
        
         
        Val 
          Gielgud and 1929
         
        'The 
          stage can show you the face. But the microphone can show you the working 
          of the mind behind the face.'- page 499, The Radio Times, March 1, 1929.
         
        Val Gielgud took command 
          of BBC Productions in January 1929, barely 6 years after the BBC had 
          begun transmitting in the United Kingdom scheduled dramatised stories 
          on the new electronic broadcast medium of radio. He was only 28 years 
          old.
        It could be argued 
          that Gielgud's appointment at the BBC and the year were marked by key 
          artistic, social and cultural developments which are concatenated by 
          the evolution and progress of radio drama in this year:
        1: Gielgud published 
          in the Radio Times a series of six articles setting out a central leadership 
          and manifesto for radio drama writing and production.
         
        
        Page 
          397, The Radio Times, May 24, 1929.
         
        2: With his friend 
          and co-writer Eric Maschwitz, who was editor of the Radio Times, he 
          was part of a cultural celebration and promotion of radio drama as a 
          significant dramatic art form. This is exemplified in an entire issue 
          of the Radio Times being devoted to Radio Drama on March 1st 1929.
        3: Radio Drama was 
          the primary medium of electronic broadcast storytelling to an audience 
          of at least 3 million listeners.
        4: Radio Drama did 
          not have any competition although 1929 was the year when the cinematic 
          'Talkie' began to draw significant audiences in the picture palaces. 
          The introduction of speech and dialogue to what had been a medium of 
          visual storytelling was interpolated by the development and growing 
          maturity of speech only entertainment and drama on the BBC.
        6: The Listener Magazine 
          began publication. This provided another space for debating and critically 
          evaluating the performance of radio drama as well as the Radio Times.
        7: 1929 saw the completion 
          of an ambitious 12 part 'Great Play' series supported by BBC merchandising 
          of printed scripts and guides sold from the BBC Bookshop at Savoy Hill. 
          The series was also underpinned by qualitative and considerable editorial 
          coverage in the Radio Times and the Listener. The project led by director 
          Howard Rose provided a location for the production of Russian, Indian, 
          Scandinavian, English and German classical texts. The series resonated 
          the role of radio in 'globalising' storytelling traditions, but it was 
          criticised for the unevenness of the productions and the effectiveness 
          of the broadcasts as entertainment for listeners.
        8: BBC broadcasting 
          of radio plays was clearly contextualised in a 'global' field of Empire 
          and multicultural diversity. BBC dramatic productions, graphical design 
          and text articles about them in the Radio Times provided an intriguing 
          location of cross-cultural experience and visual cues and memory reference 
          points to accompany transmission and listening. This was the year the 
          BBC broadcast Paul Robeson live from Bournemouth and although displaying 
          signs of what would be now described as 'Orientalism', celebrated African 
          American 'Negro spirituals', Hebrew folk music, and classical Indian 
          literature. 
         
        
        Page 
          236, Radio Times, May 3, 1929. Eric Maschwitz's adaptation of 'The Prisoner 
          of Zenda' is accompanied by a detailed plan of the Castle and Chateau 
          of Zenda as well as an action short illustration from the original novel. 
           
         
        9: The year was characterised 
          by recognised landmarks in radio drama production such as Compton Mackenzie's 
          'Carnival', Tyrone Guthrie's 'Squirrel's Cage', Robert Cedric Sheriff's 
          'Journey's End', L. Du Garde Peach's 'Ingredient X' as well as abstract 
          audio drama experiments by Lance Sieveking. 
         
        
        The 
          listings and art-deco illustrative promotion of L. Du Garde Peach's 
          'Ingredient X' for July 31st 1929. Page 192, Radio Times, July 26, 1929. 
          This is emphasised as a play specially written for broadcasting. It 
          contains narrative techniques recognised at the time and subsequently 
          explored academically which fused modernist structure with the intrinsic 
          potential of the radio medium. Switching between locations, and time 
          transepts describe the story and evolution of 'Ingredient X'- a mysterious 
          substance used in the formation of a synthetic rubber that is to make 
          or mar the fortunes of what would be recognised now as a 'global' corporation. 
          To use the language of the Radio Times of July 19th 1929 'While men 
          with complete detachment discuss its possibilities, other men are giving 
          their lives for this mysterious ingredient.'
         
        Link 
          to Electronic Journal article by University of Kent lecturer Alan Beck 
          on significance of 'Ingredient X' and an extract from the script. 'Cognitive 
          Mapping and Radio Drama' - Consciousness, Literature and the Arts, 
          Volume 1 Number 2, July 2000 
        10: The Radio Times 
          was a philosophical context for radio drama information which explored 
          prophesies about the future of radio and radio drama 50 years hence 
          to 1979, discussed the role of radio in terms of communication/social 
          media history, the future uses of broadcasting in war, and the publication 
          of radio poetry and radio drama scripts.
        11: It could be argued 
          that radio drama 'became of age' in 1929 because the productions and 
          output clearly resonated in alternative media and generated a debate 
          about its role and value in newspapers and lecture halls. Many of the 
          theoretical points made about radio drama in the context of its practice 
          ring true today and echo the writing and utterances of audio drama producers, 
          writers and performers since.
        12: These broadcast 
          developments in terms of content and structure coincided and refracted 
          key political and social events such as the Labour Party's victory in 
          the 1929 General Election which had also equalised the franchise for 
          women voters aged 21. 
        There is clear evidence 
          of space being given to feminist political and social perspectives in 
          BBC broadcast and in the Radio Times. 
        It was also the year 
          of the Wall Street crash and Britain's weakened Imperial economy would 
          begin to send ripples of economic recession and 'protectionism' throughout 
          all levels of British society. 
        It was a time when 
          appeasement and the avoidance of future war was a social and cultural 
          preoccupation. The polarisation between communism and fascism would 
          begin to concretise throughout Europe and isolationism would abrogate 
          US intervention in the growing chaos and disintegration of European 
          economies and societies. To what extent was the censorship row the previous 
          year surrounding Reginald Berkeley's 'Machines' a manifestation of this 
          tension? The narrative is comprehensively covered by Alan Beck in Chapter 
          8.4 of his CD Rom History of Radio Drama in the UK Vol 1, 'The Invisible 
          Play'. Berkeley's own publication of the rejected script and the correspondence 
          between him and the BBC is also worthy of consideration: Berkeley, R, 
          (1928) Machines, A Symphony of Modern Life, London: Robert Holden and 
          Co. Ltd.
        The fact that the 
          content of radio drama becomes a subject for political struggle and 
          a location for forces of censorship are pointers to its developing cultural 
          maturity. The BBC's vulnerability was predicated by its handicap of 
          having to tread warily on matters of political controversy. It had only 
          been a year since the granting of the Royal Charter and 2 years since 
          it had survived a potential takeover by government during the General 
          Strike although it has been convincingly argued that it was fatally 
          compromised as an agent of the State. (pp 71-76 Crook, T (1997) International 
          Radio Journalism - History, Theory & Practice, London, New York: 
          Routledge) Censorship of radio plays has become a rich subsequent history. 
          The 1933 BBC Yearbook provided a detailed list of cancellations and 
          postponements on the grounds of politics and taste:
        'Then there was Filson 
          Young's play "Titanic", the protests about which were remarkable 
          as they referred purely to the subject, the play itself not having been 
          written at the time, and the author having publicly stated that the 
          actual sinking of the ship did not figure in the play. This protest 
          was all the more remarkable in that some of the most successful broadcasts 
          of the past have been plays like "Journey's End" and "Brigade 
          Exchange," which must have aroused many more sorrowful memories 
          than the sinking of the "Titanic". In this case the BBC decided 
          to abandon the projected broadcast, as it felt that the play would not 
          obtain a fair hearing and would be prejudiced by the misrepresentation 
          to which it had been subject.
        On the other hand, 
          there have been postponements on the BBC's own initiative where circumstances 
          beyond its control have made the broadcast of a particular play inopportune 
          or tactless. Two examples may be given: the postponement of Galsworthy's 
          "Escape," the broadcast of which had been arranged for a date 
          which happened to come just after the Dartmoor mutiny. Similarly when 
          a Welsh mine disaster occurred a few days before the date of the broadcast 
          from Cardiff of Richard Hughes' mining play "Danger", the 
          BBC felt it right to cancel the programme.' (p 132, The BBC Yearbook 
          1933, London: British Broadcasting Corporation)
        Examples of censorship 
          nearer the time of writing include the decision by BBC R4 controller 
          James Boyle to cancel transmission of a satirical drama series on the 
          National Health Service during the campaign for the May 1997 General 
          Election. His attention was prompted by the Sunday Times and his decision 
          was subsequently applauded by the same newspaper.
        It could be argued 
          that a more effective social and cultural meaning for the radio drama 
          of 1929 can be achieved through a more profound consideration of its 
          social and cultural context. 
         
        
        