Whenever TV producers want to evoke an image of cosy 1950s
British domesticity they will invariably reach for the music track In Party Mood. More than half a century
after it was first used Jack Strachey's piece still has the ability to immediately
strike the right nostalgic note.
In Party Mood was
the theme to the Light Programme's daily request show designed to accompany the
morning chores after the menfolk had gone off to work - this was the 1940s
after all - Housewives' Choice.
The idea for Housewives'
Choice actually came from Sweden - the reference books make no mention of
its title or its longevity - following a visit to the country by the Light's
Programme Controller Norman Collins. It launched on 4 March 1946 (1) and lasted
until the close of the station some twenty-one years later.
Musical requests ranged from the traditional - Greensleves and the Eton Boating Song - to the popular - Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree With Anyone Else But Me by the
Andrews Sisters and Charles Trenet's La
Mer. In 1956 the favourite artists were Perry Como, Ruby Murray, Percy
Faith, Pat Boone and Doris Day. The programme's production office groaned under
the weight of 3,000 postcard requests a week. At its height over eight million
listeners tuned in.
The programme's first compère was the actor and
broadcaster Robert MacDermot. Others who proved popular in the early days were
Bryan Michie and Godfrey Winn. Presenters were generally booked for a two-week stint; many returned
again and again over the years. Some were not re-booked. There were also
appearances from BBC staff announcers. You'll notice - in the list at the foot
of this post - that of the 250+ names the majority are men. During the week it
seems, in contrast to Sunday's Family
Favourites, women were not allowed to play record requests.
Of the four women who did present Housewives' Choice, three were on the BBC staff and had broadcast
during the war. They all featured on the programme in the late 1940s and all
were also associated at one time or another with Woman's Hour: Barbara McFadyean, Jeanne Heal and Joan Griifiths.
The other woman presenter was Vera Lynn, who made a couple of one-off
appearances in 1956 and 1962 and then did a fortnight in 1963.
One of the best-known and most-loved of the regular hosts
was George Elrick (pictured above), the former big band drummer and singer who would later
combine his radio work alongside managing Mantovani and his orchestra. In his
autobiography (2) he recalls that it was veteran DJ Christopher Stone that put
his name forward to Anna Instone, the indomitable Head of Gramophone records
whose domain included Housewives' Choice.
(3)
When the programme first started the presenters were
expected to help choose the records from the submitted requests (4) and turn up
to the studio early for a complete run through, all scripted of course. But
George Elrick enjoyed a little latitude to deviate from the script and one
morning "after the last record had been played and I knew I was off the
air, I removed my headphones, leaned back in my chair and began to la-di-da the
signature tune which I could hear faintly from the room where they played the
records. Unfortunately my engineer thought I was still talking and, unbeknown
to me, hastily switched me back on". Concerned that he might get a ticking
off from the BBC he was surprised to hear programme organiser Pat Osborne tell
him: "Wonderful touch, old boy. Do it again tomorrow." In the
following show he added the words "See you all again tomorrow
morning..." and that sign-off became a programme institution.
In 1965 the BBC recorded an average daily audience for Housewives' Choice of 8.5 million, by
far the largest weekday radio listenership. The following year this had dropped
to 6.5 million - the impact of the pirate radio stations perhaps? But its days
were numbered as in September 1967 the Light Programme came to an end, and with
it Housewives' Choice. Final
presenting duties were taken up by David Hamilton, his first and last
appearance on the show.
Although the title disappeared on 29 September 1967 the
programme format did not. The following week a 90-minute daily record requests
show was back in the schedules of Radio 1 under the guise of Family Choice. (5) Like its predecessor
it has hosted by figures from the entertainment world and disc jockeys. Family Choice ran until 26 September
1969, replaced the following week by Pete
Murray's Open House on both Radio 1 and Radio 2.
Very little exists in the way of recordings of Housewives' Choice. The BBC kept just a
few minutes of a 1964 edition with Kenneth Horne. Online you can find 40
minutes of a 1950s programme with Bob Danvers-Walker. And that's the sum total
of 21 years of broadcasting.
Between 1982 and 1989 Russell Davies celebrated the programme in When Housewives Had the Choice - though
the Radio Times billings suggest
recordings from the original programmes were available - and in 1990 George
Elrick was back at the helm for a one-off May Bank holiday special. I only
recorded the first fifteen minutes of the show so I've no idea how he signed
off this particular edition.
In 1995 to celebrate fifty years since the launch of the
Light Programme there was another one-off programme, this time with Roy Hudd
looking after proceedings. Roy hadn't presented Housewives' Choice first time round, but he had been on Family Choice. This is my recording of
that complete show.
1- Although the regular series of Housewives' Choice started in March 1946 the BBC Genome site lists
two earlier weeks: w/c 26 November 1945 with Roy Rich and then w/c 1 January
1946 with Franklin Engelmann. The programme was broadcast from 9.10 to 10 am,
but later started at 9 am and finally 8.30 am.
2 - Housewives'
Choice: The George Elrick Story by George Elrick (Mainstream Publishing
1991)
3 - George's first appearance was on 9 December 1946.
Between 1946 and 1967 he hosted the show about 240 times.
4 - Richard Murdoch, who was a regular DJ on the Light
Programme alongside his comedy work, remembers that in the early days "we
could take home the postcards and compile our own programmes. One could have
filled a whole hour of requests for Gracie Fields singing Bless this House." As quoted in the foreword to The Golden Age of Radio by Denis Gifford
(Batsford, 1985)
5 - On occasions in the 1950s and 1960s Housewives' Choice had been billed as Family Choice, usually on Bank Holidays. Radio 1's Family Choice was also simulcast on
Radio 2.
Housewives' Choice Presenters
This is a list of all the presenters in order of their first
appearance:
Robert MacDermot, Geoffrey
Sumner, Bryan Michie, Roy Rich, John
Webster, Sandy Grandison,
Alvar Lidell, Franklin Engelmann, Neal
Arden, Joesph Lewis, George Elrick, Hector
Stewart, Christopher Stone, Spike
Hughes, Dennis Vance, Barbara MacFadyean, Gordon Crier, Jonah
Barrington, Bob Danvers-Walker, Jack
Jackson, Sam Heppner, Roger Snowdon, Alan Adair, Robin Richmond, Paul Adam, Roger Falk, Stanley
Maxted, David Jacobs, Jeanne Heal, Joan Griffiths, Georgie Henschel, Harold
Warrender, John Watt, Jerry Desmonde,
Bernard McNab, Stephen Grenfell, Cliff
Michelmore, Godfrey Winn, Alex McCrindle, Wilfred Thomas, Harry Parry, Edmundo
Ros, Ernest Dudley, Michael Miles, Bentley Collingwood Hilliam, Bill Gates, Sam
Pollock, Eamonn Andrews, John Ellison,
Teddy Johnson, Lou Preager, Gilbert Harding, John Masters, Tom Masson, Maurice Denham, Richard
Attenborough, Billy Cotton, Gordon Gow, Joesph Linnane, Steve Race, Peter
Brough, Felix Deebank, Kim Peacock, Fred Yule, Bruce Belfrage, Roy Bradford, Donald Peers, Alastair Dunnett,
Victor Silvester, Peter Noble, Peter Bathurst, Duncan Carse, Bill Phillips,
George Moon, Barry Delmaine, Benny Lee,
Peter Haigh, Leonard Henry, James
Norbury, Felix King, Elton Hayes, Alan Gibson, Chappie D'Amato, Lionel Gamlin,
Peter Sinclair, Paul Martin, Robert Irwin, Donald Bisset, Reginald Dixon,
Hamilton Kennedy, Jack Train, Harold Berens, Woolf Phillips, Roger Delgado,
Gordon Bradley, Peter Lloyd, Arthur Bush, Mark White, James Urquhart, Rex
Palmer, Frank Weir, Norman Hackforth, Ralph Reader, Jack Melford, Max
Robertson, Edward Barnes, Sam Costa, Leslie Heritage, David Nixon, Peter West,
Dennis Noble, Hubert Gregg, Geroge Melachrino, Howard Lockhart, Jimmy Hanley,
Nat Temple, Alan Dixon, Dennis Castle, Huphrey Lestocq, Richard Murdoch, Noel
Iliffe, Eric Phillips, Derek Prentice, John
Merrett, Frederick Allen, Len Marten, Hugh McDermott, John Burnaby, Denis Moonan, Clarence Wright, Keith Fordyce, Gary Miller, Douglas
Blackwell, Donald Stewart, Ian Stewart, Frank Duncan, Bruce Trent, Kenneth Best, Jimmy Young, Thomas
Woodrooffe, Alan Dell, Leslie Parker, Jimmy Vivian, Kenneth Wolstenholme,
Desmond Llewelyn, David Enders, Frank Chacksfield, Donald Gray, Peter Jones,
Archie McCulloch, Maurice O'Callghan, Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, Ken Sykora, Pete
Murray, Don Lang, Wilfred Pickles, Cardew Robinson, Max Jaffa, Cyril
Fletcher, Russ Conway, Bryan Johnson,
Brian Rix, Ian Wallace, Ted Moult,
Hughie Green, Cyril Stapleton, Alan Freeman, McDonald Hobley, Charlie Chester, Alex MacIntosh,
Malcolm Mitchell, Ted Ray, Desmond Carrington, Brian Matthew, John Slater, John
Anthony, Frankie Vaughan , Harry Secombe, Vera Lynn, Andy Stewart, Tommy
Steele, Alan Keith, Jon Pertwee, Eric
Robinson, David Hughes, Kenneth McKeller, Arthur Haynes, Rex Alston, Ted King,
Tim Brinton, Kenneth Horne, Rupert Davies, Bob
Monkhouse, Ken Dodd, Tim Gudgin, Hattie Jacques, Eric Sykes, Don Moss, Geoffrey Wheeler, Stratford Johns , Lance Percival, Gay
Byrne, Norman Vaughan, David Gell, Jack DeManio, Roger Moffat, Johnny Morris, Bruce Forsyth, Val Doonican, Raymond
Baxter, Ivor Emmanuel, Alun Williams, Brian Johnston, Richard Briers, Roy Castle, Inia TeWiata, Jimmy Henney, Bill
Simpson, Edric Connor, Bill Crozier, Denny Piercy, Kenneth Cope, Terence
Edmond, Bob Holness, Leslie Crowther,
Martin Locke, George Martin, Joe
Henderson, John Benson, Peter Goodwright, Terry Scott, Geroge Chisholm,
Arthur Murphy, Bernard Miles, Joe Brown,
Cy Grant, Doug Arthur, Dave Allen, Percy Edwards, Paddy
Feeny, Barry Alldis, Jimmy Thompson, Rolf Harris, Edmund Hockridge, Max Bygraves, Jim Dale, Freddie Frinton, James Ellis, Terry Wogan, Corbet Woodall, Ian
Carmichael, Simon Dee and David Hamilton
Hi
ReplyDeleteMy mother had a request done by her sister for either "Please Release Me" or "The last Waltz" unfortunately I have lost the newspaper article as a newspaper did a story on Mum getting a bunch of flowers from her favourite singer Engelbert Humperdinck. I would love to have a copy of this newspaper article and would cherish it as my Mother is no longer alive.
J