Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 4,02 Feb 2013,60 mins

Spoken Like a Woman

Archive on 4

Available for over a year

In the earliest days of radio, women commented on 'household matters' and talked about their garden or their travels. Writers Vita Sackville-West and Rebecca West were regulars - and became Children's Hour 'Aunts'; but certainly never read the news. On the other hand, the young BBC employed a number of brilliant young women behind the microphone who shaped the earliest days of programme-making. But when they finally broke into the male bastion of mainstream broadcasting, largely as a result of the Second World War, women's particular affinity with the microphone was quickly recognised, notably on the BBC World Service where the female voice was soon found to be more effective at reaching listeners at the other end of the Empire than that of their male counterparts. Anne Karpf explores, with the help of the sound archive, the way women's voices have shaped the sound of British radio, from Auntie Kathleen of Children's Hour and those formal talks of the early BBC, via the forces' sweethearts like Jean Metcalfe and Marjorie Anderson, to today's topliners like Martha Kearney and Bridget Kendall. Producer: Simon Elmes First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in February 2013.

Programme Website
More episodes