The Third Programme "will devote to the great works the
time they require. It will seek every evening to do something that is
culturally satisfying and significant. It will devote occasional series of evenings
to some related masterpieces, a Shakespeare historical cycle, all the Beethoven
quartets, or a series of Mozart operas. It will, so far as circumstances
permit, be international. Concerts, operas, plays will be taken from abroad as
landline conditions improve. Its talks will include contributions from the
great European thinkers. Its whole content will be directed to an audience that
is not of one class but that is perceptive and intelligent".
So ran the introduction from the BBC's Director-General Sir
William Haley on the opening night of the Third Programme on 29 September
1946. But the first programme chosen to
open the new service wasn't a concert, an opera, a drama or a talk but a comedy
from Stephen Potter and Joyce Grenfel.
"This is the BBC Third Programme," said announcer
Patrick Butler. "How to Listen.
Including how not to, how you ought to, and how you won't." The idea of
launching with a send-up of highbrow listening was that of Leslie Stokes, the
station's Assistant (Presentation and Publicity), who thought that "we
ought to have a laugh at ourselves."
Stephen Potter had been writing and producing for BBC radio
since the mid-30s. He'd already appeared in a few How to ... programmes on the Home Service: How to talk to Children, How
to Argue, How to Give a Party, How to Woo and so on. Turning freelance
after the war he wrote comic books on Gamesmanship
and One-Upmanship that would
later form the basis for the delightfully funny film School for Scoundrels with Alistair Sim and Ian Carmichael.
Recounting the events of that opening night Humphrey
Carpenter, in his book, The Envy of the
World, takes up the commentary:
Narrator (in a hushed tone): the programme is about to begin. We are rehearsing the opening announcement. The last details are being added. In the studio, last directions from the producer ... One minute to go ...
Amyot [Etienne Amyot, the Third Programme's Assistant (Planning)] says there was indeed such a mood as six o'clock approached that evening: 'We were terrified that something might go wrong. I remember George [George Barnes the Controller of the Third] saying to me, before we went on air, "Well, it'll succeed or it won't."'
In its opening moments, How to Listen exposed everyone's anxiety that no one would tune in to the Third. A radio producer, waiting eagerly for his live programme to go on the air, is suddenly granted a dispiriting vision of what is going on in listeners' homes:
Narrator: Are they ready? Are they listening? Here, the house is empty - there, the set is switched off - but here, Licence number 865432, Mrs Moss, is she listening?Old Lady: Turn up the wireless, Mrs Moss.Mrs Moss: Yes, dear, it is chilly tonight, let's turn up the wireless a bit ...Producer (anxiously): Yes, but is she really going to listen?Narrator: On to another radio set. Where are we now? Let's look in at the window of Baltimore Gardens.Man: It's your call.Woman: I said four clubs.Man: Four clubs...I say, could we have the radio down a little, please?
Woman: Yes, let's have it down a little. It's a bit difficult to concentrate on bridge.
This was all too realistic. A survey conducted by the Daily Telegraph during the third evening of the Third gathered these, among other responses:Housewife: Bottling apples when the play started and could not listen. Now playing bridge.Business Man: Not the time. I play bridge.
How to Listen went on to poke fun at every kind of BBC cliche, from the inanities of Workers' Playtime on the Light Programme to 'poetic drama' at its worst. Then, in the final few minutes, it suddenly turned serious, quoting from The Anatomy of Melancholy and Robert Graves on the listening ear, and offering some mock-Shakespearean verse (spoken by Deryck Guyler) which was presumably thought appropriate to the opening of the Third: '...Admit me Chorus to this History, / Who, Prologue-like you humble patience pray / Gently to hear, kindly to judge our play.'
The genesis of the Third Programme can be traced back to a
1943 memo from Senior Controller Basil Nicolls who proposed a general 'Home
Service'. a 'light' programme, 'popular', but not 'rubbishy', and an 'Arts
Programme', which would be devoted to high-quality performances of masterpieces
'in all the arts amenable to broadcasting'.
Controller of the Home Service, Sir Richard Maconachie, also
attempted to carve up the radio networks to fit the available wavelengths. Programme
A would be "cultural, for want of a better word" that would be
directed to a "highly intelligent minority audience", Programme B
would be 'Educational and Youth', Programme C would draw on regional material,
Programme D would be like the wartime Forces Programme and Programme E would be
'light'. This proved too ambitious and all peacetime audiences got was just the
Home, Light and Third, and they had to wait for over a year for the latter.
The Third Programme was at pains to emphasise that the
schedule would have no fixed points, if a concert overran then so be it.
"The Third Programme avoids annotation" explained the BBC Year Book
for 1947. "Comment on a work about to be performed is avoided, and silence
- a full ten-seconds' pause - is regarded as the best cushion for a
masterpiece. This leisured presentation in which silent pauses of up to four
minutes have been allowed is one reason why the Programme has been described as
unexpected and different from what is customary".
Back to that opening night. How to Listen was billed as running from 6 pm to 6.45 pm but it
under ran by seven minutes. "The timing was slipshod to say the
least" said one newspaper. To fill the gap announcer Christopher Pemberton
read some Henry James. A later four
minute gap just before 8 pm remained just silent, save for twelve words from
Pemberton.
Bach's Goldberg
Variations followed at 6.45 pm. Played by Lucille Wallace at the harpsichord
they were introduced by yet another announcer on duty that evening, Marjorie
Anderson.
At 7.30 pm came a talk: Reflections
on World Affairs by Field-Marshal J.C. Smuts. They had wanted Churchill for
the opening talk but he was ill.
The first concert on the station commenced at 8 pm with the
BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Adrian Boult and the BBC Chorus performing
live at the Maida Vale studios with announcer Alvar Liddell introducing. The
concert featured a specially commissioned Festival
Overture by Benjamin Britten. The concert interval was Director-General
William Haley's introductory talk referred to above.
Following the concert at 10.10 pm was Living Opinion, a heavily-scripted discussion between
"ex-Servicemen and others". The Star
was not impressed: "The handful of woolly-minded men discussing ... were
obviously reading it all out and despite careful producing it did not sound
real."
The rest of the evening consisted of Monteverdi madrigals on
record, a repeat of a 1935 talk by Sir Max Beerbohm on London Revisited and, to close, the Epilogue.
There were bouquets and brickbats from the press and
listeners. "Haley's Third Symphony for orchestra and two listeners"
jibed the Daily Mirror. The Evening Standard liked "the look of
it" whilst the Daily Mail though
"it demanded no greater feat of endurance than two hours of choral and
orchestral music ... and the fragments of talk and music which made up the rest
of the evening were easy enough on the ear". One listener thought it left
"no time to do anything else except listen and I can see a succession of
evenings in which meals will be prepared in ten minutes' time and eaten in five
minutes". Another exclaimed "Today is the high spot of my listening
life."
So here is that opening programme, How to Listen. With Joyce Grenfel are Gladys Young, Betty Hardy,
Louise Hutton, Carleton Hobbs, Geoffrey Wincott, Roy Plomley, Ivor Barnard,
Deryck Guyler and Ronald Simpson. My recording comes from the Radio 3 repeat on
29 September 1986, hence the voice of
announcer John Holmstom.
As a bonus this is How
to Broadcast that aired on the evening of the Third's fifth anniversary on
29 September 1951. The cast is Joyce Grenfel, Betty Hardy, Ronald Simpson, Deryck
Guyler, Geoffrey Wincott, Alan Reed, Elwyn Brook-Jones, Carleton Hobbs and Roy
Plomley. This recording is of the Christmas Day 1987 repeat on Radio 4 and
includes an introduction from Laurie MacMillan.
References:
The Envy of the World
by Humphrey Carpenter (Phoenix 1997)
The History of Broadcasting
in the United Kingdom: Volume IV Sound & Vision by Asa Briggs (OUP
1979)
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