{"id":20666,"date":"2024-01-13T03:22:06","date_gmt":"2024-01-12T21:52:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/annie-nightingale-how-radio-1s-first-female-presenter-and-longest-serving-broadcaster-changed-the-industry-forever-ents-arts-news\/"},"modified":"2024-01-13T03:22:06","modified_gmt":"2024-01-12T21:52:06","slug":"annie-nightingale-how-radio-1s-first-female-presenter-and-longest-serving-broadcaster-changed-the-industry-forever-ents-arts-news","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/annie-nightingale-how-radio-1s-first-female-presenter-and-longest-serving-broadcaster-changed-the-industry-forever-ents-arts-news\/","title":{"rendered":"Annie Nightingale: How Radio 1’s first female presenter and longest-serving broadcaster changed the industry forever | Ents & Arts News"},"content":{"rendered":"

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“Our disc jockeys are husband substitutes,” Annie Nightingale was told when she knocked on Radio 1’s door following it’s launch in 1967. So why on Earth, they said, would a woman would want to join the airwaves?<\/p>\n

“They were bewildered,” Nightingale told Desert Island Disc’s presenter Lauren Laverne, during her appearance on the much-loved radio show in 2020.<\/p>\n

The male bosses were bewildered, but Nightingale was determined. Not only was she the first woman to join the station, in 1970 – remaining the only female host until Janice Long’s arrival 12 years later – she was also its longest-serving broadcaster, male or female, still on air until late last year with Annie Nightingale presents…<\/p>\n

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She was a friend of The Beatles and David Bowie, but more importantly supported waves of popular music genres including prog rock, German electronica, punk, acid house and grime. Now highlighted following her death at 83<\/strong>, her influence on the world of British music culture cannot be overstated.<\/p>\n

Even into her 80s, she was a champion of new music. Look at her Desert Island Discs choices and you see a mix including John Lennon and Bowie, yes, but also Billie Eilish and Beyonce, interspersed with Ethel Merman and Sid Vicious.<\/p>\n

While most of us turn to the music of our formative years and early adulthood when we think of the songs that have defined our lives, Nightingale was constantly soaking up the new, always with an ear for those artists who might become stars. “You want to hear something you’ve never heard before,” she told Laverne, quoting the late John Peel. “Something that surprises you.”<\/p>\n

Nightingale was born in Osterley, now part of outer west London but then part of Middlesex, on 1 April 1940. She started her career as a journalist in Brighton and first broadcast on the BBC in 1963 as a panellist on the TV show Juke Box Jury.<\/p>\n

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\n Nightingale was friends with Paul McCartney and The Beatles
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It was in Brighton where she first interviewed The Beatles, and she went on to become a frequent guest at the band’s Apple Studios in London during the 1960s – a front-row seat to one of the most creative periods in British popular music.<\/p>\n

She knew about John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s relationship before it was made public, but did not report what she knew would be a headline-making story as she did not want to break her bond of trust with the band.<\/p>\n

And Paul McCartney even proposed to her on one occasion, according to the BBC. “Well, sort of yes,” she said when asked about it in an interview. “But I don’t think he was serious!”<\/p>\n

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