At first reading 
            there would be some justification for taking a rather sceptical approach 
            to the value of this article as objective evidence of the success 
            and importance of 'Carnival'. At no point does the Radio Times reveal 
            that the main scriptwriter of the production Holt Marvell is in fact 
            the Editor of the Radio Times Eric Maschwitz. The conceit here is 
            almost as disingenuous as Val Gielgud fabricating letters to represent 
            false opinion on BBC programmes. 
          However, Filson 
            Young was by no means 'a lackey' of 'The Polish Corridor' at Savoy 
            Hill. As Lord Asa Briggs explains in 'The Golden Age of Wireless 1927-1939' 
            Filson Young was the most important of the BBC's paid advisors. He 
            was a kind of resident consultant employed to criticise and evaluate 
            programmes independently of the programme making people. (p 64, Briggs, 
            A (1995) The Golden Age of Wireless 1927-1939 - The History of Broadcasting 
            in the United Kingdom, London, Oxford: Oxford University Press). Young's 
            grasp of the imperatives of radio drama in the 1929 Radio Times article 
            are prescient and modern. In fact other advice he offered BBC executives 
            in 1934 had considerable relevance to decision making in subsequent 
            BBC history. As quoted on page 69 of Briggs's volume:
          'Young believed 
            that as the BBC grew in size, 'the science of administration' had 
            'to some extent overlaid the essentially creative side of broadcasting, 
            to its disadvantage'. p 69 [Young to Dawnay, 5 Mar. 1934]
           
          
          Original 
            studio at Savoy Hill. Picture taken 1928
           
          Filson Young's criticism 
            is also markedly more helpful than that of George Bernard Shaw who 
            in July 1925 had informed C.A. Lewis that having installed a Burndept 
            four-valve wireless set and loudspeaker, his opinion of plays broadcast 
            by the BBC could be expressed in one word: 'damnable'. (pp 62 & 
            63 ibid)
          Young's analysis 
            is characterised by logic and commonsense:
          'the problem has 
            been to find a suitable medium by which to excite the imagination 
            of the listener and make it function in place of optical vision. In 
            the case of 'Lord Jim' the dramatic effect was almost entirely produced 
            by narrative. In the case of the Nativity Play the problem was different, 
            and, in a way, easy. The story was already present in the mind of 
            the audience; all that was necessary, therefore, was a brief, but 
            very carefully-worded, description of the scene, and an occasional 
            interpolation of a word or two directing the listener's attention 
            to a movement or a scene. The success of these devices was certified 
            by the fact that thousands (literally) of letters were received in 
            which the writers expressed their sense of having been present; and 
            quite unconsciously and artlessly used phrases that had been used 
            in introducing the play - phrases so purposely intended to sow ideas 
            and pictures in the mind of the audience that they literally adopted 
            them as their own, and showed that they had been duly innoculated 
            with the desired impression.'
           
          
          Studio 
            1 at BBC Savoy Hill
           
          Young's theoretical 
            observation about the importance of cultural memory cueing and 'seeding' 
            of imagery or association through introduction and contextualisation 
            is supported by pp 53-69 Crook, T (1999) Radio Drama- Theory & 
            Practice, London, New York: Routledge, and the conclusions of Pear, 
            T. H (1931) Voice and Personality.
          Young makes the 
            following detailed evaluation of Carnival:
          'In Carnival all 
            these developments were used with a skill on the part of the producer 
            which revealed the extent of the progress made at Savoy Hill during 
            the last four years. The production of Carnival was the result of 
            a combination of good brains, infinite enthusiasm, imagination, and 
            great skill. Something like genius inspired the selection of the forty-eight 
            scenes in the text. Sometimes these 'scenes' lasted less than a minute; 
            they never went on a moment after the listener had grasped their significance 
            on the development of the story. The change was sometimes as rapid 
            as that in a cinematograph, and infinitely more artistic. We all know 
            the awful boredom of having to look at, say, a caption on the screen 
            for the time it would take the most illiterate person in the audience 
            to spell it out twice over letter by letter. We also know the irritation 
            of a beautiful scene - say, a picture of breaking waves - being whisked 
            away from our vision, when the eye would like to dwell on it. No such 
            feeling was discernible in Carnival, and the restlessness produced 
            by the effect of so many kaleidoscopic scenes was averted by the rest 
            and refreshment to the imagination afforded by the charming narrative 
            interludes read by the author himself.'
           
          
          Studio 
            3 at BBC Savoy Hill
           
          Young makes a significant 
            contribution to the theory of radio drama in an article that has not 
            been referenced by any existing literature on the subject:
          'You can sit down 
            by the fireside and think over the memory of a lifetime. It will all 
            pass before you, or rather not all, but only the essential part of 
            it; a year may be passed over in a second; or a minute may be dwelt 
            upon for half-an-hour. The difference between that and the actual 
            enactment of the scenes of a lifetime is equivalent to the difference 
            between the functioning of memory and the reading over of an elaborate 
            and meticulous diary in which every event has been recorded. The diary 
            gives equal emphasis to everything, the significant and insignificant; 
            the memory retains only the essentials, and blurs or eliminates all 
            the rest. Thus the development of radio drama up to the moment may 
            be said to have been in the direction of a technique which functions 
            like the human memory - not attempting to represent life, but to telescope 
            the memories and impressions of a life or a story into the dream vision 
            of an hour or two.'
           
          
          Studio 
            5 at BBC Savoy Hill
           
          A more modern reference 
            to the significance of 'Carnival' is to be found in the potted biography 
            of its dramatiser Eric Maschwitz or Holt Marvell:
          'One of his first 
            ventures, at Gielgud's behest, was to convert Compton Mackenzie's 
            novel Carnival into a complicated radio play with a hundred scenes. 
            It ran for over two hours, involved two orchestras, and used all the 
            Savoy Hill studios linked together. Carnival was very popular and 
            rebroadcast many times. In 1932 Gielgud wanted to mount a radio operetta 
            using the same techniques.' (p 36 Miall, L (1994) Inside the BBC- 
            British Broadcasting Characters, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.)
          This would be the 
            hugely successful 'Good Night Vienna' that was to become the first 
            British musical talkie film starring Maschwitz's first wife Anna Neagle 
            and Jack Buchanon. Maschwitz was to enjoy great success with the composition 
            of popular songs such as 'A Nightengale Sang in Berkeley Square' and 
            scriptwriting in Hollywood which included a significant writing credit 
            for 'Goodbye, Mr Chips'. 
          The Radio Times 
            'What The Other Listener Thinks' column for January 18th 1929 published 
            the following letter which because of its initials 'F.H.A, Northampton' 
            may have been an apocryphal rather than genuine reaction to the broadcast:
          'The Triumph of 
            "Carnival"
          "Carnival" 
            is over. The hour is late. But it has set memory and emotion tingling. 
            I do not know how it was contrived. I do not know how that fast moving 
            shuttle of voice and music wove the pattern gay and sombre and complete. 
            The pitiful little history of Jenny, now in sun and now in shade, 
            came before us as a living thing and moved to its climax as inexorably 
            as Greek tragedy. "Carnival" is a tale for many of us of 
            our own age, and our thanks must go to this very virile present for 
            their delicate art in bringing the past before us once again.'
          It is impossible 
            to authenticate this letter, but it could be argued to have an articulacy 
            and hyperbole which is beyond what could be expected from an unsolicited 
            letter.
          'Carnival' and Compton 
            Mackenzie are the 2 symbols or factors which frame and structure the 
            first 'Radio Drama Number' of the Radio Times published on March 1st 
            1929. There have been few times when a high selling magazine has been 
            committed to a celebration and debate about Radio Drama as an instrinsic 
            art form and force of storytelling and 'popular culture'.
           
          
          The 
            art-deco design references the titles of what were clearly regarded 
            as key productions in the relatively short history of BBC Radio Drama 
            and include: Mr Wu, The White Chateau, Peer Gynt, The Kaleidoscope, 
            Speed, Lord Jim, R.U.R., Way of an Eagle, Prunella, The Wandering 
            Jew and Rampa. This intricate design by Eric Fraser is described as 
            'based upon the mechanics of Radio Play production as explained in 
            an article on page 498. It shows seven studios in use, controlled 
            bythe producer at the Dramatic Control Panel!'
           
          Compton 
            Mackenzie is given 'the front page' as it were with the first article 
            on 'The Future of the Broadcast Play'. It is editorial and advert 
            and brimming with confidence, hope and a tendency to chauvinism and 
            arrogance. 
          As 
            early as the first paragraph George Bernard Shaw was likely to burst 
            a blood vessel when he contemplated the bold opinion that his plays 
            'are not great plays' and that on three occasions Compton Mackenzie 
            had fallen asleep in the box when seeing them acted. Whereas Ibsen 
            requires the theatre and his 'plays are almost unreadable, and the 
            marvellous way they come to life when interpreted, as they so often 
            are, by inferior actors and actresses, is the most convincing proof 
            of his supreme dramatic genius.'
          For 
            Mackenzie the beginning of the 20th century was the age of the novel 
            and he argues convincingly of the link and dramatic potential of fusing 
            the force of effective novelistic storytelling with the new art of 
            radio drama although this link is articulate through a vicarious channel 
            of personal experience. Chauvinism manifests itself with the assertion 
            that British Broadcasting is superior to that of any other country 
            and probably of all other countries put together. The usual swipe 
            and condemnation of the print media for neglecting radio drama - the 
            new art form:
          'with 
            one or two honourable exceptions, not a single London newspaper has 
            condescended to criticize these experiments with as much attention 
            as it will devote to some trumpery film...'
          He 
            makes a point previously made and subsequently echoed up until the 
            present day:
          'the 
            future of broadcast drama lies with authors who are prepared to write 
            directly for the microphone.'
          He 
            condemns contemporary productions of Shakespeare as failures largely 
            because 'We are paying now for the Irving and Tree mistake of presenting 
            Shakespeare too exclusively for the eyes and not the ears of an audience.'
          He 
            makes a point about the integrity of purpose in writing and performance 
            which has survived through to the present day:
          'I 
            believe that if one word be sought to state one permanently indispensable 
            necessity for Radio Drama, that word will be "sincerity".'
          Content 
            and emotional purpose should rule over style and artifice:
          'However 
            ingenious the effects, however neat the construction, however well 
            written the dialogue, no Radio Drama which diverges into mere cleverness 
            without the fullest inspiration of life will ever get across to that 
            immense audience - that so much greater audience than any dramatist 
            has ever had to face before, even in the mighty fifth century B.C.'
          Mackenzie 
            also pointed up an essential similarity between the Ancient Greek 
            dramatic tradition and that of modernist electro-magnetic radio drama. 
            The mass appeal of the ancient Greeks was secured through the voices 
            of the players speaking through megaphones 'with their faces hidden 
            by tragic masks and their stature raised to more than mortal size 
            by buskins so that they must have appeared to the audience as inhuman 
            as our loud-speakers of today.' 
          Eric 
            Maschwitz somewhat disingenuously offers an analysis of the lessons 
            of the success of 'Carnival' and the centre of the text is marked 
            by a page from the production script: 'On the left will be seen notes 
            in the producer's handwriting of the various 'fades' between studios 
            demanded in the space of one page alone, though it must be admitted 
            that the page was a more than usually complicated one being descriptive 
            of the vague reminiscent thoughts which drifted through the heroine's 
            mind at a critical moment in her brief life.' 
          The 
            article is disingenuous because it is authored as 'Holt Marvell' - 
            the declared adaptor of 'Carnival' - but nowhere are the readers informed 
            that Holt Marvell is also the editor of the Radio Times himself - 
            Eric Maschwitz.
          Maschwitz 
            aka Holt Marvell makes the following points:
          1: 
            The fact that the microphone cannot enable its audiences to see is 
            its only one limitation.
          2: 
            One should look to the novelist for the microphone play because it 
            is the ideal medium for an unshackled form of drama.
          3: 
            The Dramatic Control Panel with its mechanical potential to mix and 
            cross fade scenes has liberated drama of the last cramping limitations 
            of stage form. He is in a sense talking about the topography, environment 
            or geography of dramatic imagination which has been expanded and extended 
            by the ability to fade from one scene to another, superimpose one 
            body of sound upon another, introduce music and sound effects for 
            background.
          4: 
            He defines the contribution of the Control Panel as introducing 'Expressionism' 
            to radio drama. The radio playwright can use sound as the film producer 
            uses light.
          5: 
            It is important to emphasise the retention of 'the human element' 
            and not sacrifice 'the play' to the medium.
          6: 
            The 'fluid quality' of sound mixing compares exactly with the novel 
            than with the stage play because in the novel the drama flows with 
            the imagination seeing it develop 'step by step, like the drama of 
            real life.'
          7: 
            Maschwitz somewhat controversially advances the view that radio drama 
            can achieve greater realism than stage drama.
          8: 
            Maschwitz is optimistic about radio drama being 'a drama of large 
            scope, realistic in all that it implies to the imagination, picturing 
            as wide a section of existence as is artifically possible, discarding 
            the limitations of the theatre, heightening its emotions by the sparing 
            use of music and expressionism.'
          9: 
            Maschwitz recognises the emotional potential of radio as a storytelling 
            medium when he says 'The microphone brings its listeners very close 
            to the heart of the drama which is being given in the studios.
          10: 
            Maschwitz raises the critical question of how much should be left 
            to the listener's imagination which has been explored as the fifth 
            dimension of narrative direction in radio drama or the imaginative 
            spectacle in 'Radio Drama - Theory and Practice'.
           
          In 
            'Carnival' Maschwitz claimed that he and Compton Mackenzie 'left almost 
            everything to the listener.. scene succeeded scene without explanation, 
            one drifting into another, and yet, among the letters received by 
            the BBC and the authors following the broadcast, there was not one 
            which complained that the development of the story was not sufficiently 
            clear.'
          He 
            concluded that 'each reader, or listener creates for himself his own 
            idea of what "So-and-so" looks like, and it rests with the 
            skill of the author and the producer to make these thousands of images 
            resemble as closely as possible the "master image" which 
            is in their mind.'
          The 
            director of 'Carnival' who seems to have a subsidiary role in the 
            promotion and marketing of the production was Peter Creswell. He contributed 
            an article 'On Casting For Broadcasting' in the March 1st Radio Times 
            'Radio Drama Number'.
          Creswell 
            said the 'most important pigment' in the painting of the mental picture 
            of radio drama 'is the human voice'
          1: 
            The human voice is one of the loveliest of musical instruments.
          2: 
            The role of the producer is to disembody the voices he thinks of using.
          3: 
            He does this by listening to it with closed eyes or better still over 
            a loud-speaker in another room.
          4: 
            The radio producer has to recapture that invaluable first impression 
            of the listener's point of view: perhaps one should rather say 'point 
            of hearing'.
          5: 
            Another consideration is the transmission of personality over the 
            ether. He discovers this when he ceases taking notes when listening 
            at an audition. Instead 'I heard and saw!'. Transmission of personality 
            is achieved when the listener instantly sees gestures, carriage, colour 
            of hair and eyes.
          6: 
            The technique of radio acting depends on understanding the extreme 
            sensitivity of the microphone. Theatrics have to be avoided and the 
            naturalistic or natural needs to be adopted. 'Character' acting on 
            the radio is a redundant concept and practice. Creswell advocated 
            a striving for realism in his appeal to actors not to come to BBC 
            Savoy Hill with a tendency to 'elocute'. He complained of the suffocating 
            experience of hearing 'a terrible unreality about their up-and-down 
            sing-song delivery.'
          The 
            March 1st Radio Drama Number also offered Val Gielgud the opportunity 
            to make his first contribution on his thoughts about the future of 
            radio drama after less than 2 months in the job he later admitted 
            to being thoroughly unqualified for. Gielgud approached the debate 
            from the point of view of 'writing techniques in 'Leave The Stage 
            Alone - Limitations of the Theatre and Scope of the studio.' (Page 
            499, The Radio Times, March 1, 1929)
          The 
            centre piece for his article was undoubtedly the celebration of the 
            writer through the photographic portraits of six men described as 
            'Six Famous Radio Playwrights:
          ' William 
            Gerbardi and Ashley Dukes, well known as novelist and dramatist respectively, 
            whose first plays for the microphone will be heard by listeners in 
            the near future; Richard Hughes, author of Congo Night and Danger. 
            Compton Mackenzie, adapter of his own novel, 'Carnival'; Cecil Lewis, 
            author of Pursuit and other radio plays and adapter of 'Rampa', 'Through 
            The Looking Glass' etc; and Reginald Berkeley whose war-play, The 
            White Chateau, is a classic of radio drama.'
          Gielgud's 
            key point was that the biggest risk to radio drama was listeners and 
            writers continuing to think of radio drama as 'the Cinderella of the 
            ordinary stage.'
          1: 
            Tyrone Guthrie's 'Squirrel's Cage' was a play written for the microphone 
            and impossible for performance on the stage because the cast is practically 
            unlimited,
          it 
            can use as many voices as the studio can accommodate, or the Corporation 
            pay,
          it 
            shifts from suburban dining-room to school, from school to office, 
            from office to 9.15 train, with a rapidity only paralleled on the 
            screen,
          And 
            it covers in an hour the greater part of a man's psychological development. 
            
          2: 
            Gielgud repeats points about the relative strengths and weakness of 
            stage and microphone plays but achieves a fine and elegant precision 
            with his point:
          'The 
            stage can show you the face. But the microphone can show you the working 
            of the mind behind the face.'
          3. 
            After replicating points about casting and acting made by Peter Creswell, 
            Gielgud concluded his contribution by describing radio drama being 
            'in its last experimental stage.' Again the tone is optimistic and 
            positive:
          'It 
            has been abundantly shown that a new field has been opened to writers, 
            actors, and producers, and if they are to take advantage of it they 
            must realize that they are dealing with a new thing and not with an 
            inferior substitute for an old thing. Once that is realized we can 
            go ahead.' (pp 499 & 502, The Radio Times, March 1, 1929)
          Two 
            further articles which highlighted the culture of BBC radio drama 
            production in 1929 was a piece by Howard Rose on 'The Seven Ages of 
            Radio Production' and Mary Hope Allen on 'A Shoe Shop Full of Plays 
            - A Word about the Ever-growing Play library at Savoy Hill' which 
            may or may not be of some comfort to subsequent generations of radio 
            drama departments who have had to cope with the BBC's popularity as 
            the destination of hopeful unsolicited dramatists. 
          Carnival was repeated 
            on November 4th and 6th 1929 with an additional frisson of promotion 
            and hyperbole that was likely to boost sales of the novel. The provision 
            of visual cueing - particularly for the central character Jenny would 
            have been risque for the time in the extent of the depiction of a 
            naked woman's back:
           
          
          Page 
            340 of Radio Times November 1st 1929
           
          On 
            Page 331 of the same edition of the Radio Times the BBC announces 
            that 'Carnival' is being 'revived' at the request of many listeners 
            who were unable to hear it on the first occasion:
          'The 
            experiment of presenting the complete life-story of a character in 
            a play of more than two hours in length, was a daring one. That it 
            succeeded so admirably was mainly due to the special qualities of 
            Mr Mackenzie's story with its back of London bohemian life. The play 
            produced by Peter Creswell.' 
          The 
            production as in January had a first broadcast on the Monday on 5GB 
            in Birmingham and then on all other stations, including 2LO on the 
            Wednesday. Wilfred Rooke-Ley published a full page literary promotion 
            of the original novel on page 315 of the Radio Times edition for November 
            1st 1929. A consideration of the opening paragraph:
          'It 
            is not often that a novel - which mirrors so faithfully as "Carnival" 
            a particular moment of contemporary life - survives the generation 
            about whom and for whose delight it was written'
          and 
            the final paragraph:
          '"Carnival" 
            is a late flowering of that period whose youth and enthusiasm Mr Mackenzie 
            inherited. I should not wonder if Posterity takes the view so neatly 
            expressed by a contemporary reviewer, one of Mr Punch's Learned Clerks: 
            "I shall put 'Carnival' upon the small and by no means crowded 
            shelf that I reserve for 'keeps'"'
          provide 
            the flavour of admiration and fawning present throughout the article. 
            The fact of the matter is that 'Carnival' did not endure as a key 
            text of Compton Mackenzie's literary output. In the present age (2001) 
            he is vaguely recollected as the author of 'Whiskey Galore' - a story 
            whose resonance probably owes more to the film medium rather than 
            that of the novel. Wilfred Rooke-Ley compares the prose and characters 
            with those created by Dickens and Chaucer:
          'Jenny 
            herself is incarnate London: the London that bred Chaucer and Dickens. 
            She is the latest of the long gallery of London characters, which 
            include Caddy Jellyby-Dickens's solitary heroine, perhaps, who is 
            really flesh and blood - and Sam Weller. Dickens and the creator of 
            Jenny have much in common: that constant, untiring awareness of character, 
            of all that is odd and whimsical in the world. But Mr Mackenzie's 
            humour never deserts him, as it sometimes deserted Dickens, and it 
            may be said that it is humour on the one hand and intense virility 
            on the other that save him from the pitfalls which the poetic treatment 
            of "Carnival" might have involved.'
          The 
            article incredibly but predictably continues to place the author on 
            the same literary pedestal as the poet Keats.
           
           
          
          Number 
            1 studio BBC Savoy Hill
           
          It is not the first 
            time the idea of the virile and virility has been used in respect 
            of 'criticism' or more appropriately 'unqualified applause' for this 
            novel. It was suspiciously present in the apparent letter from F.H.A 
            in Northampton. The language of 'virility' is a thin mask for the 
            sexuality of the story which is very much an Edwardian nostalgic and 
            masculine construction of the fin de siecle female - 'Jenny Pearl'. 
            This might account for the fact that the novel and story lost fashion 
            and cultural resonance as society became more predicated on women 
            authors empowering the characterisation of women's psyche. 
            
          
          Studio 
            7 at BBC Savoy Hill
           
          The 
            1929 production and broadcast of 'Carnival' is also an interesting 
            model of how the early BBC set up the concept of a contemporary 'celebrity' 
            in the uncritical signposting of Compton Mackenzie as champion and 
            hero of radio drama and popular literature. For the issue of January 
            4th the following 'diary' item appeared on the page 'The Other Side 
            of the Microphone':
          'Siamese, 
            Spies and Scotland.
          Can 
            it be that anyone has got more out of life than Compton Mackenzie? 
            As son of the famous actor Edward Compton, he knew, as a youth, all 
            the famous people of the '90s. After a brilliant career at Oxford 
            he took to writing and astonished us, in 1910 and 1912, with 'The 
            Passionate Elopement' and 'Carnival' following these first books with 
            'Sinister Street'. After seeing service in Gallipoli, he became our 
            Secret Agent at Athens. His adventures in the Intelligence provided 
            him with enough material for a hundred novels. He has already published 
            one book based upon them, 'Extremes Meet'; a second, 'The Three Couriers,' 
            will shortly appear. His passion for islands is well known. After 
            living on Capri, he moved nearer home, to Jethou, in the Channel group. 
            Here he now dwells with the Siamese cats he told us of in a recent 
            talk. There are eleven of them, divided into two rival camps. Their 
            owner is President of the Siamese Cat Club. When not writing on Jethou, 
            Mackenzie is dashing up to Scotland. He is standing for Parliament 
            in the next election as a Scottish Nationalist. A member of the Clan 
            Mackenzie, he is a passionate Nationalist. If ever we see a Stuart 
            on the throne of Scotland, we may be sure that he has had something 
            to do with it. He has recently acquired two more islands off the west 
            coast of Scotland on one of which, he is thinking of breeding reindeer. 
            A fascinating personality, with his lively knowledge of the classics, 
            cats, music, the stage, and the demi-monde. A fascinating figure with 
            restless eyes, a mouth that is two sides of a triangle, and a suit 
            of Harris tweed the colours of which must be stolen from some sombre 
            northern rainbow. As perfectly a young man of 1929 as he was a young 
            man of 1909.'
           
          
          Compton 
            Mackenzie - the Secret Agent. The portrait and inside page of a rare 
            copy of 'Greek Memories' which was actually suppressed under the Official 
            Secrets Act on publication in 1932. The Author himself was prosecuted 
            'In Camera' and fined for revealing sensitive information about British 
            espionage activity in Greece and the Balkans during the First World 
            War. Rupert Allason and Tam Dalyell have speculated that the prosecution 
            was largely the result of a personality clash and 'falling out' with 
            people in MI5 and MI6.
           
          Here 
            we have a model of the 'Richard Hannay' Buchanesque hero of the period 
            between the two wars. He was an Intelligence agent and adventurer 
            in the Greek Islands during the First World War. He is so rich he 
            lives as a tax exile in the Channel Islands and can buy 2 islands 
            off the West Coast of Scotland to embellish his identity as the romantic 
            modern 'Bonnie Prince Charlie'. 
          He 
            is the glorious aristocratic amateur adventurer of Imperialist Britain. 
            Standing for Parliament, classically and Oxford educated, 'Our Secret 
            Agent in Athens', not so much the careerist and workaholic that he 
            cannot be president of the Siamese Cat Club. A romantic and Byronesque 
            emblem of establishment culture who is also the habitue of the demi-monde 
            when he needs to be for King, Country, Empire and Art.
           
          
          Compton 
            Mackenzie - very much the 'Richard Hannay' Buchanesque swashbuckling 
            hero of his time. 'Dashing up' to Scotland to breed reindeer and fulfil 
            his role as the modern Stuart of Scotland.
           
          Mackenzie 
            becomes the hero of BBC radio drama, transcending his role as writer 
            to be the player in his own novel and the champion of the art. When 
            the British Drama League Club Room organises the discussion on the 
            artistic value of the broadcast play on April 8th 1929, it is Compton 
            Mackenzie who mounts the white stallion on behalf of the BBC and radio 
            drama.
          On 
            May 1st in the Listener it would be reported:
          'Mr 
            Compton Mackenzie made a shrewd hit when he urged that it encouraged 
            individualism and, therefore, intelligence in its audiences. A wireless 
            play must make its appeal direct to the individual listener without 
            any adventitious aids, either of previous criticism, hearsay or mass 
            suggestion. This is, indeed, a feature which is common to all the 
            activities of broadcasting. There is a certain artistic puritanism 
            here which, if it can find the right forms, is capable of that self-discipline 
            which breeds great art. More than this no advocate of wireless drama 
            world claims.' (Pate 590, column 2, 2nd paragraph, The Listener, May 
            1, 1929)
          The 
            debate during which Mackenzie was pitched against the woman dramatist 
            Naomi Royde-Smith was broadcast live by the BBC. Royde-Smith spoke 
            for the motion 'The Broadcast Play is an unsatisfactory Form of Art' 
            and she carried her resolution by a majority of three to one. She 
            had argued that to use H. G Wells' phrase the radio play 'teaches 
            us what life must be for the blind':
          'Why 
            listen to several people speaking with intermittent distinctness an 
            abbreviated play when you can either go to the theatre and see a play, 
            or stay at home and read it in full for yourself? Not only is the 
            broadcast play an unsatisfactory form of art. It is a dangerous one. 
            It is not even good substitution. All listeners should be warned against 
            it.' 
          (Page 
            555, Column 1 Paragraph 5, April 24, 1929, The Listener.)
           
          
          Featuring 
            the live debate on Radio Drama on page 93 Radio Times April 12th 1929
           
          'Both 
            Sides of the Microphone' authored by Eric Maschwitz reported on April 
            5th that Compton Mackenzie:
          'will 
            be heard at 8.00 p.m. from 5GB debating with Naomi Royde-Smith. Miss 
            Royde-Smith will maintain "That the Broadcast Play is not a satisfactory 
            form of art"- an assertion which Mr Mackenzie is well equipped 
            to combat, for his interest in radio drama is of long standing and 
            found practical expression in the recently-broadcast adaptation of 
            one of his novels. His opponent, on the other hand, is a stage playwright 
            of some experience - and stage writers are not usually kind to broadcasting. 
            In view of the present interest in radio plays and the recent transmission 
            of several successful experiments this debate should appeal to a large 
            section of our audience. The debate has been arranged by the Drama 
            League, and will be relayed from their premises in Adelphi Terrace.' 
            (Page 4, column 2, paragraph 1, Radio Times, April 5, 1929)
          In 
            September Compton Mackenzie continued to spring to Radio Drama's defence 
            in the face of an attack by Gordon Craig which was described as 'outspoken' 
            by the Radio Times. In reality Craig's article was badly argued and 
            unevenly written with rather poor analogies:
          'So 
            when you ask me as to the possible future development of the drama 
            as affected by broadcasting, I can only say that I see no development 
            possible whatever, because drama is one of those eternal things which 
            never changes. Broadcasting can of course affect the sale of some 
            drama and the fashions in drama: it can even affect the spread of 
            bad drama but it can in no way help to develop or to retard the development 
            of the drama, because the drama is unaffected by whatever happens. 
            In fact, drama is a big thing and broadcasting only looks like a big 
            thing.' (first paragraph, column 1, page 666, Radio Times, September 
            1929)
           
          
          Compton 
            Mackenzie's further defence of Radio Drama in the Radio Times September 
            27, 1929, page 667
          Compton 
            Mackenzie argued that radio drama had advanced the interests of the 
            storytelling artist to a point not experienced since the age of the 
            epic narrators of Greek literature:
          'I 
            have realised that radio is going to give the artist the greatest 
            opportunity he has had since the days of Homer to express himself 
            without the mechanical barrier which the progress of human inventiveness 
            has raised higher and higher between the artist and his audience.'
          But 
            the final paragraph of his defence introduces a personal element of 
            attack which introduces a patronising, superior and somewhat emotional 
            dimension to the debate.
          'For 
            Mr Gordon Craig to write in one sentence "the radio, the movie-tones, 
            the cinema and all these things," argues such a confusion of 
            mind, such a failure of imagination, and so much ill-informed prejudice 
            as to make it seem hardly worth while for an intelligent man to argue 
            with him. Nevertheless, if Mr Gordon Craig will give himself the trouble 
            to listen intelligently to radio for a whole year, I will debate with 
            him before the microphone at the end of that year, with one proviso, 
            which is, that there shall not sit between us and the real audience 
            a small visible audience ready to titter at any jokes he may make 
            about curates and so render serious debating an impossibility.' (column 
            3, paragraph 2, page 667, The Radio Times, September 27, 1929)
           
          
          Our 
            Man In Athens. Compton Mackenzie after visiting the French Consul-General 
            14/07/1917. From page 315 'Aegean Memories' published in London by 
            Chatto and Windus in 1940. The book also discusses the activities 
            of the Serbian Secret Society which was called 'The Black Hand.' It 
            is coincidental that John Buchan's malign enemy in 'The Thirty Nine 
            Steps' which threatens world peace and is involved in the assassination 
            of a Greek Prime Minister' Karolides' was called 'The Black Stone'. 
            'The Thirty Nine Steps' was originally published in 1913.
           
          Compton 
            Mackenzie's Official Secrets Act prosecution was mentioned in a Hansard 
            debate on a new Official Secrets Act in 1989 
          Extract 
            from Hansard
          Mr 
            Rupert Allason: There was very little after his revelations of the 
            Secret Intelligence Service's operations in the first world war until 
            shortly before the second world war, when Sir Compton Mackenzie was 
            prosecuted for revealing various desperately secret details such as 
            the fact that the chief of the secret intelligence service was known 
            by the letter "C". As was pointed out in Committee when the Security 
            Service Bill was being debated, the judge observed that if it was 
            so deadly secret that the chief of the secret intelligence service 
            was known as "C", why had he not changed it to "D" or "E" and had 
            there not been some 20 years for him to do that? The key to the Compton 
            Mackenzie prosecution, however, is the little-known fact that the 
            deputy director-general of the Security Service at that time not only 
            authorised publication of the book -- he was a great friend of Compton 
            Mackenzie -- but was himself a somewhat vain individual and was terribly 
            flattered by the references to himself. This was part of the reason, 
            I suspect, why the prosecution did not press the case very hard and 
            why Compton Mackenzie, although convicted, was given a very small 
            fine. 
          Mr. 
            Tam Dalyell (Linlithgow) : I may have misunderstood the hon. Gentleman 
            but I hope that he was not calling Compton Mackenzie a vain individual. 
            I knew him very well and he was not vain. 
          Mr. 
            Allason : No, I was not suggesting that. The then deputy director-general 
            of the Security Service was a very vain individual and he was terribly 
            flattered by what Compton Mackenzie had written, hence his motive 
            in authorising this particular disclosure and hence the appalling 
            mess that the Government got themselves into at the time. 
          Mr. 
            Dalyell : The hon. Gentleman must be a little careful in going into 
            this particular example because Compton Mackenzie used to hold court 
            in his house in Drummond Place in Edinburgh and told, at some length, 
            all who would listen that he felt that he was being got at on personal 
            grounds, and that much of the case was connected with issues of personality 
            rather than with the prosecution of the law. 
          Mr. 
            Allason : That may be so. The fact remains that he was convicted and 
            fined. 
           
          Compton 
            Mackenzie links:
          A 
            potted biography 
          Links 
            and a short biography 
          Audio 
            extract of spoken word product of Whiskey Galore 
          Another 
            short biog 
          Famous 
            Scots 
          A 
            page on his second hand books 
          Page 
            on his espionage career with MI5 
          University 
            of Archive papers