Isa Donald Benzie (4 December 1902 – 25 June 1988) was a British radio broadcaster. She played a key role in the launch of Today on BBC Radio 4, and served as its first senior producer.[1]
Isa Benzie | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 25 June 1988 Hastings, England, United Kingdom | (aged 85)
Nationality | British |
Employer | BBC Radio |
Early life and education
editBenzie was born in 1902 in Glasgow.
She took the equivalent of a degree in German at Lady Margaret Hall in Oxford. She was not given a degree because she was a woman.
Career
editBenzie became a secretary at the BBC in 1927, just two years after it first had de facto national coverage in Britain. During the World War I, her father, Lt. Colonel Robert Marr Benzie, served in the same army division as John Reith who would become the managing director of the BBC, and had written to Reith asking for a position for his daughter. Isa Benzie was paid £150 per year as assistant to the head of the Foreign Liaison department, Major CF Atkinson.[2] Benzie gathered material for talks given by Vernon Bartlett on his programme The Way of the World.
In 1932, Atkinson resigned and Benzie was given his role. Her salary increased to £500 a year but this was much less than her former boss had been paid. Benzie's career continued and her salary was increased by £100 every year with a ceiling set at £1,250 per year.[3]
By 1933, Benzie was head of the foreign affairs department. She oversaw relationships with broadcasters worldwide, including for significant events such as the 1936 Summer Olympics and for the Coronation of George VI and Elizabeth.[4][5]
In 1937 she married a BBC producer, Royston Morley. They had one child, a daughter.[1] She had to leave the BBC because of a rule against women being married to another of their employees.[1] Another source says that she opted to leave and her resignation meal was attended by Lord Reith.[3]
The marital rule was relaxed during the war and Benzie returned to the BBC into the Radio Talks department, where she often organised talks on aspects of health.[4]
In the 1940s, Benzie produced Donald Winnicott's series "The Ordinary Devoted Mother and Her Baby".[6] Benzie and Janet Quigley "worked with Winnicott to improve his broadcasting style" and shaped the content of the programmes.[6]
Benzie played a key role in October 1957 in the launch of Today on BBC Radio 4, which she named. She edited the programme and was its first senior producer. She took it from a programme for "people on the move"[4] to the important step of having its own named presenter. Quigley and Benzie worked together on the programme and complemented each other's careers. They worked in the same BBC departments, had the same alma mater and witnessed each other's marriages.[1]
Later life, death and legacy
editBenzie retired in 1964 and died in St Leonards in 1988.[1]
The first and only portrait of a woman in Broadcasting House is a painting of Isa Benzie painted by Ronald Dunlop. The portrait was included in a digital project "100 Objects that made the BBC".[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e "Benzie, Isa Donald". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/65410. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ "22 January 1924". Reith Diaries.
- ^ a b Kate Murphy (28 April 2016). Behind the Wireless: A History of Early Women at the BBC. Springer. pp. 175–. ISBN 978-1-137-49173-2.
- ^ a b c d "Isa Benzie Portrait". 100 Objects that made the BBC. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
- ^ Murphy, Kate (July 2016). 'She is known in every European capital': Isa Benzie and the Foreign Department of the BBC, 1927-38. The Radio Conference.
- ^ a b "From Donald Winnicott to the naughty step". Wellcome Collection. Retrieved 12 July 2022.