If families had their favourites played on Sunday and
housewives got their choice on weekdays then on Saturday mornings it was Children's Favourites. In this the fifth of nine posts recalling the
years of the BBC Light Programme I remember the time when kids requested the Swedish Rhapsody and Sparky's Magic Piano.
Even if you don't know remember Children's Favourites you'll know that delightfully cheerful theme
tune, Puffing Billy. But the
forerunner of the show started just over a year earlier as Children's Choice and it used the Housewives' Choice theme In
Party Mood until Puffing Billy
was shunted in a year or so later.
Children's Choice
started off as a Christmas Day 1952 request programme on the Light Programme.
The host was the singer Donald Peers. Throughout 1953 it effectively ran as a
Saturday morning extension of Housewives'
Choice; whoever was presenting during the week covered the junior edition
too. Early record favourites were The
Runaway Train by Vernon Dalhart, Nellie
the Elephant by Mandy Miller and Charles Penrose with The Laughing Policemen - all still instantly recognisable to
Stewpot's listeners some twenty years later.
The programme had a rebrand on 2 January 1954 to become Children's Favourites. In charge of
proceedings was Derek McCulloch (pictured above), better known from his Children's Hour programmes in the 1930s and 40s as Uncle Mac.
McCulloch had retired from the BBC in 1950 but became the somewhat testy compère
of the request show, his familiar Children's
Hour sign-off of "Goodnight children...everywhere" transformed
into the opening words "Hullo children...everywhere".
Uncle Mac's last edition was on 5 December 1964. By then even Children's Hour had been axed and the
BBC wanted some younger blood on Children's
Favourites. Perhaps this was in response to the growing competition from
the pirates, even if the requests still came in for Max Bygraves singing You're A Pink Toothbrush, I'm A Blue
Toothbrush.
Though McCulloch presented the lion's share of the
programmes in the first eight years you could also write in to Archie Andrews
and Peter Brough, Max Bygarves, Rex Palmer (Uncle Rex), John Ellison, Spike
Milligan, Christopher Trace and Jim Dale. Between 1964 and 1967 you'd have
heard Paddy Feeny, John Ellison and Leslie Crowther. And it was Crowther who
took the show to Radio 1 where it became Junior
Choice on 30 September 1967.
From 24 October 1965 Children's
Favourites added a Sunday morning edition. The Radio Times advised that this double helping - initially presented
by Paddy Feeny - aimed to "satisfy the mounting number of requests (from
both parents and children) which has kept this popular morning programme
spinning along for eleven years". It went on to say that "children -
from toddlers to teenagers - are explicit about what they like and why. Even
the youngest listeners are quick to follow the trends of the new pop sounds,
but there's also a constant demand for all those intriguing children's
'standards' - many of them off-beat novelty records which nudge the charts
without reaching the hit parade but still delight generations of children.
Among the artists who are perennial favourites are Danny Kaye, Charlie Drake,
Julie Andrews, Rolf Harris, Burl Ives, Doris Day, Petula Clark, Cliff Richard
and Anthony Newley." I'll leave you to provide the appropriate novelty
song titles for these singers.
The early years of Children's
Favourites are recalled in this 1988 Radio 4 documentary written and
presented by Jeremy Nicholas: Hullo
Children Everywhere. Nicholas described part of the appeal of the programme
as "its thumb-sucking security, each week the same old welcome friends
singing the same old welcome songs".
In this second recording it's former Junior Choice presenter Ed Stewart who recreates the days of Children's Favourites. This show was
broadcast on Radio 2 on 29 July 1995 as part of the station's celebrations of
the Light Programme years.
Hi Andrew
ReplyDeleteSorry to crash this blogpost to ask about another one, but I'm scratching my head trying to find the name of a theme tune I think was used on Capital Radio in the 1970s by a female presenter with an American accent - quite possibly not a DJ. If you can help please drop me a line at Eutychus [at] ship-of-fools.com
Thanks!