- Muriel Young
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Muriel Young (19 June 1923 Bishop Middleham[1] near Sedgefield, County Durham – 24 March 2001)[1] was a British television continuity announcer, presenter and producer[2].
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Early life
As a child, she lived with her family in the gatehouse of Elmwood, Hartburn, County Durham, near Stockton on Tees. Her father, Wilfred Young, was chauffeur to Col. Kitching (previously being Col. Kitching's batman) who lived at Elmwood for many years after retiring from the army in 1939.
Early career
Young worked briefly as a librarian on leaving school and attended art college, before deciding to embark on a career as an actress. She joined a repertory theatre in Henley-on-Thames, where her uncle was directing. She subsequently performed at The Gateway Theatre, London, and the Theatre Royal in Chatham. Trying to get into the movie industry, Young did some photographic modelling for advertising agencies, including promoting products such as toothpaste, which paid her enough money until she became an actress. She also studied to be a dental nurse and used her substantial artistic talents to paint glassware.
Starting out as an actress, she starred with Rex Harrison and Kay Kendall in The Constant Husband and was also in The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan (1953). She also obtained parts in the movie The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan, acting in a segment featuring the Mikado.
Television
In 1955, as the first ITV company Associated-Rediffusion was gearing up to launch, she intended to attend an actors' audition at the company, but mistakenly went to an announcers' audition instead. Nevertheless, Young was instantly hired and announced for A-R on 22 September 1955, the opening night of commercial television in the UK. Young worked as a presenter and interviewer for regional programmes on Granada Television and Southern Television, and as a disc jockey on Radio Luxembourg. She was cast, alongside the actor Peter Sellers in the movie I'm All Right Jack as an announcer, without the director knowing that it was in fact her real-life job. However, her career could have easily taken a different route. Just before joining ITV, she had been on stage touring with Eamonn Andrews, in a game show called Double or Drop. Shortly after signing her ITV contract, he told her that he had sold the idea to the BBC. It was later used as part of the children's show Crackerjack![3].
She was probably most famous for her work as a presenter of children's programmes for Associated-Rediffusion and Rediffusion London between 1959 and 1968, working alongside Wally Whyton and Bert Weedon, and featuring the puppet characters Pussy Cat Willum, Ollie Beak and Fred Barker. The popular format thus created lasted for many years, under various titles including Lucky Dip, Tuesday Rendezvous, Five O'Clock Club, Ollie and Fred's Five O'Clock Club and Five O'Clock Funfair.
In the late 1960s and 1970s, Muriel Young became a staff producer of pop programmes for Granada Television, with such shows as Lift Off with Ayshea, Get It Together, the Bay City Rollers series Shang-a-Lang, The Arrows Show and Marc, starring Marc Bolan. She also devised Clapperboard, presented by Chris Kelly, Granada's film magazine show for children. Young was also an occasional panellist on the ATV talent show New Faces.
Changing direction again in the mid 1980s, Young made two series of Ladybirds, a Channel 4 programme from Mike Mansfield's independent company, in which she interviewed female singers including Barbara Dickson, Elaine Paige and Kiki Dee. She even went to America to speak to Rita Coolidge and Jane Birkin about their success in the entertainment industry.
Personal life
In 1986, Young left her successful career in television and moved back to county Durham, where she lived in part of Stanhope Castle, with her husband Cyril Coke - a television drama director, whom she had married in 1954. Coke was the son of the film actor Edward Rigby and the novelist Phyllis Austin. The couple had met when he was casting director for the film The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan. He died in 1993.
One of her great interests was oil painting and some of her works, mainly landscapes, were shown in local exhibitions, as well as Liberty's in London.
Many references give her birth year as 1928, she was actually born in 1923.
References
- ^ a b Hayward, Anthony (26 March 2001). "Muriel Young (obituary)". The Independent (London). http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/muriel-young-728961.html.
- ^ "Pictures of Muriel Young at the TV announcers website". http://tvannouncers.thetvroomplus.com/images.php?id=346. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
- ^ TV Heroes website accessed 18 February 2010
External links
Categories:- British radio people
- British television presenters
- British television producers
- Radio and television announcers
- 1923 births
- 2001 deaths
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