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[[Category:BBC radio programmes]]
[[Category:BBC_radio_programmes]]
[[Category:BBC radio soap operas]]
[[Category:British_radio_soap_operas]]

Revision as of 20:56, 23 July 2007

Front Line Family was a British radio soap opera initially broadcast on the BBC's North American Service. It ran from 1941 until 1948 when it was replaced by Mrs Dale's Diary.

Front Line Family was devised as a tool in the propaganda effort to help the USA join Britain in the Second World War[1]. The BBC's radio drama department, under the influence of Val Gielgud had long resisted the production of serial dramas, or soaps, as Gielgud saw them as excessively populist and part of the Americanisation of British culture.

However, the demands of the war effort and the involvement of personnel from the BBC's Canadian production wing saw Front Line Family become a successful BBC programme and the first of its kind.

The storylines of the show depicted the trials and tribulations of a British family, the Robinsons, living through the war. This featured plot lines about rationing, family members missing in action and the Blitz.[2]

The show was moved to the Light Programme in 1946 and continued to run until 1948.

  1. ^ http://mcs.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/29/1/5 Abstract of "Front Line Family: ‘Women's culture’ comes to the BBC" by Michele Hilmes. Accessed on 23-07-07
  2. ^ http://www.irdp.co.uk/britrad3.htm "British Radio Drama - A Cultural Case History" by Tim Crook. Accessed on 23-07-07