As any BBC Radio 4 controller knows, you ‘refresh’ the
schedules at your peril. And what’s more, to tinker with
The Archers is sure to incur the wrath of any dyed-in-the-wool Ambridge
fan. Cue the letters in green ink and emails fired off to
Feedback.
But this is exactly what Radio 4 controller Mohit Bakaya is
doing from next month as the Sunday omnibus edition of The Archers is shifted by an hour to the later start time of 11am.
Taking its place after Broadcasting House
is an extended one hour Desert Island
Discs. As a sop to listeners whose Sunday morning routines will now be in
disarray the omnibus edition will be available online at midnight, presumably
so that Archers listeners can play it out for themselves just after Paddy
O’Connell has signed off.
To be fair the omnibus edition has been at 10am on Sundays
for the last 26 years. It was moved forward by 15 minutes in April 1998 under
the controllership of James Boyle. He’d gain himself something of a reputation
as schedule meddler -in-chief, changing the time of the weekday editions of The Archers from 1.40pm to 2pm, dropping
the repeat of the Friday edition (reinstated in the new changes) and adding a
Sunday evening edition. Boyle also
extended Today, changed the start time of Woman’s Hour lopped 10 minutes off The World at One and dropped the likes of Kaleidoscope
(for Front Row), Week Ending, Sport on 4 and Breakaway.
Interestingly Desert Island Discs
also moved from 12.15pm to 11.15am where it also has remained until next month.
But surely The Archers
omnibus edition has always been on a Sunday morning? Well, no it hasn’t, as
this dip into the schedules of Radio 4, the Light Programme and the Home
Service will demonstrate.
7.30 pm on Saturday
Well that surprised you. Yes, when the omnibus editions
first started on 5 January 1952 – a year after the programme had first been
nationally broadcast – it was on a Saturday night. In 1952 it was on the Light
Programme so followed programmes such as Sports Report, Jazz Club and Radio Newsreel.
4.00 pm on Sunday
From 26 July 1953 the omnibus moves to Sunday. Why? Well
I’ll come to that.
7.30 pm on Saturday
Yes even Light Programme controller Kenneth Adam liked to
move the radio furniture now and then as the omnibus is back to Saturday night
by the end of September 1953. That same week saw the start of Friday Night is Music Night, also recently in the news as it
re-appears on Radio 3.
9.10 am on Sunday
Listeners can, in July, August and September 1954, now ‘have
breakfast with The Archers’. But
what’s behind this Saturday night/Sunday morning swapping? Well it coincides
with the summer Proms concerts. In the 1950s the Proms were not the exclusive
preserve of the Third Programme and would also be broadcast on the Light and
the Home Service. This summer pattern continues in 1955.
7.30 pm on Saturday
This remains the usual slot apart from when the Proms are on
in 1955. The Sunday morning versions start at 9.10 am and run for 50 minutes
rather than the usual one hour so actually there’s a bit of editing going on
here to make the omnibus version fit the timeslot.
8.00 pm on Saturday
It’s moved on by half-an-hour from 1 October 1955. In the
summer of 1956 it again pops up on Sunday, this time at 3.15 pm. In mid July
1957 it temporarily moves to Sundays at 9.10 am.
12.15 pm on Saturday
For some reason, between 28 September and 30 November 1957,
the omnibus is now heard on the Home Service on Saturday lunchtime, again in a
truncated form. The weekday editions remain on the Light Programme.
9.45 am on Sunday
Finally, from 8 December 1957, the omnibus edition ends up
on Sundays where it has remained ever since. Back in 1957 on the Light
Programme it was followed at 10.30 am by Easy
Beat, so it remains very much edited down from the regular weekday broadcasts.
9.32 am on Sunday
On 1 January 1961 it moves back a few minutes and is now just
under an hour long so presumably we’re now getting the full weekly story. It
follows Chapel in the Valley and a
two-minute news bulletin at 9.30 am.
9.30 am on Sunday
From 30 August 1964 the Home Service takes the Sunday
morning omnibus and, as it happens, Chapel
in the Valley. Meanwhile over on the Light they have The Record Show with Geoffrey Wheeler followed by Easy Beat. The fact that Radio Caroline,
with its all day pop programmes, had started earlier that year is purely
coincidental surely!
Meanwhile from 14 December 1964 the Home Service starts to
repeat the previous day’s Light Programme broadcast. From Monday 2 January 1967
the Home Service broadcast all editions of The
Archers .The Home Service becomes BBC Radio 4 on 30 September of that year.
6.15 pm on Sunday
In 1976 Ian McIntyre is appointed as the new controller of
Radio 4 and a year later, from 2 October 1977 he causes major consternation by
moving The Archers omnibus to Sunday
evening at 6.15 pm; at the same time dislodging Letter from America from Sunday morning to lunchtime. Listeners
complain in droves. Correspondents to the Radio
Times were not happy: ‘I feel like weeping...the most disastrous change of
all” (Renee Obard, Salisbury) and ‘change for the sake of change has no appeal’
(S.C. Russell, Bolton). Even the offering of a quadraphonic stereo transmission
– for the first omnibus edition at any rate – failed to impress: ‘the pleasure
afforded to a few listeners of hearing The
Archers in stereo and quad must surely be outweighed by the discomfort
caused to those who, like myself, are now denied the pleasure of listening at
all, albeit in humble mono’ (R. Collingwood, Camberley)
The incoming Director General Ian Trethowan tells McIntyre to
think again. Bizarrely someone protests by nailing both an abusive letter and a
kipper to the door of McIntyre’s son’s room at his Cambridge college. BBC
Governor Lady Seota complains that it has “up-ended her life”. Eventually after
increasing pressure from listeners and the governors McIntrye relents and the
omnibus programme reverts back to Sunday mornings from July 1979.
10.15 on Sunday
This becomes the new time for the omnibus edition for the
next 19 years. Returning to Sunday morning on 1 July 1979 it is preceded by Letter from America (which had already
been moved back to Sunday morning) and the Morning
Service and followed by Weekend
Woman’s Hour, back on air after been dropped in late 1974.
10.00 on Sunday
On 19 April 1998 there are changes to Radio 4 Sunday
morning’s schedule as mentioned above. At 9 am we get a brand new programmes Broadcasting House in which ‘Eddie Mair
presents a fresh approach to news’ followed by The Archers now 15 minutes earlier and also 15 minutes longer. And that is how things have
remained until now.