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Kenny Everett presents another show on ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Bristol, a day after his 27th birthday. From Boxing Day 1971.

Festive frolics from the home of radio’s enfant terrible.

Kenny Everett was a radio genius, loved by millions and lauded by his fellow broadcasters. He honed his craft on pirate radio, helped launch Radio 1, and was there at the start of Capital Radio, the UK’s most successful commercial station.

He described himself, slightly tongue in cheek, as β€œthe wireless wizard”. He worked harder than any of his rivals to produce innovative programmes laced with wacky jingles, crazy sound effects and zany comedy moments. But he pushed the barriers, was always getting into trouble with management, and was regularly fired.

The crunch came in July 1970 when he was sacked by Radio 1 after insulting the wife of a Government Minister. He was just 25, at the height of his creativity. The ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ had a radio monopoly and there was nowhere else to go. The only other outlet was the corporation’s Local Radio stations. But they didn’t play many records, had little money, and had few listeners, as they could only be heard on VHF (now FM) when most people had medium wave sets. But a chance phone call from ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Bristol led to the corporation’s β€œbad boy” returning to the airwaves on June 12, 1971.

The station manager David Waine, who was the same age as Kenny, took a gamble against the advice of Broadcasting House bosses, hiring him as a stand-in for an hour-long Saturday morning show. Everett got Β£50 for a month’s work, with the proviso that the programmes were pre-recorded so they could be checked before they went on air just in case the enfant terrible said something naughty.

The appointment was deemed such a success that by the end of the year Kenny was doing similar shows for five other ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Local Radio stations. He also did a Christmas special for Radio Bristol on Boxing Day 1971, the day after his 27th birthday. You can now hear it for the first time since it was originally broadcast 53 years ago.

The programme closes with Kenny making a whimsical appeal to ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ management to put him back on national radio, describing himself as a β€œpoor soul on the dole” living in a β€œrat-infested mansion” with β€œno food in the fridge and no dough in the bank”.

It includes music by the Beach Boys, Mama Cass, Peter Noone, Colin Blunstone, John Barry, Martha Reeves and The Vandellas, The Jimmie Haskell Orchestra, Gilbert O’Sullivan, The Faces, Cat Stevens, Tony Christie, Mike Vickers, Matt Munro, Rich Fever and Rossini.

Kenny returned for another Radio Bristol series in 1972 before eventually being let back on air by Radio 1 the following year. Shortly afterwards he joined Capital Radio at the launch of Independent Local Radio before beginning a successful television career in 1978. But Kenny remained true to his radio roots and was still broadcasting on Capital Gold shortly before his death from AIDS in 1995. He was just 50.

So did these ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Local Radio programmes help rehabilitate Kenny Everett’s career? Judge for yourself.

The second of three shows Kenny made for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Bristol first broadcast on 26th December 1971.

*** Part of ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 Extra's celebration of Kenny Everett who was born 80 years ago on Christmas Day, 1944.

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