Daily Mail

This is daft. Mum would sing at Last Night if she were here, says Vera Lynn’s daughter

- By Mario Ledwith

DAME Vera Lynn would still be singing Land of Hope and Glory if she were alive, her daughter said yesterday. Virginia Lewis-Jones said it was ‘wonderful’ that a rendition of the track by the forces’ sweetheart topped the charts after the race row about its meaning. A social media drive has been launched for the recording by Dame Vera – who died in June aged 103 – to be played during the BBC’s Last Night of the Proms. Mrs Lewis- Jones, 74, claimed the song is against slavery and her mother would be proud of her for speaking out. She said: ‘I feel that I can see my mother now saying “You tell ‘em girl”. She would feel the same thing and if she were here now she would be singing it.’ The 1902 lyrics of Land of Hope and Glory are associated with Cecil Rhodes – the British imperialis­t whose statue is being removed from an Oxford college. The Proms will feature an orchestrat­ed version of the song without lyrics after organisers reportedly expressed a desire to reduce patriotic elements to reflect the internatio­nal anti-racism movement. Mrs Lewis-Jones said that the song was particular­ly meaningful to her mother, who sang it on VE Day in 1945. When asked about the BBC’s decision, she said: ‘It is daft and I can’t understand it. You try to stop 12,000 people in the Royal Albert Hall plus all those outside from not singing it. How are you going to do that? Especially if mummy’s record has gone to number one. What it could do is put a lot of people’s backs up and defeat the object of whatever they were trying to do.’

Mrs Lewis-Jones added: ‘ My mother is a British icon and she cared a lot about this country and the Commonweal­th. Mummy was always very apolitical.

‘One has to appreciate that this was written around 100 or so years ago. But not only that, the words are meaningful for everybody.

‘The song is against slavery, not for it. It is an appalling thing and we all still know that unfortunat­ely racism to a certain extent does go on in this country. And we have all got to fight it. I’m a mixed bag myself. Daddy was Jewish, mum was Church of England and I went to Catholic school.’

The campaign behind the Dame Vera version was launched by Defund the BBC – a group which aims to decriminal­ise failure to pay the licence fee.

Her rendition topped the iTunes digital songs chart yesterday.

The UK’s top-selling songs are usually played during BBC Radio 1’s chart show but there have been some exceptions.

For example, when Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead reached number two following the death of Lady Thatcher, the BBC did not play the track in full.

 ??  ?? Icon: Dame Vera Lynn topped the iTunes chart yesterday
Icon: Dame Vera Lynn topped the iTunes chart yesterday
 ??  ?? Speaking out: Virginia Lewis- Jones with her mother, Dame Vera
Speaking out: Virginia Lewis- Jones with her mother, Dame Vera

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