Ilmington
Manor and St Mary’s Church. You can read about this drama on Run Home website
and hear the full recording here.
Note 1: Supposedly his notepaper was headed ‘Badger Killer
and Bramble Merchant’. His expertise in folk music and dance meant he was
already well known not just in the UK but also in the States. In 1928 he accepted
an invitation from Henry Ford, no less, to visit the USA. Bennett was also a
parish councillor.
Note 2: There were three
BBC broadcasts from Ilmington in 1934. With the equipment already in place
for the Christmas Day programme The Burford-based Westhall Singers were on air
from the Tithe Barn at the Manor House for part of Carol Contrasts on the Midland Regional service on Christmas Eve.
Note 3: Richard Long died in October 1935 aged 97. Spenser
Flower died just a week after the declaration of World War II on 12 September
1939, He was 62. Sam Bennett enjoyed considerable success as a fiddle player
even appearing on In Town Tonight. He
died in February 1951 aged 86. A programme about his life was broadcast in the
Midland region on 15 February 1952. Ilmington Manor remains in the Flower
family and the gardens are regularly open to the public. The bells of St Mary’s
church can be heard on BBC Sounds if you search under Bells on Sunday.
In May 2012 I wrote about the BBC World Service request show hosted by Sandi Jones and ended the post by writing “I've no recordings of
Sandi on the World Service - if you have please contact me”. Well nearly 13
years later I have a recording! More on that, in a moment.
The World Service request show had started in late 1975 and
ran until October 1988. Initially there were four shows a week with a different
presenter for each edition, at first Don Moss and Brian Matthew then a year or
so later by Don, Sandi Jones, Sarah Ward and Bob Holness. By 1979 there were
two editions per week presented by Sandi and Tony Myatt who would both continue
to share presenting duties for the rest of its run. [Sarah Ward continued on
the World Service with Sarah and Company,
Bob Holness with Anything Goes]. From
January 1981 just one edition per week was recorded going out on what would be
its fixed day and time of Sundays at 1345 GMT (initially with a midweek
repeat).
We get a chance to find out what a whole edition of the show
sounds like, in this case from Sunday 26 December 1982, thanks to a cassette
that has turned up. Unearthing the recording was Dennis Biggs. The tape had been
kept by his wife Doina who was producing the show at the time. This particular
edition was the final request show she produced and Sandi acknowledges this at
the end, as well as mentioning her daughter Nadina.
For many years Doina Biggs was a producer for the BBC’s
Romanian section at the BBC in Bush House. The Romanian Service had started
broadcasting on 15 September 1939 – it would close in 2008 – and when Doina
joined as a secretary in 1968 it was a time of change in the service which at
that point mainly consisted of pre-war emigrees such as Ion Podea and Liviu
Cristea. Doina and Dennis had married in Bucharest in September 1967 and after
being virtually expelled from Romania the following February she joined her
husband in London. By the early 1970s she’d undertaken training courses with a
view to becoming a programme producer. She would specialise in youth features
and pop music shows and was seconded to the English service for about a year
during which she produced the request show with Sandi Jones. Eventually, after
having to work many night shifts and as a result of internal politics, Doina
left the BBC in 1995. She continued to have an interest in Romanian issues and
took in a number of Romanian dissidents who she assisted in their citizenship
applications. She had frequently travelled to Romania until she was warned that
her safety couldn’t be guaranteed as her activities were being monitored by the
secret police. Doina passed away in September 2023.
London Calling magazine listings for 26 December 1982
In this edition of TheSandi Jones Request Show it’s
apparent that the programme enjoys wide listenership in Ghana as Accra is
mentioned many times and there are also messages from St Louis, Bahrain, Sri
Lanka, Cork, Singapore, India, Monrovia, Southampton, Paris, Bhutan, St Helena,
Saudi Arabia, Ascension Island and Malawi.
Although it’s a request show in most cases no particular
record is chosen or it’s a case of a “record of your choice please”. There are,
however, requests for specific records by Simon and Garfunkel, Carpenters,
Boney M as well as any Judy Garland track and also something by Chicago which
the team “just cannot trace”. The playlist is:
When I Need You –
Leo Sayer, O Holy Night – Nat King
Cole, Coat of Many Colours – Dolly
Parton (“a much loved record that’s been much played and is, I’m afraid,
sounding a bit ancient now”), Just You ‘n’ Me – Chicago, Where Do I Begin – Andy Williams, Ave Maria – Elaine Paige, The Wanderer –
Donna Summer, The Sound of Silence –
Simon and Garfunkel, Have Yourself A
Merry Little Christmas – Judy Garland, Every
Beat of My Heart – Gladys Knight, Top
of the World – Carpenters, Mary’s Boy
Child – Boney M and We Wish You a
Merry Christmas – Ray Conniff.
So its back 42 years to 1345 GMT on Boxing Day, Sunday 26
December 1982 for this edition of The
Sandi Jones Request Show.
With thanks to Dennis Biggs and in memory of Doina Biggs.