Listen With Mother (1950-82)

with Ann Driver, George Dixon,
Daphne Oxenford, Dorothy Smith, Eileen Browne (left), Catherine Edwards and Julia Lang (right).
Few radio memories come as misty-eyed as this: no other signature tune evokes the warmth and tenderness of childhood security as powerfully as the Berceuse from Faure's Dolly Suite.
The time is a quarter to two. This is the BBC Home Service for mothers and children at home. Are you ready for the music? When it stops, Catherine Edwards will be here to speak to you. Ding-de-dong. Ding-de-dong, Ding, Ding! Are you sitting comfortably? Then I'll begin!
Listen With Mother Introduction
So began Listen with Mother every afternoon at 1:45pm (just before Woman's Hour), a fifteen minute programme of stories, songs and nursery rhymes for children under five. The audience was over one million at its peak.

George Dixon
With nursery rhymes set to music by Ann Driver and sung by George Dixon, a senior schools producer with a long and distinguished career in broadcasting, and Eileen Browne, the songs were often unaccompanied. There cannot be many children who did not march up and down the hill with "The Grand Old Duke of York".
Meanwhile "Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary" was growing neat rows of silver bells and cockleshells in her garden, while the King of Spain's Daughter regularly visited a "Little Nut Tree" which only grew a silver nutmeg and a golden pear. Humpty Dumpty and "Ride a Cock Horse to Banbury Cross" were other favourites.
Then, helping us to count was "One, two. . . . three, four, five; Once I caught a fish alive; six, seven. . . . eight, nine, ten; Then I let it go again" and the rhyme "Ding, Dong, Dell, Pussy's in the Well" all turned out for the best once we had found out who put her in and who pulled her out! So "Polly Put the Kettle On, We'll All Have Tea!
Also "Hob Shoe Hob"
Another
particularly memorable song, which featured at least once a week,
ended:
This is the way the old men ride, Hobble-dee Hobble-dee
Hobble-dee and down into a ditch!
It is quite likely that this latter song was the origin of the following anecdote sent in by George Dixon's son, Paul: "My father told us one story about the programme. A listener had called in with the complaint that her child had been terrified by the sound of galloping horses. It was explained to her that the sound effect was made with the traditional half coconut shells, and how she could make the sound herself to show the child. They would not run that song again until she let them know that the child understood, which she did. Presumably there was one satisfied customer!"

The stories were read by Daphne Oxenford, Dorothy Smith and Julia Lang. The storytellers wrote several of their own tales and Dorothy Smith's readings of the My Naughty Little Sister stories written by the late Dorothy Edwards are still remembered with affection.
![]() Daphne Oxenford |
![]() Dorothy Smith |
Daphne Oxenford and Dorothy Smith were very long-standing members of the team and read the stories on the programme for 21 and 26 years respectively.
Audrey Hindley [Allen] wrote several stories for Listen With Mother in the 1960's I created stories for my two children (Mark
was the younger). The children asked me to repeat the
stories and they are the best critics!
so
Listen With Mother
Mark and his
Teddy Bears
Some of these stories were also broadcast on BBC Welsh Service . |
It wasn't only children who listened, but seamen on board ship were also regular listeners, as were the occupants of Buckingham Palace.
Eileen
Browne (top) an early presenter of "Listen
With Mother" later moved on to "Watch With Mother" and provided the voice of
"Jenny" in "The Woodentops". Eileen's nephew, Geoffrey
Browne remembers:
"As a child, I visited Broadcasting House to watch them make
the programme with a wonderful new invention: the tape recorder.
This incredible machine enabled them to record all the programmes
for the whole week in one go, without having to do it live every
weekday. The music and stories were on 78 rpm records with a
yellow crayon mark that showed where to put the needle down.
Eileen was of course wearing a tweed suit and sat in front of the
famous BBC 'lollypop microphone'. If I remember rightly, women
were not allowed to wear trousers in the BBC until 1971."
The audience numbers diminished over the years with the advent of Watch With Mother and the programme finally ended in 1982.
If
you have any comments, questions or further information of
interest, please e-mail:
radiodays@whirligig-tv.co.uk