Photograph: Henry Hall and the BBC Dance Orchestra in February 1936. Standing left to right are Elizabeth Scott, Bert Yarlett, Vivienne Brooks, Henry Hall, Dan Donovan and the Three sisters.
The BBC Dance Orchestra, led by Jack Payne, made its first official broadcast on 12 March 1928. The band had proved its popularity as The Cecilians, occasionally broadcasting from the Hotel Cecil. Given the title Director of the BBC Dance Orchestra, Payne moved his 10-piece band to the studio at Savoy Hill. His regular radio performances ensured his success, and made his signature tune, "Say it with Music", a hit.
The BBC Handbook of 1929 acknowledged the importance of dance music on the radio and called it "the voice of something very typical of ourselves and of this post-war age". Radio dancing lessons were all the rage, and the listeners' appetite for dance music was huge. The BBC Dance Orchestra was soon receiving 10 thousand letters a week.
Payne left the BBC in 1932 and was replaced by Henry Hall, who continued the success with another line-up of the BBC Dance Orchestra. Hall was followed by Billy Ternent and then Stanley Black, until 1952. The orchestra provided the music for many hit programmes, including The Goons, Ray's a Laugh and Much Binding in the Marsh.
March anniversaries

BBC Producer Guidelines published
1 March 1989
Truly Madly Deeply
1 March 1992
Launch of BBC Four
2 March 2002
Housewives' Choice
4 March 1946
Round the Horne
7 March 1965
Pennies From Heaven
7 March 1978
The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy
8 March 1978
French and Saunders
9 March 1987
The Frost Report
10 March 1966
World Service Television News
11 March 1991
First broadcast by the BBC Dance Orchestra
12 March 1928
Launch of the Latin American Service
14 March 1938
I’d Do Anything
15 March 2008
This Life
18 March 1996
First televised Budget speech
20 March 1990
Up Pompeii
23 March 1970
Letter From America
24 March 1946
Newswipe with Charlie Brooker
25 March 2009
The return of Doctor Who
26 March 2005
Grand National televised
26 March 1960
Troubleshooter
27 March 1990
Opening of new Crystal Palace transmitter
28 March 1956
Going for a Song
31 March 1965
Teletubbies begins
31 March 1997
























