The Scotsman

Annie Nightingal­e

◆ Pioneering DJ who smashed all-male bastion of Radio 1 and stayed with station for five decades

- Fiona Shepherd

Annie Nightingal­e CBE, DJ and broadcaste­r. Born: 1 April, 1940 in Osterley, Middlesex. Died: 11 January, 2024 in London, aged 83

Annie Nightingal­e was a remarkable broadcaste­r, a non-conformist who became a national institutio­n, claiming firsts and breaking records throughout her career. She was the first – and for 12 years the only – female presenter on Radio 1, joining the station in 1970, and also the first female presenter of The Old Grey Whistle Test, a bastion of muso snooze until Nightingal­e injected some punk energy.

Never losing her love of new music, Nightingal­e became a Guinness World Record holder as longest-serving female radio presenter. She was inducted into the Radio Academy Hall of Fame in 2004 and received an OBE, then a CBE for services to broadcasti­ng, but said she was most proud of her Muzik magazine award for Caner of the Year in 2001.

Her accolades were hard won. In the late Sixties she persisted in applying to join the newly launched Radio 1 despite their policy of employing male presenters as proxy husbands for their presumed female audience. Following repeated rejections from the nascent station, Beatles’ publicist Derek Taylor helped to grease the wheels and in late 1969 Anne Nightingal­e, as she was known then, was offered a trial run of six shows. “I thought I’d last a year,” she said. She remained with the station until her death, aged 83.

Nightingal­e was best known as the voice of the Sunday afternoon request show, which ran from 1975-1994, with a threeyear hiatus at the turn of the Eighties during which she presented a Friday night music chat show.

In her time she interviewe­d music legends including The Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix and Marc Bolan and called The Beatles, Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page her friends. She once bet Joe Strummer a Cadillac that The Clash’s new single London Calling was a surefire Top Ten hit. The track reached Number 11.

She regularly crossed the tracks to appear on Radio 4’s The Today Programme and fronted music documentar­ies such as the groundbrea­king Police in the East, following the band at the height of their success on tour in Japan, India and Egypt.

She Djed in clubs and at festivals around the world – along the way remarking she had been “mugged in Cuba, drugged in Baghdad and bugged in Russia”. Discoverin­g new music was her fuel and this committed rock chick became an early adopter of acid house and electronic dance music in the late Eighties, restoring her faith in music and sealing her reputation as the doyenne of late nights on Radio 1,

where she avoided the strictures of the station playlist. She became known as the Queen of Breaks for her championin­g of the breakbeat genre and the name of her latest show, Annie Nightingal­e Presents, attested to her curatorial skills.

Among the many tributes to this broadcasti­ng legend, those of the women who came after her rang out most sincerely. Jo Whiley hailed her as “the coolest woman who ever graced the airwaves”, Lauren Laverne thanked her “for opening the door and for showing us all what to do when we got through it”, while Annie Mac said “her very existence as an older woman playing undergroun­d music on Radio 1 was subversive”.

Nightingal­e wore her trailblazi­ng reputation lightly – she was a music fan first and foremost. “I remember [Mick] Jagger saying most people associate with music in their extreme youth, then they get into relationsh­ips, buy a flat, other things take over. But that’s never happened to me,” she said. “I’m not trying to get down with the kids, but if the music I listened to wasn’t constantly changing then I wouldn’t be interested.”

She was born Anne Avril Nightingal­e, only child of Celia and Basil Nightingal­e, and claimed her first word was “music”. She attended school in Twickenham and Hampton but, having discovered the blues in her teens, couldn’t wait to escape the suburbs for soon-to-be-swinging London, where she studied journalism at Central London Polytechni­c.

She eloped with her first husband, Gordon Thomas, a cousin of Dylan Thomas, to Brighton, becoming a reporter on the Brighton and Hove Gazette and then The Argus where, busting the first of many glass ceilings, she was the only woman

in the newsroom. In addition to her regular reporter duties, she wrote a pop column – a specialism that continued when she moved into television reporting in the early Sixties, appearing on Juke Box Jury and presenting Ready Steady Go! spin-off That’s For Me, where she was able to exercise her love of new bands by booking The Yardbirds and The Who.

By the mid-sixties, Nightingal­e had diversifie­d into fashion and modelling, opening her own boutique chain called Snob, while cultivatin­g a parallel radio career on pirate station Radio Luxembourg.

She found her place on Radio 1 – up the back of the class with fellow maverick John Peel – and helmed the record review show What’s New before settling into the Sunday request show.

Her stint as the main presenter of The Old Grey Whistle Test coincided with the heyday of punk and new wave, which she embraced with alacrity. She also hosted the fertile Late Night In Concert series and helmed the BBC’S coverage of the US leg of Live Aid in 1985.

In 2020, Nightingal­e’s half century on Radio 1 was marked with accompanyi­ng TV documentar­ies, a compilatio­n album, her (third) memoir Hey Hi Hello and an appearance on Desert Island Discs – she chose David Bowie’s Space Oddity as her ultimate track.

Like Michael Palin and David Frost, she has a BBC vault named after her but the dusty past has never been Nightingal­e’s thing – as recently as 2021, she launched a scholarshi­p to support young female and non-binary DJ talent.

She is survived by her children, Alex and Lucy.

 ?? ?? Annie Nightingal­e in a 1964 publicity shot for her TV request show That’s For Me
Annie Nightingal­e in a 1964 publicity shot for her TV request show That’s For Me

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