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Patricia Hughes (Read 7967 times)
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Patricia Hughes
Feb 9th, 2013, 1:31pm
 
A BBC News tribute to Patricia appears here.

"Former BBC radio announcer Patricia Hughes - one of the most distinctive BBC voices over several decades - has died at the age of 90.

Famed for her elegant tones, Hughes started at the BBC as a secretary in 1944, before appearing on what was then the "overseas service".

She later appeared on the Light Programme, the Home Service and the Third Programme, now known as Radio 3.

In 1969, following a career break, she returned to Radio 3 until 1983."  

"In Simon Elmes' book, Hello Again: Nine Decades of Radio Voices, Hughes described how she used to spend nights in the radio announcers' dormitory - in a building which has since been converted into the Langham Hotel - and recalled one particularly memorable broadcast.

She told the author: "By the mercy of God I'd remembered to take a diaphanous negligee to put over my nightie, which I didn't normally do.

"I rushed down the stairs, tore across Portland Place into Broadcasting House and luckily with about three or four minutes to spare, got into the studio, very breathless. I read the news at nine. Then, at 10, I realised with appalling clarity that I was still in my nightdress, hair in all directions looking like nothing on earth.""  


This story in her own voice here.



"Radio Today" has a tribute here.






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Re: Patricia Hughes
Reply #1 - Feb 24th, 2013, 6:01pm
 
A tribute to Patricia by Nigel Rees, appears in "The Guardian".




"...Born in Malaya, where her father was a senior executive, Patricia went to school in Sussex and then rejoined her parents in Kuala Lumpur. Following the Japanese invasion at Christmas 1941, she and her mother fled to Singapore. After a short spell in South Africa, Patricia came back to Britain on her own and took a secretarial job with the BBC General Overseas Service (GOS).

In due course, she applied for an announcing post and remained with the GOS for about 15 years, also working for the Home Service and for the Third Programme after it was inaugurated in 1946."

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