Skip to Add Tribute Skip to Content
Create a notice
What type of customer are you?
Why create a notice?
Announce the passing
Publish funeral arrangements
Remember a loved one gone before
Raise charitable donations
Share a loved one’s notice
Add unlimited tributes to this everlasting notice
Buy Keepsake
Print
Save

The obituary notice of DUDLEY SAVAGE

National | Published: Online.

(3) Photos & Videos View all
Change notice background image
DUDLEY SAVAGEDudley Savage, MBE, whose death at the age of 88 was announced by the BBC on 25 November, 2008, was a musician and radio host best known for his long-running hospital request show.
As Prescribed was broadcast on BBC Radio from the ABC's Royal Cinema in Plymouth, where Mr Savage began his career as a professional organist. He presented and played for As Prescribed, a programme of requested organ music for those ill in hospital or at home which ran from 1948 to 1979.
Such was the popularity of the show that when the BBC dropped it from its schedules in 1968, a petition of 43,000 signatures resulted in it returning to the airwaves.
Writer and fellow organist Jonathan Mann was among the first to pay tribute to Mr Savage. He said:"The thing that was remarkable was his musicianship. He had an incredibly distinctive style with a particular gift for harmony. He was a first-rate organist and arranger, as cinema organists have to arrange things in their head.
"He not only presented the show for an hour every week, but also played, which I don't think anyone else ever did. He was also incredibly modest. He never made anything of his playing and never regarded himself as a celebrity."
The Cinema Organ Society said: "Dudley was one of the last surviving organists from the great days when cinema organs were to be heard constantly on the wireless."
Mr Savage was born in Gulval, near Penzance in Cornwall. His mother was the organist at the church there and taught him the piano before he too took up the organ.
He became the resident organist at the Royal Cinema in 1938. During the Second World War he interrupted his playing at the Royal to serve with the army in India.
He died at a nursing home near Liskeard. His wife, Doreen, died in 2003.
Keep me informed of updates
Add a tribute for
2147 visitors
|
Published: 25/11/2008
Want to celebrate a loved one's life?
Create your own ever lasting tribute today
8 Tributes added for
Report a tribute
Add your own tribute
Add Tribute
Tribute photo for Dudley Savage
Dudley Savage at the organ of the Royal / ABC cinema Plymouth
Will Light
29/01/2014
Comment
Tribute photo for Dudley Savage
Dudley Savage
Will Light
29/01/2014
Comment
Tribute photo for Dudley Savage
Dudley Savage
David BOOKER
29/01/2014
Comment

From the age of 11 I used to listen to As Prescribed each Sunday From Plymouth. As a Classical organist alone he was truly brilliant- his stunning Hymn tune arrangements are testimony to that!


Slushy heart tugging arrangements of popular tunes still manage to evoke the 'lump in the throat'. 42 years on Im still totally hooked on the sounds he produced.


I was fortunate to know both Dudley and his lovely wife Doreen over a number of years, and have become custodian of his music collection including his compositions and arrangements.


He once wrote on a CD sleeve.. 'To Bill..whose music is a joy to listen too...would very much like to meet the person who inspired you..one day perhaps?? Dudley.


That to me will always sum up one of the warmest and kindest man i have ever met

William Alvin Moore
04/09/2010
Comment

I met Dudley Savage when he played on the St James Church organ in Jersey, my memory of him playing
(The March of the Bowmen) which I have added to my repetoire

David Marquis
16/12/2008
Comment

Dudley was a "perfectionist" on the organ. which was his life. A typical English gentleman, he was always keen to involve younger musicians to follow in his footsteps. Apart from his sterling work on radio ( or wireless, as he preferred to call it ), & television, he spent most summers touring both in this country & abroard giving organ performances ( he didn't like the word " recitals ") to ever appreciating audiences in churches as well as theatres, and he was always invited back for repeat performances. It was a privilige to have experienced your enthusiastic "showmanship" Dudley, and may you now entertain on a "higher plain".

David Booker
12/12/2008
Comment

I was fortunate to meet Dudley and his wife later in their lives through his CDs and cassettes he made. I have never meet a couple who were warmer and kinder, and very obviously in love. Dudley was such an unassuming man, and never courted his fame and talent. In fact, he used to say that his OBE stood for "Other Buggers Effort", such was his modesty towards his huge achievements in the world of entertainment.

I will always remember both Dudley and Doreen, and send my deepest sympathies to his family. God bless you both.

Jerry Foale
06/12/2008
Comment

Dudley Savage's voice was a major part in his success. He had a quiet and warm voice which fitted the request programme admirably. His early programmes were 'live' from Plymouth, and one morning when heavy snow lay on the ground, he walked into the theatre from Cornwall so that the programme could go ahead. He will be much missed. I heard him play a house organ recital one evening in Poole and his warm personality shone through the music he played.

Hugh Ashley
05/12/2008
Comment
Next
Holy FAMILY