The engineers and studio managers also taught me the skills of the medium; explaining that I shouldn’t talk straight into the microphone, but speak slightly across it. That way, the voice is still present, but not
When working for radio, of course, you must also be keenly conscious of time. Announcers require that particular facility when they know the ‘pips’ are approaching, heralding the news. Once, when a live radio production of
I was lucky to work for many renowned radio directors in the studios of Broadcasting House. David Thomson, for example, an endearing eccentric who had came into drama from the Features department. In 1968, he directed me as the ‘Old Gal’, an upper-class woman in her nineties, in
I enjoyed working with Reggie Smith (also from the Features department) whose productions may have suffered from the rollicking lunch hours we spent in the George Tavern; Betty Davies, tall and Welsh and sexy, who always wore hats, and lived to be a hundred; and Audrey Cameron, Scottish and quite waspish. And the late, great John Tydeman, of course, the immensely influential director who became head of BBC Radio Drama. He directed me ‘down the line’ reading Sue Townsend’s
Enyd Williams started as a studio manager and became one of the BBC’s finest directors. She persuaded me to record
Radio is a civilised medium; you have only your voice to use but, of course, when you’re acting a part, the whole body comes into play. A voice is a person: if you’re just doing a voice, you’ve left the humanity out — you’re only doing half the job.
Our producers in the 1960s were remarkable. The real oddballs had come to the Drama department from Features. Former actors David Thomson and Reggie (R. D.) Smith were huge characters. Martin Esslin, a refugee from Nazism, was intellectual, precise but with a great sense of humour; Ronnie Mason was always smoking, full of mischief.
I remember when B10, the flagship studio, opened in the basement of Broadcasting House. It looked like a moon landscape, with a choice of acoustics, staircases which led nowhere and masses of sound effect doors, full of different bells, knockers and planks. They were covered with the wittiest graffiti, which should have been preserved like Banksy’s work. Patricia Gallimore remembered one that ran: ‘Miriam Margolyes thinks Clement Freud is a School of Thought. Clement Freud thinks Miriam Margolyes is a School of Porpoises.’ Others were far more scurrilous and while we were waiting for our green light we used to read the doors — suppressing our sniggers.
Radio is a particular world and I belong there. The great, glory days have gone — that was in the fifties and sixties, before television became the medium of choice. I was in the last generation brought up entirely on radio: every night I listened to
These voices are part of my youth and it is a source of high delight to me to think I follow in their footsteps, in their
Swinging London