ABSTRACT

Elsie had acquired some small experience of broadcasting before she was employed by the British Broadcasting Corporation. In August 1945, she had been invited to give six brief talks in the popular wireless programme Lift Up Your Hearts which had been on the air since 1939. These talks, of four to four and a half minutes each (650-700 words), went out in the week October 22-27 from 7.55 to 8 am. In preparation for the broadcast, Elsie had been advised to put her thoughts into simple words, avoiding traditional phrases of Christian piety (that is churchy language), but encapsulating ‘some truth of the Gospel’. She clearly acquitted herself well for she was later congratulated for these ‘really excellent broadcasts’ by Kenneth Grayston, the assistant head of religious broadcasting (1944-1949) and a Methodist minister. Three years later, in November 1948, Elsie took part in a discussion on ‘Women as Ordained Clergy’, to be transmitted to Sweden.1 Therefore this brief taste of broadcasting had given her some valuable knowledge of how things were done at the BBC and had whetted her appetite for more.