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BBC's and Light
Their performance at the award show impressed the BBC's Head of Light Entertainment Bill Cotton and Controller of BBC One Paul Fox, who were sitting in the audience.
The show was broadcast for much of the war from the BBC Wales studios in Bangor, Caernarvonshire, north Wales, where the BBC's Light Entertainment Department was based during World War II after an initial brief relocation to Bristol.
In the 1950s and 1960s, the Light Programme ( along with the BBC's two other national programmes, the Home Service and the Third Programme ) gradually became available also on what was known at the time as VHF, as the BBC developed a network of local FM transmitters.
Bill Cotton, the BBC's Head of Light Entertainment, believed that Bruce Forsyth was best for the job.
The other two were the Home Service ( mainly speech based ) and the Light Programme, principally devoted to light entertainment and music, usually cover versions of popular music of the day played by the BBC's own orchestras.
Parkinson began in 1971 when the host was offered a series of eight shows by the BBC's Head of Light Entertainment, Bill Cotton.
Basket of Light, which followed in mid 1969, was their greatest commercial success, thanks to a surprise hit single, " Light Flight " which became popular through its use as theme music for a TV drama series Take Three Girls ( the BBC's first drama series to be broadcast in colour ) for which the band also provided incidental music.
Created by Norman Collins and originally presented by Alan Ivimey the programme was first broadcast on 7 October 1946 on the BBC's Light Programme ( now called Radio 2 ).
He worked for Radio Luxembourg and Radio London before presenting the Saturday afternoon programme Where It's At with Kenny Everett ( produced by Johnny Beerling ) on the BBC's Light Programme.
These were broadcast on the BBC's Light Programme.
The overture received a rehearsal performance by the BBC Northern Ireland Light Orchestra in Belfast in 1969, under the auspices of the BBC's light music rehearsal scheme.
He also appeared in the BBC's second dramatisation of Charles Dickens ' Bleak House as Inspector Bucket ( 1985 ) and in the science fiction television series Doctor Who as the villain Josiah Samuel Smith in the 3-part serial Ghost Light ( 1989 ).
Adam spent nine years in this role, before in 1950 the Director General of the BBC, William Haley, took the perhaps surprising decision to appoint him as the Controller of the BBC Light Programme, one of the BBC's most popular national radio stations.
It was intended to provide an " up-market " offering which would compete directly with the BBC's Light Programme.

BBC's and Entertainment
However, the source of this story turned out to be a misinterpretation of comments by Wayne Garvie, head of BBC's Entertainment Group ( and previously the last producer on The Krypton Factor ) naming it as the next " TV gem " that " should " ( rather than would ) be revived.
Unusually, it was produced by the BBC's in-house Entertainment department rather than the Drama department — this was because Renwick preferred working with people he knew rather than the people at Drama who might not share his vision.
BBC Prime was the BBC's general entertainment TV channel in Europe and the Middle East from 30 January 1995 until 11 November 2009, when it was replaced by BBC Entertainment.
This appointment was only a brief one, however, before a re-organisation of the BBC's Executive Committee led to the creation of a new post, filled by Yentob, of Director of Drama, Entertainment and Children's.
The series is shown to more than 100 countries on BBC Entertainment ( formerly BBC Prime ), the BBC's 24-hour global entertainment channel, broadcast to Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

BBC's and Department
In Thought for the Day, featured since 1970, a speaker reflects on topical issues from a theological viewpoint ; the editorial responsibility lying with BBC's Religion and Ethics Department ( a point often made on the Today Programme ).
In 1990 Singh joined the BBC's Science and Features Department, where he was a producer and director working on programmes such as Tomorrow's World and Horizon.
His initial career was in the theatre, where he worked as a director, before in 1976 he joined the BBC's English Regions Drama Department as a Script Editor under producer David Rose.
The BBC's Bangor base played host to the BBC Variety Department during the war, although this fact was never officially announced.
As far back at 1962, the makers of Z-Cars had deliberately set their programme near Liverpool in the North of England to break away from the perceived London bias ( although, ironically, it was shot in the BBC's London studios ), and in 1971 an English Regions Drama Department had been established at BBC Birmingham headed by David Rose with a remit for making ' regional drama ', gaining a major success with Alan Bleasdale's Boys from the Blackstuff in 1982.
The BBC has established a strong reputation in the field of children's drama, although children's dramas are almost universally commissioned and / or produced by the BBC's Children's Department rather than the Drama Department itself.
The estate has been the home of the BBC's Engineering Training Department since the war, now branded the BBC Academy.
In 1944, Heath talked Douglas Lawrence, the Dance Music Organizer for the BBC's Variety Department, into supporting a new band with a broadcasting contract.

BBC's and moved
Following the launch of BBC London, the region moved into facilities in Marylebone High Street, where the news service was based alongside BBC London News and the BBC's Governance Unit.
Tam Dean Burn wrote in The Herald ( Glasgow ) " I would argue that this bias has moved on apace since Thompson went to Israel in 2005 and signed a deal with prime minister Ariel Sharon on the BBC's coverage of the conflict.
The cast and crew moved to Studio D at the BBC's Lime Grove Studios on Saturday 11 December 1954 for a full camera rehearsal and run-through.
Hugely popular at its peak, with audiences occasionally touching an astounding twenty million, Armchair Theatre was an important influence over later programmes such as the BBC's The Wednesday Play ( 1964 – 1970 ), a programme initiated by Sydney Newman after he had moved to the BBC.
In November 2011 the program moved to Salford from London to a brand new studio as part of the BBC's relocation north.
After nine months in California he moved back to the UK when, in 1978 two of his songs, " Solid Love " ( performed by Siffre ) and " We Got It Bad " ( co-written and performed by Bob James ) reached the UK finals of the BBC's A Song for Europe.
He moved to South Africa after having been appointed the BBC's Africa correspondent.
The IBC's original London offices were in Hallam Street, near the BBC's Broadcasting House, then moved to nearby 35-36 Portland Place.
The BBC's Radio 1, inheritor of the audiences that Plugge's offshore successors had built until the 1967 Marine Broadcasting ( Offences ) Act made them illegal, later moved into the Hallam Street building.
The Camden Studio was also the only studio large enough for the full BBC Radio Orchestra, but the orchestra ultimately moved to a new home at the BBC's Maida Vale Studios.
In 2004 Oberman moved away from comedy to join the BBC's long running soap drama EastEnders, after she was cast as Chrissie Watts, the second wife of " one of the best-loved villains in soap history ", ' Dirty ' Den Watts.
His first job in network radio was on The Week In Westminster, and he then moved to Today Programme as a producer and to the BBC's New York bureau before becoming editor of PM in 1987.
In 2010 he moved from presenting live football on Channel 5, to fronting the BBC's Match of the Day 2 Sunday night highlights show.
Gen Pinochet was clearly moved and extremely happy with our visit ," Kamiński told the BBC's Polish service.
After the war Allison also moved into broadcasting, joining the BBC and becoming the first person to commentate on the radio on events such as the Derby and the Grand National ( with the BBC's racing correspondent Meyrick Good ), as well as the annual England v. Scotland international, and the FA Cup Final in 1927, between Cardiff City and Arsenal.
They moved to Bristol in the United Kingdom in 1964. when John got a job as a reporter for the BBC's Points West news programme.
It was the home of the BBC's Monitoring Service from August 1939 until early 1943, when Monitoring moved to Caversham Park and Crowsley Park, near Reading.
He later went on to present a celebrity edition of BBC's Cash in the Attic but moved back to America later that year.
He returned to London and presented British radio programmes such as the BBC's World at One, PM and The World Tonight, and moved to TV in 1979 as a reporter for Man Alive on BBC2.
He was attracted by Channel 4 for a time to present A Week in Politics, and then moved to cover the BBC's live broadcasts of parliament in Westminster with Nick Ross.
Sutton moved into television, the medium with which he was to become most closely associated, in 1952, joining the staff of the BBC's drama department.

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