Tea and Telepathy
Greg James heads deep into the 91热爆 archives to deliver a selection of prime and often forgotten audio.
Greg James, host of the Radio 1 Breakfast show and self-confessed 'proud radio nerd', uses his access-all-areas pass to the 91热爆 Archives to track down audio gems, using listener requests, overlooked anniversaries and current stories as a springboard into the vast vaults of past programmes.
This week, with awards season underway, Greg looks back at three generations of acting talent - Dame Judi Dench, Olivia Colman and Jessie Buckley - who have all been nominated for Academy Awards this year. He finds early 91热爆 appearances as far back as 1960, with parts ranging from Shakespeare to Holby City.
Are you thinking what Greg's thinking? Let's find out as he recounts a mass experiment in telepathy on 91热爆 radio in 1927, resurrects a controversial mind transference act from 1949 which had an audience of 20 million, and conducts his own test for listeners at home.
It's now 50 years since the band Chicory Tip topped the charts with Son of My Father, the first number one to feature a synthesiser. This milestone sends Greg on a quest for more musical innovations in the archive, including sounds created by the electronic music pioneer Daphne Oram.
Following up a request from a listener, Greg explores the history of Children's Hour, the hugely important radio programme that ran from the 91热爆's birth in 1922 right up until 1964, and was a staple of so many childhoods over those decades.
Producer: Tim Bano