BBC Publicity picture handout from 1976: Annie Nightingale
Annie Nightingale became Radio 1’s first female presenter and became its longest-serving host having joined the station in 1970 and remained the only woman on the line-up for 12 years.
Born Annie Avril Nightingale on the 1st of April 1940 in Osterley, Middlesex, the daughter of Celia and Basil Nightingale. She ventured into the world of media via The Polytechnic of Central London’s School of Journalism getting her break as a Journalist in Brighton with local newspaper the Brighton and Hove Gazette. In the sixties it wasn’t the hip sounds of pirate radio or Radio 1 but the thrashing noise of typewriters as Annie filed reports later moving to television, both as a reporter for BBC’s Southampton and Bristol based news programme South Today, and light entertainment and music programmes for the Southern Television, the ITV station for the south.
Nightingale moved up in the print world by joining the Brighton Evening Argus, as a general reporter, feature writer, and diarist. The latter involved interviews with Sean Connery in his first James Bond role and Peter Sellers on location. She became the newspaper’s first pop music columnist. It is however her work with BBC Radio 1 from 1970 until last year that she will be best remembered showcasing music that possibly wouldn’t otherwise be heard on the Beeb. Annie was also the first female presenter for BBC Two music series The Old Grey Whistle Test where she stayed for eleven years.
BBC Publicity picture handout from 1970: Annie Nightingale
Aled Haydn Jones, Head of BBC Radio 1:
“All of us at Radio 1 are devastated to lose Annie, our thoughts are with her family and friends. Annie was a world class DJ, broadcaster and journalist, and throughout her entire career was a champion of new music and new artists. She was the first female DJ on Radio 1 and over her 50 years on the station was a pioneer for women in the industry and in dance music. We have lost a broadcasting legend and, thanks to Annie, things will never be the same.”
Nightingale specialised in championing new and underground music, she also led the movement and encouraged other women to become DJs and broadcasters. She was BBC Radio 1’s longest-serving broadcaster and held the Guinness World Record for the longest career as a female radio presenter. Annie also had stints on BBC Radio 2 and was part of the ‘Radio 1 Pop Up Station’ to mark its 50th anniversary. The family note in their statement that a celebration of Annie’s life would take place at a memorial service in the spring.
Lorna Clarke, BBC Director of Music:
“She was a fierce pioneer for new music and supporting female talent and will be hugely missed by her many supporters from around the world.”