Yorkshire Post

NOSTALGIA:

They were the radio stars whose voices brought comfort to the nation. David Behrens recalls a stellar wartime cast.

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THREE-QUARTERS OF a century ago, Britain was filled with voices. Carried through the air into the living room of every household, they brought the news, good and bad, from all fronts – but most of all they brought entertainm­ent.

The wartime radio stars were, like the celebritie­s of today, among the most photograph­ed people of their time, and none more so than Vera Lynn, the forces’ sweetheart, whose unbearably poignant songs reminded serving men of being back home.

At a defining moment in the nation’s history, her radio “letters” to the boys on the front line embodied the very values they were fighting for.

“You’ll hear from me again next week,” she intoned every Sunday night. “Goodnight, boys. Sincerely yours, Vera Lynn.”

But it was a very different voice that was to prove one of the most distinctiv­e and even controvers­ial of the time. Wilfred

Pickles was an actor from Halifax plucked to join Alvar Lidell and John Snagge among the ranks of BBC newsreader­s. A regional voice was a revelation. Some said it undermined the seriousnes­s of the bulletin. But Pickles struck a chord and went on to become a post-war radio favourite.

Tommy Handley was the comedy star of the day. ITMA, his weekly assault of catchphras­es, was an institutio­n, but no less popular were Arthur Askey and Tommy Trinder and the American shows of Glenn Miller, Jack Benny and Bob Hope, broadcast on the BBC forces’ network, forerunner of the Light Programme and today’s Radio 2.

 ?? PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES. PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES. ?? WARTIME FAVOURITES: From top, American trombonist and band leader Glenn Miller, who disappeare­d in 1944 when a small aircraft he was a passenger in went missing over the English Channel; Wilfred Pickles, presenter of the radio show Have a Go, sitting at a piano in his home; uniformed comedian Tommy Trinder gives his autograph at a Home Guard celebratio­n; comedian Tommy Handley was a regular broadcaste­r in the infancy of radio.
HATS OFF: Singer Vera Lynn receives a grand welcome as she arrives in Trafalgar Square, London, to sing during the ‘Salvage Week’ campaign in June 1943.
PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES. PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES. WARTIME FAVOURITES: From top, American trombonist and band leader Glenn Miller, who disappeare­d in 1944 when a small aircraft he was a passenger in went missing over the English Channel; Wilfred Pickles, presenter of the radio show Have a Go, sitting at a piano in his home; uniformed comedian Tommy Trinder gives his autograph at a Home Guard celebratio­n; comedian Tommy Handley was a regular broadcaste­r in the infancy of radio. HATS OFF: Singer Vera Lynn receives a grand welcome as she arrives in Trafalgar Square, London, to sing during the ‘Salvage Week’ campaign in June 1943.
 ?? PICTURES: GETTY. ?? MORALE BOOST: From top, Vera Lynn serves cups of tea to servicemen from a mobile canteen in Trafalgar Square; the canteen had been presented to the mayor of Westminste­r by the Variety Artistes Ladies’ Guild; Arthur Askey and comic partner Richard Murdoch star in the Gainsborou­gh comedy Band Wagon.
PICTURES: GETTY. MORALE BOOST: From top, Vera Lynn serves cups of tea to servicemen from a mobile canteen in Trafalgar Square; the canteen had been presented to the mayor of Westminste­r by the Variety Artistes Ladies’ Guild; Arthur Askey and comic partner Richard Murdoch star in the Gainsborou­gh comedy Band Wagon.

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