Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Broadcast icon Annie Nightingal­e dies at 83

- NAOMI CLARKE wdp@reachplc.com

VShe was a champion for female broadcaste­rs BBC DIRECTORGE­NERAL TIM DAVIE

ETERAN broadcaste­r Annie Nightingal­e has died at the age of 83, the BBC has said. She became the first female presenter on BBC Radio 1 when she joined the station in 1970, and went on to become its longest-serving host.

In a statement reported by the BBC, her family said: “Annie Nightingal­e MBE passed away yesterday at her home in London after a short illness.

“Annie was a pioneer, trailblaze­r and an inspiratio­n to many. Her impulse to share that enthusiasm with audiences remained undimmed after six decades of broadcasti­ng on BBC TV and radio globally.”

The statement added that a celebratio­n of her life will be taking place in the spring at a memorial service.

Nightingal­e first broadcast on the BBC in 1963 as a panellist on Juke Box Jury, before joining Radio 1 seven years later.

She remained the station’s only female DJ until 1982, when Janice Long joined, and is credited with helping to pave the way for the likes of Sara Cox, Jo Whiley and Zoe Ball.

As a DJ she has travelled the world, and once said she had been “mugged in Cuba, drugged in Baghdad and bugged in Russia”.

During her trailblazi­ng career, she was the first woman to present the BBC’s Old Grey Whistle Test music show which aired on BBC Two, and has written two autobiogra­phical books.

In 2021, BBC Radio 1 launched a new scholarshi­p for female and nonbinary dance music DJs which was named after Nightingal­e.

Up until recently she still hosted her show Annie Nightingal­e presents... on BBC Radio 1.

The head of BBC Radio 1, Aled Haydn Jones, said the station was “devastated” to lose Nightingal­e and sent the team’s condolence­s to her family and friends.

He added: “Annie was a worldclass DJ, broadcaste­r and journalist, and throughout her entire career was a champion of new music and new artists.

“She was the first female DJ on Radio 1 and over her 50 years on the station was a pioneer for women in the industry and in dance music.

“We have lost a broadcasti­ng legend and, thanks to Annie, things will never be the same.”

Over the years, she rubbed shoulders with music titans including the late David Bowie, who she brought to a pub after watching him open up for another band to praise his talent when she was aged 22. She also befriended The Beatles and was a guest on occasion at the band’s Apple Studios in London during the 1960s. During a special show with former BBC Radio 1 host Nick Grimshaw she told him that Sir Paul McCartney once “sort of” proposed to her, adding: “But I don’t think he was serious.”

She documented her pioneering career and the evolution of five decades of pop culture in her 2020 memoir Hey Hi Hello.

In 2019, she was made a CBE for services to radio having previously been made an MBE in 2002.

BBC director-general Tim Davie said Nightingal­e was a “uniquely gifted broadcaste­r” and hailed her as a “champion for female broadcaste­rs” as he paid tribute.

“I’m deeply saddened by Annie’s passing and our thoughts are with her family, many friends and the whole of Radio 1,” Mr Davie said.

“Annie was a uniquely gifted broadcaste­r who blessed us with her love of music and passion for journalism, for over 50 years.

“As well as being a trailblaze­r for new music, she was a champion for female broadcaste­rs, supporting and encouragin­g other women to enter the industry. We will all miss her terribly.”

 ?? Tristan Fewings ?? > Radio 1’s first female DJ Annie Nightingal­e, pictured attending the Chortle Awards at Ministry Of Sound on March 26, 2014 in London
Tristan Fewings > Radio 1’s first female DJ Annie Nightingal­e, pictured attending the Chortle Awards at Ministry Of Sound on March 26, 2014 in London

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