Band Waggon

Band Waggon
GenreComedy radio
Full-service radio
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Language(s)English
Home stationBBC National Programme BBC Home Service
TV adaptationsLiving It Up
StarringArthur Askey
Richard "Stinker" Murdoch
Syd Walker
Diana Clare
Produced byGordon Crier
Harry S. Pepper
Original release1938 (1938) –
1940 (1941)

Band Waggon was a comedy radio show broadcast by the BBC from 1938 to 1940. The first series featured Arthur Askey and Richard "Stinker" Murdoch. In the second series, Askey and Murdoch were joined by Syd Walker, and the third series added Diana Clare for two episodes. Band Waggon was co-produced by Gordon Crier and Harry S. Pepper and was the first comedy show to be designed for radio.[1][2]

Together with Monday Night at Seven, it established the practice of broadcasting a regular comedy and music programme at the same time each week. The show ended in 1940, allowing Askey to pursue a career in film and Murdoch to join the Royal Air Force. A stage show of the same name and starring Askey and Murdoch was toured by Jack Hylton beginning in November 1938.[3] The show, with the addition of Tommy Trinder, was playing at the London Palladium when the Second World War broke out.[4] The following year, another version - with Norman Evans in place of Trinder - played at the Blackpool Opera House. An Audiobook CD, featuring extracts from the Band Waggon radio show along with other comedy recordings by Askey and Murdoch, was issued in 2006.

  1. ^ Peter Hay, Canned Laughter: The Best Stories from Radio and Television (1992), p. 42
  2. ^ Bandwaggon at britishcomedy.org.uk, accessed 30 July 2016
  3. ^ "Reynolds's Newspaper". Reynolds's Newspaper: 16. 9 October 1938.
  4. ^ "Production of Band Waggon | Theatricalia". theatricalia.com.