Jasmine Bligh
Jasmine Lydia Bligh (20 May 1913 – 21 July 1991) was one of the first three BBC Television Service presenters in the 1930s,[1] along with Leslie Mitchell and Elizabeth Cowell, providing continuity announcements and introducing programmes in-vision.
Pre war career
Intending to start her career as an actress, Bligh met with some opposition from her mother. However, she became a Charlot showgirl at the Cambridge Theatre, London, aged 17. Five years later, Bligh, struggling as an actress, answered a BBC advertisement for female television 'hostess-announcers' - unmarried and without red hair. Both Bligh and Elizabeth Cowell were chosen for the jobs out of 1,122 applicants from the British Empire. Along with Leslie Mitchell, they were seen during test transmissions from Alexandra Palace in 1935.
Post war career
She rejoined the service in 1946 after its Second World War hiatus and was the first person to appear when broadcasting was resumed, greeting viewers with the words:
"Good afternoon everybody. How are you? Do you remember me, Jasmine Bligh?"
After twenty minutes she introduced the Mickey Mouse cartoon Mickey's Gala Premiere (1933), which had been the last programme shown before the beginning of the Second World War in September 1939.[2]
Her theatrical experience, however, proved very useful as she had to learn 400 words a day to speak directly to the camera. The press, at that time, described Bligh and Cowell as 'Twin Paragons', and Bligh continued when the BBC began its regular television service a year later. She became a personality in her own right, amongst other daring escapades, she was seen being given a fireman's lift and hurtling about in a motorcycle sidecar.
Later she presented the BBC's Television for Deaf Children in the 1950s. She continued to work in television up until the 1970s, when she was a presenter of Good Afternoon for Thames Television.
Personal life
Bligh was born in London, England and was the niece of Esme Ivo Bligh, the 9th Earl of Darnley,[3] and also said by her biography at the National Portrait Gallery to be a descendant of Captain William Bligh, the commander famously usurped in the Mutiny on the Bounty in the 18th century.
She married first in 1940, Lt-Col Sir John Paley Johnson, 6th Bt, with whom she had a daughter, Sarah; they divorced in 1947. She married second in 1948, Frank Hugh Shirley Fox; they divorced in 1953. She later married a third time, to broadcaster, Howard Marshall. His illness in 1967 led her to look for a new way of earning money. She set up a second-hand clothes shop called "Bargain" and sold off her wealthy friends' clothes that they no longer required. Howard Marshall died in 1973. In 1981, a stroke left Bligh with speech difficulty. She died ten years later, aged 78.
References
- ↑ "Pictures of Bligh at the TV announcers website". Retrieved 25 January 2009.
- ↑ Baird: The Birth of Television, The edit that rewrote history - Transdiffusion.org via Wayback Machine
- ↑ Burke’s Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley, Burke’s Peerage, Crans, Switzerland, 1999, p. 767. Jasmine Bligh was granddaughter of Ivo Bligh, 8th Earl of Darnley; her father was Noel Gervase Bligh, brother of the 9th Earl, and her mother was Mary Jack Frost, daughter of Captain George Alfred Frost