Dewi Griffiths
Dewi Griffiths transported listeners back to the golden years of entertainment.
Dewi broadcast his hugely popular show 'A String of Pearls' for 25 years on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Wales. In 2014, after a Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ career spanning sixty years, . Dewi did return to the airwaves however for a Christmas Special.
Born in Ton Pentre in the Rhondda Valley in 1931, Dewi's father became the librarian at the Workmen's Hall and Institute; part of the building was the family home. The Institute also provided the village with a cinema, meaning Dewi grew up seeing almost every film that came out of Hollywood and the British Film Studios throughout the 1930s and 40s - and was very much influenced by the musicals of those years.
The family wireless was hardly ever switched off and a day at home was never without the sound of the Dance Bands on the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ. With a piano in the living room on which his mother would play the popular songs of the time, he grew up with a wide knowledge of the songs and singers of what he refers to as 'The Golden Age of Entertainment'. During Dewi's three years with the Royal Air Force he became a member of a small jazz group and with his imitations of famous Hollywood musical stars he became the opening act of The RAF Revue Show. He also formed and skippered the Rugby XV at RAF Luneburg.
Dewi joined the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ in May 1954 as a Probationary Technical Assistant with The Welsh Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Service in the control room and studio centre at Park Place, Cardiff, making full use of his work as a Radar Technician during his RAF days. He transfered to television in 1956 at the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ TV building at Baynton House, Llandaff, the site of today's Broadcasting House. Along the way he was a Vision Engineer, a Cameraman, a Sound Supervisor, balancing the microphones for outside broadcasts and the choirs and Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Orchestra in the studio.
In 1961 Dewi became an OB Stage Manager with Peter Dimmock's Outside Broadcast production team in London, returning at the end of 1962 to join the legendary Welsh Outside Half, Cliff Morgan, the newly appointed Sports Organiser and Tom Davies, the radio producer, as Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Wales formed its very own Sports Department. Over the next 30 years Dewi directed the cameras at every rugby match played at Cardiff Arms Park, his first being Wales v England in 1963, live into Grandstand, with three cameras, no action replay and no zoom lenses. Dewi has particularly fond memories of The 'Golden Years' of the 1970s and the famous 1973 Baabaas defeat of The All Blacks.
Dewi continued to work on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Network Sports coverage during these years, covering Horse Racing, Boxing, Rugby League, Golf, Cricket, Wimbledon Tennis Championships, the Olympic Games, and Lions Rugby Tours. Among his Wimbledon Final matches were the win by Australian John Newcombe and Australia's Yvonne Goolagong beating Billy Jean Moffat. In July 1967, Dewi's coverage of the quarter-final match between Britain's Roger Taylor, and South Africa's Cliff Drysdale launched the Colour Television Service of the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ.
But Dewi never forgot his early days in the Rhondda with those stars of radio and Hollywood providing constant entertainment for his family, community and of course, the whole nation.
It was all before television arrived and those wonderful memories were to be the key to Dewi's twilight career as a Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio Wales Disc Jockey, introducing original recordings of the songs and stars of yesteryear as presenter of the hugely popular 'A String of Pearls', which he broadcast every Sunday morning on Radio Wales. Thanks to the international appeal of the show, Dewi would receive fan mail from all over the world. It would also not be uncommon for messages to come through from couples who have been married for 50 or 60 years, or more, hearing a song that was part of their early romantic life together.
A String of Pearls was all about musical memories - thanks for listening!