Few radio shows feature both Al Bowlly and ZZ Top on their
playlist, but Desmond Carrington's The
Music Goes Round was such a show, a Radio 2 Friday night fixture for twelve
years. Prior to that Desmond had hosted the Sunday lunchtime All Time Greats from 1981 to 2004 with a
music selection, chosen by listeners, that could be equally diverse, even
though it did tend to veer towards easy listening and the nostalgic. That 36
year run of weekly music shows finally came to a dignified and poignant end in
October 2016 when ill-health forced Desmond to finally hung up his headphones.
Desmond Herbert Carrington was born and raised in Bromley
where he attended the County Grammar School. Perhaps sensing that his future
was in the arts his first job was as an office boy at Macmillan's the
publishers for 18/- a week. But his calling was acting and his first
professional role was as a Cockney schoolboy in Goodbye Mr Chips at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham. He then secured
regular repertory work with the Penge Court Players.
In the early years of the Second World War Desmond joined
the army, serving in the Royal West Kent Regiment, initially posted to Northern
Ireland before serving out in India and Burma. Here he got his first
opportunity to broadcast by opening up Rangoon Radio after the Japanese army
had left. By 1946 he was serving as a commissioned officer out of Colombo in
Ceylon and managed to wangle a job at the new forces station Radio SEAC (South
Eastern Asia Command). Based in a palm grove some 15 miles outside Colombo
the coverage was immense, taking in
India, East Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Indo-Chine, Japan, the Pacific and
the west coast of the States. On the team with Carrington were David Jacobs -
they would remain firm friends thereafter - McDonald Hobley, Charles Chilton
and Alexander Moyes.
On demob Desmond knocked on the door of the BBC but they
sent him away telling him that he was not of "sufficient promise" for
them to offer him a job. However he would eventually secure a post as part of
the BBC Drama Repertory company where he worked across a range of schools
broadcasts and drama productions such as Children's
Hour, Paul Temple and Mrs Dales Diary.
In parallel to his acting career Desmond pursued his other
great passion of cinema by carving out something of a specialism as an adapter
of film screenplays for radio broadcast. He'd presented some film programmes on
Radio SEAC and back in Britain he'd come up with the idea of recording the
soundtrack from the film projector using a sound mirror and a tape recorder.
With the agreement of the film companies he then used the edited highlights
from the recording to form a radio programme. He took the idea to both Radio Luxembourg
where the scenes would be linked together by Wilfrid Thomas in a series titled Movie Magazine. Later Desmond himself
would present a number of shows for the station that included film soundtracks
as well as interviews and film scores in programmes such as Hollywood Calling and the sponsored Alka-Seltzer Movie Parade. He continued
to appear on Luxembourg into the mid-50s.
Meanwhile back at the BBC that same idea of film adaptations
were featured in a number of programmes including Picture Parade (1948) and Sunday
Cinema (1949-50). Desmond returned to cinema related work at the BBC when
he and Spencer Hale (both pictured below) compiled and presented the Stargazing segment -basically star interviews with accompanying
film clips - and then the quiz segment Sounds
Familiar of the long-running film magazine Merry- Go-Round (Light Programme 1956-60)
Desmond's big break finally came in 1958 when he got a telephone call from a colleague who was now producing Emergency Ward Ten asking if he'd like to play the part of the son of a patient. Desmond leapt at the chance to do some live television over three months. His performance was deemed a success and he was invited back to play the part of a doctor - the part of Dr Chris Anderson. He remained in the show until 1964 appearing in over 200 episodes.
Of his time on Emergency
Ward 10 Desmond would later recall the problems of having to memorise
"some appallingly difficult and long medical terms, Then I had the bright idea of writing them on the
inside of the sink as we were always scrubbing up for the operations on the
shows. During rehearsal, it worked fine, as there was no running water in the
sinks. When it came to the live transmission I watched in horror as my medical
terms were washed away as I started to scrub up. There was nothing for it but
to improvise".
Ironically it was Desmond's TV fame that led to his future
career as a disc jockey. In 1962 he was invited to compere Housewives' Choice for a fortnight whilst he was still appearing as
Dr Anderson and, as the Radio Times
billing adds, also appearing on stage in Doctor
in the House at Streatham Hill Theatre. He got repeat bookings on Housewives' Choice for the remainder of
its run between 1963 and 1967. In 1963 he was playing music from stage and
screen on the Light Programme's Twelve
O'Clock Spin. For the second half of 1964 it was more songs from the
musicals in Record Showtime with the Radio Times billing helpfully informing
us that he was appearing in Wanted on
Voyage at the Grand Theatre, Leeds - by now he'd just left Emergency Ward 10. The following year it
was a back to the world of film in Music
from the Movies, a series scripted by Movie-Go-Round's
Peter Haigh and produced by announcer Robin Boyle (a second series, produced by
Tony Luke followed in 1966). And, in case you were wondering, Des was now in Face to Face at the Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury.
Throughout 1966 Desmond could be heard every weekend hosting
Open House with "records of
assorted speeds, sizes, and styles to suit people with assorted tastes".
In 1967 he was back with more Music from
the Movies, this time working with the future radio comedy producer Richard
Willcox. There seemed to be no room for Desmond on Radio 2 when it replaced the
Light in September 1967 but in 1968 he was back adapting film soundtracks with
Spencer Hale for Radio 4's Disney Time
that included Mary Poppins, Dumbo and Bambi. Finally, from December 1968, and running until September
1972, Desmond had a daily show on Radio 2 playing the latest releases in Album Time. Aside from three appearances
in charge of After Seven in 1973
there was radio silence for the next eight years.
Desmond was invited back into the Radio 2 fold in early 1981
to introduce a series of shows featuring The
Magic of Stanley Black (other programmes would also feature Mantovani,
Ronnie Aldrich and Robert Farnon, John Gregory, Geoff Love and John Fox). He
owed his return to producer Paul Walters who, Paul reminded him on their first
meeting, had swung the boom on some of those old Emergency Ward 10 broadcasts at the ATV's Highbury studios.
The success of the Magic
of... shows led to an invitation to present the Sunday morning All Time Greats. Desmond expected it to
run for a month or so but after the first recording producer Jack Dabbs told
him, "well that's your pension, Desmond". He was right, it ran for 23
years!
In October 2011 Desmond gave listeners to The Music Goes Round and Round an
opportunity to hear again the first edition of All Time Greats. Although the BBC hadn't kept a copy, Desmond had.
Initially just an hour in duration, All Time Greats was extended to 90 minutes and then two, and for a
while three, hours and settled into what was more or less the old Family Favourites slot. It was a record
request show too so anything went, but as Desmond told the Radio Times in October 1985, the music choice was often vintage:
"It's the listeners' programme, not mine. They choose the records". He gets about 500 suggestions a week requesting favourites pieces and reckons some 6,000 records have been chosen by Radio 2 listeners over the past four years. "Some people misquote the title as Old-Time Greats but it's certainly not that. We can play records right up to the present day, though I admit that most requests are for music from the 50s backwards. Most requested record? Without a doubt Glen Miller's Moonlight Serenade. Bunny Berigan's I can't get started is a close second.
Still acting in the late 80s as evidenced by this Radio Times article 17 January 1987 |
In 1995 Dave Alyott and Desmond formed Foldback Media to produce the shows for the BBC |
In 2013 Desmond spoke to Tim Blackmore about his radio
career in a Radio Talk podcast for
the Radio Academy.
In May 2016 Desmond celebrated his 90th birthday with this
special edition of The Music Goes Round.
Golden Paws Sam taking it easy |
Yesterday, on the day Radio 2 had already scheduled a tribute to Desmond, it was announced that he'd died. The voice of a true radio
all time great silenced.
Desmond Carrington 1926-2017 Bye just now
Thanks for the audio files. Great to hear Desmond Carrington again.
ReplyDeleteAll Time Greats always reminds me of Sunday lunchtime, where we would have the radio on in the kitchen, whilst my mum was cooking Sunday dinner.
ReplyDeleteIn fact, more recently, to reminisce, I come to this page to tune in again to Desmond, in the kitchen, whilst cooking Sunday dinner.
Such a wonderful man he was.
I miss his radio show, there is nothing to replace him or David Jacob's.
ReplyDeleteI miss Desmond's program so much along with David Jacob's, they certainly made our kind of music.
ReplyDelete