Throughout the 1960s he was the unflappable safe pair of
hands, equally adept at anchoring election coverage, moon landings, current
affairs and global broadcasts. At the start of the decade he was the avuncular
host who came into people's homes every evening on Tonight ("the next Tonight will be tomorrow night, until then
good night") and ended it advising on the latest package deals in sunny
Spain on Holiday 69.
Arthur Clifford Michelmore was born in Cowes on the Isle of
Wight on 11 December 1919. On leaving school he trained as an RAF engineer in
Loughborough. During the war he became a squadron leader and afterwards in 1947
began broadcasting as a sports commentator with the British Forces Network,
then based in Hamburg. A year later he became the BFN's Head of Outside
Broadcasts and Variety and a year later the Deputy Station Director. As I
related in my post on Family Favourites,
Cliff was called in to present the German end of the programme at short notice
where he was partnered in London by Jean Metcalfe. By 1950 they had married and
would become broadcasting's golden couple. Such was the media interest in Cliff
and Jean that when their son Guy was born in 1957 Rory McEwen composed this
topical calypso for Tonight:
Cliff Michelmore's in a lather
He's suddenly found out he's a father.
A brand new Michelmore's on tonight,
Shoving his father out of the light
He weighs 6 pounds
A bouncing lad,
Which is 16 stone lighter than his dad.
The Daily Herald
reported that Woman's Hour had rung
Cliff to say: "It's no good, old man. Woman all over the country are
badgering us to broadcast a few burps from your offspring. Can we send a
microphone along?" Poor Jean found her stay in hospital shattered by
photographer's bulbs flashing and the reporter from Woman's Hour immortalising baby Guy's first gurglings on tape.
When Cliff left the BFN and returned to the UK it was as a freelance
working for the BBC. On the television service he was both behind the camera producing shows such as the
children's magazine All Your Own,
presented by Huw Wheldon, Playbox and
Johnny Morris's The Horse Chestnut Man
as well in front of them on the children's shows Telescope, Westward Ho! and Junior Sportsview. For BBC radio he was introducing music shows
such as Top Score and Housewives'
Choice as well as providing sports commentaries. Indeed looking through the
BBC Genome website throughout most of the 1950s and 1960s there's hardly a week
where Cliff's name doesn't appear on either TV or radio either presenting,
commentating or producing.
Cliff's break into mainstream TV came about following the
arrival of ITV in 1955. The BBC decided to schedule a 20 minute Newsreel, news summary and weather
forecast from 7 pm. leaving a 10-minute gap before the evening's entertainment
kicked off at 7.30 pm. Producer Donald Baverstock jumped at the chance to fill
the void and thus Highlight was born.
Billed as "people, events, comments of today" in effect the formula
was three short interviews, carefully balanced: "a hard interview at the
start, a human interest story in the middle, and a pretty girl at the
end". Woman's lib had not reached Lime Grove in the mid-50s.
Initially the presentation duties alternated between
Macdonald Hastings and Geoffrey Johnson Smith. When Mac gave it up Cliff was
drawn in, apparently following an introduction to Donald Baverstock in one of
the pubs near the Lime Grove studios.
Cliff was worth his salt and readily adapted to this live
evening broadcast. On one occasion, not long after he joined Highlight, the contents of an edition
were the financial journalist Edward Westrop talking about the state of the
economy, an interview over the circuit to Cardiff with Welsh author Gwyn Thomas about a new
production of Under Milk Wood and
rounding off with a talk to a young Scot who'd just won the World Ham Slicing
Championship. The journalist's train broke down at Notting Hill Gate so he was
a no-show, the line between Lime Grove and Cardiff went down and so Cliff was
left with having to fill the time discussing the finer points of ham slicing.
His only consolation was that he went home with copious amounts of ham!
Working on Highlight
Cliff also learnt a valuable lesson that stood him in good stead for the
remainder of his career. It came about when he was lined-up to interview
Krishna Menon, a Minister in the Indian Government, who was in London to have
talks with Harold MacMillan and had also caused ructions at the UN over their
stance on Formosa (as Taiwan was then known). Each of Cliff's question was met
with somewhat enigmatic rebuke "That question is not cast in the mould of
my thinking." Years later Cliff would reflect: "You cannot go into
any interview over prepared. Under prepared yes, but never over prepared".
By 1956 Cliff was not only working on Highlight but was still covering sporting matters on Today's Sport and Sports Round-Up was well as covering current affairs on Panorama. It was also about this time he
acquired a new nickname. The story goes that he'd missed his train from
Victoria Station and had retired to the Golden Arrow bar for a quick drink. He
felt a tug at the bottom of his jacket, gazing up at him was a small girl.
"Excuse me", she said. "Are you Clifflemore?" Answering yes
she ran off and returned a minute later. "Clifflemore, this is my
brother." He was carrying a bag of sweets and said, "Have a phweet,
Clifflemore."
At the end of the year the Postmaster General, Lord de la
Warr, extended the hours available to television (following pressure from the
commercial channels rather than the Corporation) by opening up the closed hour
between 6 and 7pm, the so-called Toddlers Truce. Donald Baverstock proposed
that the Highlight team, with Cliff
as presenter, bridge the gap with a nightly show called Man Alive. By February 1957 that title had been dropped in favour
of Tonight. The programme was to be
"very informal and relaxed in manner, the tempo brisk and competent."
Crucially the use of filmed reports was to be an important element, a decision
which led to the launching of the TV careers of Alan Whicker, Trevor Philpott
and Fyffe Robertson. All this was promised on a very low budget of between £200
and £300 per day. Plus, as Lime Gove was unable to accommodate the expanded
show, a temporary home was found in the old Marconi Studios in St Mary Abbott's
Place in Kensington - a studio that had recently been vacated by ATV.
Cliff introduced the first edition of Tonight on Monday 18 February 1957. It had a specially composed sig
tune, Tonight and Very Night, written
by Felix de Wolfe. The packed running order included the draw for the FA Cup, a
press review by John Metcalf, Cy Grant with a topical calypso penned by Bernard
Levin of all people, actor Derek Bond telling the story of 'Bulbous Betty' the
statue of Aphrodite that was offending people in Richmond Park, Derek Hart
interviewing the great Ed Murrow and (intriguingly) Jonathan Miller giving his
impressions of shops in Charing Cross Road.
Appearing for the best part of an hour each night Cliff
would become a household name, a kind of TV everyman. The Evening Standard likened him to being "the John Bull of the
Small Screen" It went on to say "this avuncular pink-faced
middle-brow with middle-class accent, occasional squeak in the voice and
mid-as-cocoa manner has a very warm place in the hearts of millions of
Britons". Behind the scenes he was well-liked by colleagues but apparently
"he was not easy to get on with; he could be prickly and he did have
bursts of temper, but these never lasted long."
Tonight ended its
run in June 1965 but Cliff was soon back as main presenter of BBC1's new
current affairs programme, Twenty-Four
Hours, broadcast on weeknights at 10.30 pm - so in some ways a forerunner
to Newsnight. He was cutting back
on his radio work, reports for the West
region and football commentaries for the Light Programme, but was still much in
evidence on the telly: "One way or another I got caught up in the Cuban
missile crisis, General Elections, Olympic Games, early space shots, Royal
Investitures, Hungary and Czechoslovakia, Concorde's maiden flights, the Apollo
Moon programme."
Cliff was chosen to anchor the programme with the biggest
worldwide audience (at the time), the Our
World satellite link-up of 25 June 1967 that pulled in at least 400 million
viewers, some estimates say 700 million.
In July 1968 Cliff left Twenty-Four
Hours (the programme continued with Kenneth Allsop and Michael Barrett and
later David Dimbleby by which time its title had slimmed down to 24 Hours). Ostensibly he left to
"settle for a more predictable lifestyle" which would allow more time
with the family. In fact he was also planning to move into industry and set up
a corporate video programme production, as a subsidiary of EMI, with Gordon
Reece. However, a return to TV was not far away.
The edition of the Radio
Times that ushered in 1969 was packed with the usual holiday ads: JetSet
holidays offering 15 days in Majorca for £35.10.0, Hoverlloyd with Ramsgate to
Calais in 40 minutes for £10 plus a new weekly column from travel writer John
Carter. Meanwhile the centre colour pages showed the Michelmore family on
holiday, in Scotland and on the Isle of Wight, though they had plans to visit
Canada. All this was to promote the new BBC1 series Holiday 69, designed to "take the worry out of your holiday
planning". The first edition covered the increasingly popular package
holidays, week two looked at holiday camps. For the next seventeen years Cliff
was the trusted programme host, offering viewers a mix of exotic, and not so
exotic, travelogues plus a dose of consumer advice. Here, in 1994, he returned to
the programme when it celebrated its 25th anniversary. The presenter at the
time was Jill Dando.
After Twenty-Four
Hours Cliff didn't leave current affairs entirely. In 1980 and 1981 he was
one of the presenters of Southern TV's regional news show Day by Day. It wasn't an entirely happy period as the commute to
the studio's in Southampton proved exhausting.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s Cliff returned to radio. In
1982 and 1983 he sat in for both Jimmy Young and Ed Stewart on their Radio 2
shows. The latter now included a Family
Favourites feature so it was full circle. There was Waterlines (1984-92), a sort of aquatic Going Places, on Radio 4 (later transferring to Radio 5) and Coastline (1991-92) also on Radio 4. He
took over as chair from David Hamilton of Radio 2's nostalgia based quiz Some of These Days (1986-91). His last
regular series was again mining a nostalgia seam in A Year to Remember.
Since Jean Metcalfe's death in 2000, Cliff's media
appearances were infrequent. He was last seen on TV on BBC Parliament's 2007
theme night The Pound in Your Pocket and
in 2009 he was reading listener's news on iPM.
In 1984 Cliff suffered a suspected heart attack which caused
him to take stock of his life. In the joint autobiography Two-Way Story he imagined what his obituaries might read like:
"They might say I had been extremely fortunate to have achieved a measure
of success in broadcasting in spite of lacking the intellectual powers and
education of some of my contemporaries and the physical attributes of others.
Hopefully they would add that I was greatly blessed by the love of a wife and
family who, with good humour and tolerance, overlooked, and even ignored, the
deficiencies in my character."
Cliff Michelmore 1919-2016
"The next Tonight will be tomorrow night, until then
good night."
Quotes taken from:
Two-Way Story by
Cliff Michelmore and Jean Metcalfe (Futura, 1986)
Tonight: A Short
History by Deirdre Macdonald (BFI Dossier 15, 1982)
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