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news items from Bill's 12 June interview on BBC WM (Birmingham) |
more from same (Bill's Nature Shows) |
Here are a few news tidbits Bill mentioned during his interview yesterday morning on BBC WM:
- They will be doing Autumnwatch this year.
- The BBC has already green lighted Springwatch 2009.
- Bill claimed the fuss about his "smutty" remarks on Springwatch this year was the result of the Daily Mail making an issue out of only three such complaints on the BBC Message Boards (though once the story got picked up by other papers other complaints were posted).
- Bill said he's finally started writing his autobiography, which he's been putting off doing for some time. A listing for the book popped up on Amazon.co.uk a few months ago (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Autobiography-Bill-Oddie/dp/0340951923/) with a September 2008 publication date.
Posted by lisa at 13/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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BBC Radio 4 "Humph Day" info & article from The Times |
more from same (British Comedy) |
This Sunday BBC Radio 4 presents several tributes to Humphrey Lyttelton (http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/schedule/2008/06/15/day/). The event is the top story in both Radio 4 and BBC 7's weekly newsletters; there is also an article in The Times (at http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article4105629.ece).
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Excerpts from the Radio 4 newsletter (http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/newsletter/):
Friday 13 - Friday 20 June 2008
Hello fellow listeners,
As a tribute to our much loved colleague, the late Humphrey Lyttelton, we're broadcasting three programmes on Sunday in celebration of his life. Dubbed Humph Day, there's another chance to hear his final appearance on Desert Island Discs; an hour-long tribute presented by Stephen Fry; and a programme Humphrey Lyttelton made about Louis Prima - one of his own heroes.
Sunday 15 June
Desert Island Discs, 11.15am-midday Another chance to hear Humphry Lyttelton's final appearance as Kirsty Young's guest. Note: not repeated on Friday.
Chairman Humph, 12.00-1.00pm Stephen Fry presents a special tribute to Humphrey Lyttelton, the host of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, through the eyes of his close pals on the show and distinguished admirers from Dame Judi Dench to Radiohead.
The King of the Swingers, 1.30-2.00pm Humphrey Lyttelton profiles Louis Prima, one of the most prolific and accomplished jazz musicians of the 20th century, who is sadly now remembered mostly for his role as a cartoon monkey. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
Excerpts from the BBC 7 Newsletter (http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbc7/newsletter/newsletter_thisweek.shtml):
Hello again
I don't usually begin my newsletter by recommending that you switch over to another radio station, but in this instance, I suggest that on Sunday some of you might like to join our sister station, Radio 4, to catch " Humph Sunday"
Humphrey Lyttelton, widely regarded as a National Treasure, was once described (apparently to his great delight) as " trumpeter and broadcaster, and purveyor of blue-chip filth to the nation"
Alongside his music, and his 36 years in the driver's seat of I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue", Humph unquestionably brought fun, joy and laughter to millions of listeners.
When the news of his death was announced in April this year, the BBC was inundated by his many fans who wanted to pay tribute to him.
Radio 4 will be broadcasting its own special tribute and appreciation on 15th June, on what has been affectionately named Humph Sunday.
There will be almost three hours celebrating all sorts of things that are Humph, beginning with his Desert Island Discs, (from November 2007) followed by Chairman Humph, a one-hour homage warmly presented by Stephen Fry, with contributions from many friends and colleagues.
To finish off, you can catch Humph's profile of jazz musician Louis Prima (well-known in jazz circles, but most probably remembered as the voice King Louis, King of the Swingers in the film of The Jungle Book.
And King of the Swingers is the name of that programme.
I'll certainly be listening in.
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ARTICLE FROM THE TIMES ONLINE (http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article4105629.ece):
From The Times June 14, 2008
Radio 4 celebrates the life of Humphrey Lyttelton
Alan Franks National monuments like Humphrey Lyttelton tend to have characteristics willed on to them by an admiring public. Many of these, for example his commitment to silliness, are accurate; others, such as the notion that he was endlessly freewheeling and gregarious, less so. Philip Larkin, the poet and jazz lover, surely got it right when he wrote of the veteran trumpeter and radio host: "One mustn't be misled by the amiable, bumbling persona... He is a toughly intelligent man moving confidently in any kind of surroundings from Windsor Castle to Birdland."
That spectrum takes in the Mick Jagger Centre in Dartford, Kent, which is where I met him on a filthy Friday evening a year before his death. He was 85, and by then diminished to a mere 6ft - four inches less than the height of his prime. He was still an imposing, elegant figure. He had just driven down from his home in the far north of London, and was bearing the essentials of his trade; in one hand a trumpet case with a thoroughly lived-in look; in the other the lightweight suit still wrapped in the Mill Hill dry-cleaners' polythene.
In the sense that he was purposeful, punctual, eyeing the terrain for signs of his band members, he corroborated Larkin's reading. At the same time there was something mildly hunted about him. This may well have been because of the sheer freight of association with chaos that 34 years in the chair of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue would place on anyone's shoulders. While talking to him, and to people who knew him, I became convinced that his distinctive thing - his chop, as musicians say - was to border-cross; to be in places that you might not expect to find him, and then to give the probably accurate impression that he felt thoroughly at home.
It started with his birth, in 1921, which occurred in Eton. Once he had become famous in the postwar years, some thought he was having them on when he answered straight questions about his origins with straight answers. It was not just Eton the place, but Eton the school. His father was no less than the Hon George Lyttelton, who was a teacher there. So Humphrey was in effect born at Eton, duly went there as a pupil and might even have considered following in his father's professional footsteps if he had been more academically inclined and less crazy about music. One woman who knew him as a very young man on family holidays in Suffolk recalls a delightful, rather distrait character who couldn't be bothered with socks. In a classic and symbolic piece of bunking off, the teenage Humphrey walked off from an Eton v Harrow cricket match at Lords and went to Charing Cross Road to buy himself a trumpet.
Then there was the war, or rather the effects of it - the erosion of class barriers and the easing of a "downward" passage into what was considered bohemia. But again, if you look at something that had happened to him before he joined the Army (he served in North Africa and Italy) - it explains much of his deliberate journey away from privilege. "One of my father's brothers was the director of a steel firm in South Wales," he said. "My cousin and I went down there to work. It was most uncomfortable because the workers there thought we were management spies. Eventually a foreman called Fred befriended us and got us to meet the rest of the workforce. He asked the MD if we could work in the smelting shop, which meant throwing all kinds of stones, dolomite, manganese into the furnace. It was the lowest form really. He took us to the working men's clubs and I started playing the trumpet there."
It might not have been quite such a public renunciation of class birthright as that of the public school-educated former 2nd Viscount Stansgate Tony Benn, but a socialist he was. When, at the Mick Jagger Centre, I asked him if it was true that he had turned down a knighthood from John Major, he effectively snubbed the question by doing an impression of a senior moment. It was, in a different sense, pure class. Even his chairmanship of Clue could be seen as a subversion of authority, even if that authority was notionally his own.
Although he never tried to disguise his roots, he never flouted them. Far from the Old Etonian tradition of sticking close with your fellow alumni, visible still through David Cameron, Lyttelton was wary rather than proud if a bunch of them turned up at his gigs.
For someone who was for so long in the public eye, and who had chosen the most extroverted of instruments, the intensity of his privacy may have looked odd; it was of course, as Larkin implied, a necessary part of keeping the show on the road. Most musicians who worked with him had nothing but respect and affection, but even they were alarmed to discover that none of them had his phone number, and that if by some error it ever leaked, he would have it changed immediately. To my surprise he did talk of the pain of losing his wife Jill the previous year after a long struggle with the degenerative brain disease progressive supranuclear palsy. "Oh, it was a horrible thing," he said, shaking his head. "Eight or nine years. All the things she loved doing, they shut down one by one."
But then, like a bandleader striking into a brighter number: "No good agonising. I don't agonise over many things. I mean, I could agonise over my father's treatment of me in the Easter holidays. We can all allow these things to hang on and take over our lives."
It was not until he died that I realised the biggest boundary he crossed in his life was the one between the past and the present - for want of a subtler definition, the pre- and the post-Diana Britains. This was both a stoical gentleman from the war generation and an artist who enacted such New Age-friendly ideals as living in the moment, acknowledging the healing power of music and becoming the person he was meant to be.
His funeral in London on May 6 was a private affair. Family and friends only. On the order of service were these words, written many years before, by Lyttelton: "As we journey through life, discarding baggage along the way, we should keep an iron grip, to the very end, on the capacity for silliness. It preserves the soul from desiccation." He knew as well as any educated Englishman the link between that deceptive word "silly" and its Germanic origin selig, meaning blessed.
After my article appeared I got a letter with a Suffolk postmark. It was from the woman who recalled his youthful charm - Patricia, his first wife and mother of their daughter, Henrietta, who is now a grandmother herself. Humphrey had left when the girl was 2, and there were periods when there was not much contact. Patricia tells of an occasion when she and Henrietta surprised him in the interval of a concert at Aldeburgh by joining the queue for signed CDs. Henrietta says she developed a very warm relationship with him, and with her two brothers and sister. "He was a wonderful father to have," she says. "Very interested, and always tremendous company." Whatever happened all those years earlier, both women seem to have enacted his principle of no agonising.
Lyttelton also rang me to leave a message, saying thanks for the chat. I rang back but got caller withheld ... naturally. In such a long playing life, it was one of the few numbers of which there was no record.
Radio 4 on Sunday: Desert Island Discs, 11.15am; Chairman Humph - a Tribute, noon; The King of the Swingers - Lyttelton profiles Louis Prima, 1.30pm
Posted by lisa at 13/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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Bill to take part in CBeebies's Ecobabies |
more from same (Bill's Nature Shows) |
From the Coventry Telegraph's website (at http://blogs.coventrytelegraph.net/passtheremote/2008/06/cbeebies-goes-green-with-ecoba.html):
CBeebies Goes Green With Ecobabies
By Marion McMullen on Jun 9, 08 07:38 AM in Telly gossip
A YEAR-LONG green initiative called EcoBeebies will launch on the CBeebies channel on Friday.
EcoBeebies will introduce three to six-year-olds and their families to a range of environmental, conservation and wildlife related issues, with contributions from familiar faces including Springwatch presenter and conservationist Bill Oddie.
The launch day will be marked with a one-off special show called Easy Peasy EcoBeebies, followed a week later by a weekly nature programme called The Green Balloon Club, which will be broadcast every Friday afternoon for a year.
In addition, children can access EcoBeebies via an initiative called the Green Stars Club on the CBeebies website, enabling children to learn more about conservation and their environment with parents and carers online.
Michael Carrington, Controller, CBeebies said: "We want to encourage children to explore, conserve and appreciate the outdoors and nature with their parents, teachers and grandparents. Given the success of our junior versions of shows like Springwatch, we hope that EcoBeebies will inspire young children to get outside, be active and engage with conservation."
Children and carers can log on to bbc.co.uk/cbeebies/ecobeebies to learn about regeneration through the Green Stars Club, an online club where children will be encouraged to do their bit for the environment.
Each week on the show, a password will be given which enables children to enter the Green Balloon Club website. Children will be able to earn stars by completing tasks like growing their own food in a window box or garden, helping with recycling or spotting animals and birds.
Posted by lisa at 11/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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forthcoming Tim & Graeme appearances |
more from same (The Goodies) |
Here’s some info about a few upcoming projects from Tim & Graeme. We'll pass along further details (such as broadcast dates) when they become available - let us know if you spot them first!
* Tim and Graeme will both be making an appearance in the British television series "Heartbeat". Tim will be reprising the same character as in his two previous appearance.
* Tim is scheduled to appear in a radio show with Marcus Brigstocke called "I've Never Seen Star Wars" (the show may air under the title "It's Later Than You Think"). The recording with Tim is scheduled for June 26th. It doesn't appear tickets are available for that evening, but some info about the series can be found at http://shows.external.bbc.co.uk/help/shows/its_later_than .
* In September Tim & Graeme will be reprising the Buster Keaton show they presented at Slapstick 2008 this past January. The show, to be entitled "Tim and Graeme’s Classic Keaton Shorts", is tentatively scheduled for 7 & 14 September 2008 at The Barbican in London and The Rex Cinema in Berkhamstead (I don't know yet which date will be at which venue). Please note that until the shows are officially announced by the theaters the details should be considered subject to change.
Here's a preliminary blurb about the show: "The I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue panellists and former 'Goodies' Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graeme Garden choose their favourite Keaton short films including his masterpiece comedy ONE WEEK (1920). Tim and Graeme reveal the works that have influenced their lives and work along with a special montage of Goodies scenes influenced by the great comic. With live musical accompaniment this promises to be a unique afternoon of music, laughter and family entertainment."
Posted by lisa at 10/06/2008 01:00 GMT |
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Springwatch Specials - Bill presents "Springwatch Gardens" on 17 June |
more from same (Bill's Nature Shows) |
Next week BBC 2 will show four Springwatch Specials. According to http://www.bbc.co.uk/springwatch/features/specials.shtml - "For 2008, Springwatch has a week four! We've made a mini series of themed Springwatch Specials to run through the week after the live shows. Monday – Thursday 8pm, BBC TWO from Monday 16 June until Thursday 19 June".
Following are details about the special to be hosted by Bill next Tuesday. Info about the other specials are available at the link above; that page also has a short clip from Bill's special which is viewable from within the UK.
SPRINGWATCH GARDENS with Bill Oddie 8pm Tuesday 17 June, BBC TWO
Bill Oddie invites you into his very own garden to reveal wildlife stories of drama, passion and surprise. We Brits are a nation of animal and garden lovers and in our unassuming gardens rather ordinary creatures are doing extraordinary things... and all right under our noses.
Wood mice produce huge families of up to 36 babies a year, gentle ladybirds deal savagely with garden pests and sleepy hedgehogs live dangerously in compost heaps. Bill offers garden tips, simple things that we can do for nature and uncovers the lengths that some people, including himself, will go to lure wildlife into these little green nature reserves.
Posted by lisa at 10/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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Barry Cryer article from The Times - "How will we ever get over the Humph?" |
more from same (British Comedy) |
The following "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue" related article appears in today's edition of The Times Online:
From The Times June 9, 2008
How will we ever get over the Humph?
Humphrey Lyttelton was loved by millions but known only by a few, yet it's hard to know who could take his place
Barry Cryer
I knew Humph for 53 years. I worked with him on I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue for 36 years. But the first time I saw his house was on the day of his funeral. None of us had been there, because he was an obsessively private man. He never told anyone his phone number. If his number was ever leaked, he changed it. If you wanted to get in touch, you rang his manager, Sue, who rang Humph, who rang you. That was fine. That was just Humph.
His house, it turned out, was totally Humph. It had no windows on the outside. All the windows faced inwards into some sort of courtyard.After Jill, his wife, died in 2006, he started talking a bit more about how he felt about things. But he kept a strict divide between his personal and his professional life. We all respected that.
He died on April 25, after an operation on an aortic aneurysm. After his death, it was a bit like when Eric Morecambe or Willie Rushton died. People felt they knew them. Certain people impinge on the general consciousness like that, they make an impact on people.
He was 50 when he first did Clue. He'd already had a life, was already a jazz star. And he relished it. He talked a lot about how he admired Kenneth Horne. You can see the lineage - the urbane chairman among the idiots, the squire and the incompetent gardener. But Humph brought the grumpiness, then built up the air of irritation and boredom over the years.
He never swore - too much style for that. Well, hardly ever. The last show we ever did with him was on our live tour, in Harrogate, just a few weeks ago. We were all at the same hotel. At breakfast he had prunes. He took one bite, looked up from his bowl and said: “How can you f*** up a prune?”
There's nobody like him. You can't say someone is a sort-of Humphrey Lyttelton. It's his era. The patrician courteousness. He broke the mould: Old Etonian, the Guards, then jazz. Labour Party all his adult life.
I never saw him lose his temper. A lot of band leaders are respected but not really liked. He wasn't liked by his musicians, he was loved. And he loved the contrast between Clue, where everything was prepared for him, and organising the band.
A lot the obituaries quoted his lines - Humph used to call them “blue-chip filth” - as if they were written by him. In fact they were written by Iain Pattinson. But nobody else could have got away with delivering those doubles entendres. He created this air of “Well, I've been given this to do”. He made it look effortless, which of course it wasn't.
He was good at everything he did, really. Ornithology. Cartooning. Calligraphy. It sounds as if I'm talking about a saint. Well, he was a three-dimensional man. But if I'm asked to list his faults, I fail to find any.
I'm going to miss the recordings, of course. As to whether the show continues without him, it's all up in the air. There is a strong school of thought that says we should stop now. Then again, Humph once said, ‘If I went under a bus, there should be no misplaced loyalty'.
Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden and I had to talk about this now and then. It was always painful. We could smugly suggest that we'll continue as a tribute to him. More selfishly, we'd continue because we adore doing it. Maybe it could be like Have I Got News For You, with guest hosts. We'll see. But Humph was the hub. It will never be the same again, I know that much.
Humphrey Lyttelton Day is on Radio 4 on Sunday from 11.15am.
As told to Dominic Maxwell
Posted by lisa at 09/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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Springwatch Gardens |
more from same (Bill's Nature Shows) |
Thanks to wackywales for posting the following in the forums:
Another member of the Springwatch family that'll be on the week after the main programme ends.
Springwatch Gardens Bill Oddie invites the cameras into his own garden and reveals a selection of dramatic and surprising wildlife stories. He also offers tips on improving green spaces, shows simple ways to help the natural world and uncovers the lengths people go to to lure wildlife into their backyards Tuesday 17th June at 20:00 on BBC 2
Posted by lisa at 09/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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info about Radio 4's ISIHAC repeats & Humph tributes (plus other upcoming shows) |
more from same (British Comedy) |
Six classic episodes of "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue" will begin airing on BBC Radio 4 on Mondays starting 16 June. The first repeat will be a 1993 episode featuring Barry Cryer, Graeme Garden, Tim Brooke-Taylor and Willie Rushton, with Humphrey Lyttelton in the chair and Colin Sell on piano.
The day before, Radio 4 will air several tributes to Humphrey Lyttelton.
For details about these and other upcoming shows of interest to Goodies fans use the "click here for more" link below.
Posted by lisa at 07/06/2008 00:00 GMT |
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