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The Eccentric Entrepreneur

Dominic Sandbrook explores the life of Leonard Plugge, whose commercial radio station gripped Britain in the 1930s. From August 2014.

"Radio Normandy Calling!" The Belles of Normandy sing the station ident; Roy Plomley (of Desert Island Discs fame) introduces the artistes from the Bradford Alhambra, and another melody-packed hour - sponsored by a patent medicine - begins on the commercial radio station that, back in the 1930s, was often more popular than the majestic Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ.

The man behind it all was called, improbably, Captain Leonard Plugge. And in this programme, Dominic Sandbrook tells the story of this clever, enterprising and subversive man. Tory MP, passionate European and backroom boffin, Plugge created a string of brilliantly successful commercial stations in France and beyond that challenged Sir John Reith's radio monopoly with popular music and variety shows, sponsored by Bile Beans, Persil and Diploma cheddar cheese. So wealthy did his radio network make him that he owned two yachts, six cars (including two Rolls Royces), a Mayfair mansion, employed twelve staff, and lived a life that lay somewhere between The Great Gatsby and Citizen Kane.

With Plugge's son Frank, Dominic leafs through his father's mountain of diaries and scrapbooks - news cuttings, photographs... memorabilia of a life that brought him the Legion d'Honneur, a medal from US broadcaster NBC and made him a worldwide celebrity. With a rich archive of contributions from Roy Plomley, Bob Danvers-Walker and many others who first made their names on Plugge's stations, plus recordings from the shows they broadcast, Dominic Sandbrook brings a forgotten mogul of a bygone era to life.

And next time you approach a road junction with an elongated 'SLOW' painted on the tarmac, you can thank Captain Plugge for it, because that was his idea too...

Producer Simon Elmes.

Available now

1 hour

Last on

Sun 23 Jun 2019 03:00

Leonard Plugge’s son Frank (right) shows his father’s medal, including his Legion d’Honneur, to presenter Dominic Sandbrook

Leonard Plugge’s son Frank (right) shows his father’s medal, including his Legion d’Honneur, to presenter Dominic Sandbrook

Dominic Sandbrook examines a photograph of Leonard Plugge,driver of the first underground train to run in 1926 General Strike

Dominic Sandbrook examines a photograph of Leonard Plugge,driver of the first underground train to run in 1926 General Strike

Broadcasts

  • Sat 30 Aug 2014 20:00
  • Sat 18 Mar 2017 08:00
  • Sat 18 Mar 2017 15:00
  • Sun 19 Mar 2017 03:00
  • Sat 22 Jun 2019 08:00
  • Sat 22 Jun 2019 15:00
  • Sun 23 Jun 2019 03:00