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3. Remarkable Voices

Ed Stourton on the BBC’s wartime journey. General de Gaulle rallies the French from London, and US journalists arrive. From 2018.

The BBC is a British institution unlike any other, and its story during the Second World War is also the story of Britain's people.

Writer and presenter Edward Stourton is a sharp-eyed and affectionate companion on the BBC's wartime journey, investigating archives, diaries, letters and memoirs to examine what the BBC was and what it stood for.

In this episode - General de Gaulle rallies the French from London and US journalists arrive to report the Blitz.

These were the years when Auntie (the BBC's enduring nickname) earned a reputation for bossiness. It was also a period of remarkable voices - Churchill's fighting speeches de Gaulle's broadcasts from exile, George Orwell, Ed Murrow, Richard Dimbleby and Vera Lynn.

During these extraordinary times, eyewitness testimonies gave a voice to everyone, securing the BBC's reputation as a reliable purveyor of the truth.

Auntie's War is more than a portrait of an institution at a critical time, it is also a portrayal of the British in wartime and an insight into why we have our broadcast culture today.

Read by Edward Stourton.

Abridged by Anna Magnusson.

Producer: Pippa Vaughan

A Loftus production for BBC Radio 4, first broadcast in January 2018.

15 minutes

Last on

Thu 10 Nov 202202:00

Credits

RoleContributor
ReaderEdward Stourton
AuthorEdward Stourton
AbridgerAnna Magnusson
ProducerPippa Vaughan

Broadcasts

  • Wed 10 Jan 201809:45
  • Thu 11 Jan 201800:30
  • Wed 9 Nov 202214:00
  • Thu 10 Nov 202202:00