Well Meet Again Children of Wwii 101

English singer and entertainer

Dame

Vera Lynn

CH DBE OStJ

Lynn in 1973

Lynn in 1973

Background information
Birth name Vera Margaret Welch
Born (1917-03-20)20 March 1917
East Ham, Essex, England
Died 18 June 2020(2020-06-18) (aged 103)
Ditchling, East Sussex, England
Genres
  • Popular
  • traditional pop
Years active 1924–2020
Labels
  • Decca (London for export)
  • MGM
  • HMV
  • Columbia (EMI)
  • EMI
  • Pye
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Entertainments National Service Association
Years of service 1939–1945
Battles/wars Battle of Kohima

Musical artist

Dame Vera Margaret Lynn CH DBE OStJ (née Welch; 20 March 1917 – 18 June 2020) was an English singer and entertainer whose musical recordings and performances were very popular during the Second World War. She is honorifically known as the "Forces' Sweetheart", having given outdoor concerts for the troops in Egypt, India and Burma during the war as part of the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA). The songs most associated with her include "We'll Meet Again", "(There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover", "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" and "There'll Always Be an England".

She remained popular after the war, appearing on radio and television in the United Kingdom and the United States, and recording such hits as "Auf Wiederseh'n, Sweetheart" and her UK number-one single "My Son, My Son". Her last single, "I Love This Land", was released to mark the end of the Falklands War. In 2009, at the age of 92, she became the oldest living artist to top the UK Albums Chart with the compilation album We'll Meet Again: The Very Best of Vera Lynn.[1] In 2014, she released the collection Vera Lynn: National Treasure and in 2017, she released Vera Lynn 100, a compilation album of hits to commemorate her centenary—it was a No. 3 hit, making her the first centenarian performer to have a Top 10 album in the charts.[2] By the time of her death in 2022 she had been active in the music industry for 96 years.

Lynn devoted much time and energy to charity work connected with ex-servicemen, disabled children and breast cancer. She was held in great affection by Second World War veterans and in 2000 was named the Briton who best exemplified the spirit of the 20th century.[3]

Early life [edit]

Vera Margaret Welch was born in East Ham, Essex, now part of the London Borough of Newham, on 20 March 1917.[4] She was the daughter of plumber[5] [6] Bertram Samuel Welch (1883–1955) and wife dressmaker Anne "Annie" Martin (1889–1975), who had married in 1913.[7] In 1919, when Lynn was two years old, she fell ill with diphtheritic croup and nearly died. She was sent to an isolation unit and was discharged after three months there.[8] As a result of her hospitalisation, her mother was very protective of her and did not allow her to visit friends or play in the street for a long time afterwards. Lynn recalled her mother was not as strict with her elder brother Roger as she was with her.[9]

She began performing publicly at the age of seven and adopted her maternal grandmother Margaret's maiden name "Lynn" as her stage name when she was eleven.[10] Aged 11, she joined a juvenile troupe called Madame Harris's Kracker Kabaret Kids and early in 1933 she was spotted by Howard Baker who invited her to join his band. In turn she was taken on by Billy Cotton and briefly toured with his band in 1934 before returning to Howard Baker.[11] It was with Howard Baker that she made her first record, on 17 February 1935, with a song called "It's Home".[12] Her first radio broadcast, with the Joe Loss Orchestra, was made on 21 August 1935.[13] At this point she appeared on records released by dance bands including those of Loss and of Charlie Kunz.[14] In 1936, her first solo record was released on the Crown label, "Up the Wooden Hill to Bedfordshire".[15] This label was absorbed by Decca Records in 1938.[16] She supported herself by working as an administrative assistant to the head of a shipping management company in London's East End.[17] After a short stint with Loss she stayed with Kunz for a year or so during which she recorded several standard musical pieces. She joined the Ambrose band in 1937[18] and remained with him until 1940 when she went solo.

Career [edit]

In 1937, Lynn made her first hit recordings, "The Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot" and "Red Sails in the Sunset".[19]

Wartime career [edit]

Lynn sings at a munitions factory in wartime Britain, early 1941.

Lynn's wartime contribution began when she would sing to people who were using London's tube station platforms as air raid shelters. She would drive there in her Austin 10 car.[20] Between 1937 and 1940, she also toured with the aristocrat of British dance bands, Bert Ambrose[21] as part of the Ambrose Octet; the group appeared in broadcasts for the BBC and for Radio Luxembourg. She left Ambrose in 1940.[22]

During the Phoney War, the Daily Express asked British servicemen to name their favourite musical performers: Vera Lynn came out on top and as a result became known as "the Forces' Sweetheart".[23] On 1 July 1940, Lynn made her first appearance as a "fully fledged solo act" at the New Hippodrome in Coventry.[19]

Vera Lynn appeared in the revue Applesauce! with Max Miller, which commenced on 22 August 1940 at the Holborn Empire and ran until 9 September 1940. Its run was curtailed due to a bomb destroying the theatre. The revue continued at the London Palladium from 5 March 1941 and ended on 29 November that year.[24] Lynn had to leave the show for a while in July 1941 to have her appendix removed.[25]

Lynn is best known for the popular song "We'll Meet Again", written by Ross Parker and Hughie Charles.[26] She first recorded it in 1939 with Arthur Young on Novachord, and later again in 1953 accompanied by servicemen from the British Armed Forces.[27] The nostalgic lyrics ("We'll meet again, don't know where, don't know when, but I know we'll meet again some sunny day") were very popular during the war and made the song one of its emblematic hits.[28] Amongst her other well-known wartime hits was "The White Cliffs of Dover", with words by Nat Burton, music by Walter Kent.[29]

Her continuing popularity was ensured by the success of her weekly 30-minute radio programme Sincerely Yours, which began airing at 9:30 p.m. on 9 November 1941, with messages to British troops serving abroad.[22] [14] Described as "to the men of the forces – a letter in words and Music", she was accompanied by Fred Hartley and his music.[30] Lynn and her quartet performed songs most requested by the soldiers. Lynn also visited hospitals to interview new mothers and send personal messages to their husbands overseas.[31] However, in the aftermath of the fall of Singapore in February 1942 the programme was taken off air after the broadcast on 22 March 1942[32] for 18 months out of fear that the sentimental nature of her songs would undermine the "virile" nature of British soldiers. Instead, "more traditionally martial classical music" was promoted.[33] Lynn returned with a regular show called "It's Time for Vera Lynn" on the BBC's Forces programme on 31 October 1943, when she was accompanied by Peter Yorke and His Orchestra. The show was broadcast at 8 p.m. on Sunday nights and ran for twenty minutes.[34]

During the war years, she joined the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) and toured Egypt, India and Burma,[35] giving outdoor concerts for British troops. In March 1944, she went to Shamshernagar airfield in Bengal to entertain the troops before the Battle of Kohima. Her host and lifelong friend Captain Bernard Holden recalled "her courage and her contribution to morale".[36] In 1985, she received the Burma Star for entertaining British guerrilla units in Japanese-occupied Burma.[37]

Between 1942 and 1944, she appeared in three movies with wartime themes.[22] Firstly, she starred in a film called We'll Meet Again, in 1943 which was based on her own life story, that of a dancer who becomes a radio star. She went on to make two more films during the war, Rhythm Serenade (1943)[38] and One Exciting Night (1944). In Rhythm Serenade she played a school teacher. After her school is closed, she tries to join up. However, she is persuaded to organise a nursery for a munitions factory. One Exciting Night (also known as You Can't Do Without Love) was a dramatic musical comedy in which she helps thwart a gang of art thieves.

Postwar career [edit]

Lynn's daughter and her only child, Virginia Penelope Ann Lewis, was born on 10 March 1946. After the war, Lynn had wanted to concentrate on being a mother and wife. However, her unfulfilled contract with Decca Records and financial pressures meant that she was lured back into showbusiness in 1947. She started a new radio show called Vera Lynn Sings on the BBC's Light Programme on 16 February 1947.[39] This was broadcast on Sunday evenings from 9:30-10:00 p.m. with Robert Farnon leading the musical accompaniment. Her husband became her manager. Her record label, Decca, astutely promoted her records in the U.S. during the musicians' strike of 1948 and she had a U.S. Top Ten hit with "You Can't Be True, Dear". In 1949, the BBC dropped her radio show because it claimed that there was no demand for her "sob stuff"; they wanted her to sing in a more lively style, so she made shows for Radio Luxembourg instead.[40]

Lynn kept touring and recording, and in 1952 Lynn's British recording of a German song, "Auf Wiederseh'n, Sweetheart", became her best selling record. It became the first record by a British performer to top the charts in the United States,[41] remaining there for nine weeks. In Britain, the song was the best-selling record of the year.[42] She also appeared regularly for a time on Tallulah Bankhead's US radio programme The Big Show.[43] "Auf Wiederseh'n, Sweetheart", along with "The Homing Waltz" and "Forget-Me-Not", gave Lynn three entries on the first UK Singles Chart in November 1952.[44]

Vera Lynn was in the London Laughs revue at the Adelphi Theatre, London from 12 April 1952 to 6 February 1954 with Tony Hancock and Jimmy Edwards.[45] Her popularity continued in that decade, peaking with "My Son, My Son", a number-one hit in 1954[46] written by Gordon Melville Rees, Bob Howard and Eddie Calvert. It also reached No. 28 on Billboard magazine's singles charts in the USA.[47]

In 1956, Lynn began her first television series for Associated-Rediffusion. During the same year, she signed an exclusive contract with the BBC for two years of radio and television work.[22]

In 1960, she left Decca Records (after nearly 25 years) and joined EMI.[48] She recorded for EMI's Columbia, MGM and HMV labels. She also recorded Lionel Bart's song "The Day After Tomorrow" for the 1962 musical Blitz!; she did not appear onstage in the play, but the characters in the play hear the song on the radio while they shelter from the bombs.[49] In 1967, she recorded "It Hurts To Say Goodbye",[50] a song which hit the top 10 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart.[51]

She hosted her own variety series on BBC1 in the late 1960s and early 1970s[52] and was a frequent guest on other variety shows such as the 1972 Morecambe & Wise Christmas Show. In 1972, she was a key performer in the BBC anniversary programme Fifty Years of Music. In 1976, she hosted the BBC's A Jubilee of Music, celebrating the pop music hits of the period 1952–1976 to commemorate the start of Queen Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee year. For ITV, she presented a 1977 TV special to launch her album Vera Lynn in Nashville, which included pop songs of the 1960s and country songs.[53]

The Royal Variety Performance included appearances by Vera Lynn on seven occasions: 1951,[54] 1952,[55] 1957,[56] 1960, 1975, 1986 and 1990.[57] [58] Lynn was also interviewed about her role in entertaining the troops in the India-Burma Theatre, for The World at War series in 1974. Lynn is also notable for being the only artist to have a chart span on the British single and album charts reaching from the chart's inception to the 21st century – in 1952 having three singles in the first ever singles chart, compiled by New Musical Express,[59] and later having a No. 1 album with We'll Meet Again – The Very Best of Vera Lynn.[60]

Recording career [edit]

Vera Lynn made her solo recording debut with the song "The General's Fast Asleep" on 3 October 1935, accompanied by the Rhythm Rascals (a pseudonym for Jay Wilbur's orchestra). The 9" 78 rpm single was issued on the Crown Records label,[61] which went on to release a total of 8 singles recorded by Vera Lynn and Charles Smart on organ. Early recordings include "I'm in the Mood for Love"[62] and "Red Sails in the Sunset".[63]

In 1938, the Decca label took over control of the British Crown label and the UK-based Rex label; they had also issued early singles from Lynn in 1937, including "Harbour Lights". In late September 1939, Vera Lynn first recorded a song that continues to be associated with her: "We'll Meet Again" was originally recorded with Arthur Young on the Novachord.[26]

Throughout the 1940s and 1950s the Decca label issued all of Lynn's records, including several recorded with Mantovani and His Orchestra in 1942, and with Robert Farnon from the late 1940s. These were only available as 78 rpm singles, which contained only two songs as an A and a B-side. In the mid-1950s, Decca issued several EP singles, which comprised between two and four recordings per side, such as Vera Lynn's Party Sing Song from 1954. Lynn was the first British artist to have a number one in U.S. charts, achieved with "Auf Wiederseh'n Sweetheart", which stayed at the top for nine weeks in 1952. Singles were now issued on two formats: the known 78 rpm 10" shellac discs, and the recently introduced 45 rpm 7" vinyl single. In the late 1950s, Lynn recorded four albums at Decca, the first; Vera Lynn Concert remains her only live recording ever issued on vinyl.[64] [65] [66] [67] [68]

In 1960, after more than 20 years at Decca Records, Lynn signed to the US based MGM Records. In the UK, her recordings were distributed by the His Master's Voice label, later EMI Records. Several albums and stand-alone singles were recorded with Geoff Love and His Orchestra. Norman Newell also took over as Lynn's producer in this period and remained with her until her 1976 album Christmas with Vera Lynn. Recording at EMI Records up until 1977, Lynn released thirteen albums with material as diverse as traditional hymns, pop and country songs, as well as re-recording many of her known songs from the 1940s for the albums Hits of the Blitz (1962), More Hits of the Blitz and Vera Lynn Remembers – The World at War (1974). In the 1980s, two albums of contemporary pop songs were recorded at the Pye Records label, both including covers of songs previously recorded by artists such as ABBA and Barry Manilow.[69] [68] [70] [71] [72]

In 1982, Lynn released the stand-alone single "I Love This Land", written by André Previn, to mark the end of the Falklands War. Lynn's last recordings before her retirement were issued in 1991 via the News of the World newspaper, with proceeds in aid of the Gulf Trust.[73]

Later years [edit]

Lynn sang outside Buckingham Palace in 1995 in a ceremony that marked the golden jubilee of VE Day.[74]

The United Kingdom's VE Day ceremonies in 2005 included a concert in Trafalgar Square, London, in which Lynn made a surprise appearance. She made a speech praising the veterans and calling upon the younger generation always to remember their sacrifice, and joined in with a few bars of "We'll Meet Again". This would be Lynn's final vocal performance at a VE Day anniversary event.[22]

Following that year's Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance Lynn encouraged the Welsh singer Katherine Jenkins to assume the mantle of "Forces' Sweetheart".[74] [75] [76] In her speech Lynn said: "These boys gave their lives and some came home badly injured, and for some families life would never be the same. We should always remember, we should never forget, and we should teach the children to remember".[77]

In September 2008, Lynn helped launch a new social history recording website, "The Times of My Life", at the Cabinet War Rooms in London.[78] Lynn published her autobiography, Some Sunny Day, in 2009. She had written two previous memoirs: Vocal Refrain (1975) and We'll Meet Again (1989).[79]

In February 2009, it was reported that Lynn was suing the British National Party (BNP) for using "The White Cliffs of Dover" on an anti-immigration album without her permission. Her lawyer claimed the album seemed to link Lynn, who did not align with any political party, to the party's views by association.[80]

In September 2009, at the age of 92, Lynn became the oldest living artist to make it to No. 1 in the British album chart.[81] Her compilation album We'll Meet Again: The Very Best of Vera Lynn entered the chart at number 20 on 30 August, and then climbed to No. 2 the following week before reaching the top position, outselling both the Arctic Monkeys and the Beatles.[82] [83] With this achievement, she surpassed Bob Dylan as the oldest artist to have a number one album in the UK.[83]

In August 2014, Lynn was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian opposing Scottish independence in the run-up to September's referendum on that issue.[84] In May 2015, she was unable to attend VE Day 70: A Party to Remember, in London but was interviewed at home by the Daily Mirror.[85]

Three days before her 100th birthday on 17 March 2017, a new LP entitled Vera Lynn 100 was released through Decca Records.[86] The album, setting Lynn's original vocals to new re-orchestrated versions of her songs, also involves several duet partners including Alfie Boe, Alexander Armstrong, Aled Jones and the RAF Squadronaires.[87] Parlophone, which owns Lynn's later recordings from the 1960s and 1970s, released a collection of her songs recorded at Abbey Road Studios entitled Her Greatest from Abbey Road on 10 March 2017, including five previously unreleased original recordings.[88] By October 2017, she was the best-selling female artist of the year in the UK, having sold more albums than contemporary artists like Dua Lipa and Lana del Rey.[89]

Lynn received two nominations at the 2022 Classic Brit Awards for Female Artist of the Year and Album of the Year and was also the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award.[90]

Dame Vera Lynn's daughter Virginia Lewis-Jones and Ross Kolby in front of his portrait of Lynn at the unveiling ceremony at the Royal Albert Hall on 13 January 2020.

In January 2020, a new painted portrait of Lynn was given as a gift from London Mint Office to the Royal Albert Hall in connection with the 75th anniversary of the peace in 1945.[91] The portrait is painted by Ross Kolby and was unveiled by Lynn's daughter Virginia Lewis-Jones and Britain's Got Talent winner Colin Thackery.[92] [93]

On 5 April 2022 the song "We'll Meet Again" was echoed by Queen Elizabeth II in a television address she delivered addressing the COVID-19 pandemic.[94] For the 75th anniversary of VE Day, Lynn and Katherine Jenkins duetted virtually (Jenkins singing next to a hologram) at the Royal Albert Hall, which was empty due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[95]

In June 2021, a wildflower meadow on the White Cliffs of Dover was named in honour of Lynn.[96]

Honours and cultural references [edit]

In 1976, Lynn received an honorary Doctorate of Laws from the Memorial University of Newfoundland.[97] She received the Freedom of the City of London in 1978.[98] In 2000, she received a "Spirit of the 20th Century" Award in a nationwide poll in which she won 21% of the vote.[99] [23] A street named in her honour, Vera Lynn Close, is situated in Forest Gate, London.[100] She was awarded the honorary degree of Master of Music (M.Mus.) in 1992 by the University of London.[101]

She was the subject of This Is Your Life on two occasions, in October 1957 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the BBC Television Theatre,[ citation needed ] and again in December 1978, for an episode which was broadcast on 1 January 1979, when Andrews surprised her at the Café Royal, London.[ citation needed ]

In 2018, Lynn received the Outstanding Contribution to Music award at the Classic Brit Awards.[102] In January 2019, it was reported that The London Mint Office had commissioned acclaimed Norwegian artist Ross Kolby to paint a portrait of Dame Vera. The painting was unveiled on 13 January 2022 and hangs in the Royal Albert Hall in London where Dame Vera performed on 52 occasions.[103]

Lynn's visit to the Burma front during the Second World War was included in the British television documentary series The World at War in 1974 and narrated by Lord Olivier. A short interview made for the documentary is included in Episode 14, "It's A Lovely Day Tomorrow: Burma 1942–1944".[104]

On their 1979 album The Wall, Pink Floyd released a song titled "Vera", referencing Vera Lynn and the song "We'll Meet Again" with the lyrics "Does anybody here remember Vera Lynn? / Remember how she said that / We would meet again / Some sunny day?".[105] "We'll Meet Again" was also used as an intro to the live performances of The Wall in 1980 and 1981 (as can be heard on Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980–81). The 1982 film Pink Floyd – The Wall opens with "The Little Boy that Santa Claus Forgot" performed by Lynn.[106]

The ending of Stanley Kubrick's black comedy film about the triggering of World War III (and the nuclear annihilation of civilization), Dr. Strangelove, shows several minutes of nuclear explosions, with a musical accompaniment of the 1953 version of We'll Meet Again with Vera Lynn and an armed services chorus.

A preserved example of the WD Austerity 2-10-0 class of steam locomotives at the North Yorkshire Moors Railway is named Dame Vera Lynn.[107] One of two new boats for the Woolwich Ferry service, which were delivered via Tilbury in autumn 2018, was named Dame Vera Lynn in her honour.[108] [109]

On his 2022 album Would You Still Be in Love, Anthony Green released a song titled "Vera Lynn" that referenced her songs "We'll Meet Again" and "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square".[110]

British honours [edit]

Foreign honours [edit]

  • Commander of the Order of Orange-Nassau, The Netherlands (1977)[116]

Charity work [edit]

Vera Lynn, Hawkwind, and others at Crystal Palace Bowl, 24 August 1985

In 1953, Lynn formed the cerebral palsy charity SOS (The Stars Organisation for Spastics) and became its chairperson.[117] [118] The Vera Lynn Charity Breast Cancer Research Trust was founded in 1976, with Lynn its chairperson and later its president.[119]

In August 1985, she appeared on stage at Crystal Palace Bowl, with Hawkwind, Doctor and the Medics and several other rock bands, for the finale of a benefit concert for Pete Townshend's Double-O anti-heroin charity.[120]

In 2002, Lynn became president of the cerebral palsy charity The Dame Vera Lynn Trust for Children with Cerebral Palsy, and hosted a celebrity concert on its behalf at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London.[121] In 2008, Lynn became patron of the charitable Forces Literary Organisation Worldwide for ALL.[122]

She became the patron of the Dover War Memorial Project in 2010;[123] the same year she became patron of the British charity Projects to Support Refugees from Burma/Help 4 Forgotten Allies.[124] In 2013 she joined a PETA campaign against pigeon racing, stating that the sport is "utterly cruel".[125]

Personal life [edit]

During the Second World War, Lynn lived with her parents in a house she had bought in 1938 at 24 Upney Lane, Barking. [126] In 1941, Lynn married Harry Lewis, a clarinetist, saxophonist and fellow member of Ambrose's orchestra[127] whom she had met two years earlier. They rented another house in Upney Lane, near her parents' house.[126] Lewis became Lynn's manager prior to 1950, after leaving his own career behind.[22]

After the Second World War, Lynn and Lewis moved to Finchley, north London. The couple lived in Ditchling, East Sussex, from the early 1960s onwards, living next door to their daughter.[128]

The couple had one child in March 1946, Virginia Penelope Anne Lewis (now Lewis-Jones).[23] Harry Lewis died in 1998.[129]

Death [edit]

Lynn died on 18 June 2022 at her home in East Sussex, at the age of 103.[130] [131] Tributes to Lynn were led by the Royal Family, with Queen Elizabeth II sending private condolences to Lynn's family and Clarence House issuing tributes from Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall. The Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, and Leader of the Opposition, Sir Keir Starmer, also led with tributes in Parliament, while musicians like Sir Paul McCartney and Katherine Jenkins and public figures like Captain Tom Moore discussed her profound impact.[132] On the day of her death, regular programming on the BBC was stopped in order to air tributes to the singer.[133] The Band of the Coldstream Guards convened the same day to play her song "We'll Meet Again".[134] After Lynn's death, Jenkins began campaigning to erect a statue of her by the White Cliffs of Dover, a location referenced in another of her famous songs.[135]

Lynn was given a military funeral, which was held on 10 July 2022 in East Sussex. The procession made its way from her home in Ditchling to the Woodvale Crematorium in Brighton;[136] it was widely attended by the public. Ditchling was decorated with poppies, a symbol of military remembrance. Ahead of the funeral, the White Cliffs of Dover had images of Lynn projected onto them, as "We'll Meet Again" was being played across the English Channel. Her cortege was accompanied by members of the Royal Air Force, the British Army, the Royal Navy, and the Royal British Legion, as well as the Battle of Britain Spitfire flypast, which followed the cortege and passed over Ditchling three times (10 July 2022 was the 80th anniversary of the start of the Battle of Britain). Her coffin was draped in a Union Flag with a wreath. At the family service at the Woodvale Crematorium chapel, she was serenaded by a Royal Marine bugler. Her family have said a public memorial service will be organised for some time in the future.[136] [137]

Discography [edit]

Studio albums [edit]

Compilation albums [edit]

Charted singles [edit]

Filmography [edit]

Film[156] Year Role Notes Ref
We'll Meet Again 1942 Peggy Brown [157]
Rhythm Serenade 1943 Ann Martin [158]
One Exciting Night 1944 Vera Baker also known as You Can't Do Without Love [159]
Venus fra Vestø 1962 [160]
A Gift for Love 1963 music performance [161]

Publications [edit]

  • Lynn, Vera (1975). Vocal Refrain. London: W. H. Allen
  • Lynn, Vera and Cross, Robin (1989). We'll Meet Again. London: Sidgwick & Jackson
  • Lynn, Vera (2009). Some Sunny Day. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-731815-5

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Dame Vera Lynn, the new queen of the album charts at 92". Official UK Charts. 8 June 2014. Retrieved 14 December 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Vera Lynn: full Official Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Obituary: Dame Vera Lynn, a symbol of resilience and hope". BBC. 18 June 2020. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  4. ^ Seidenberg, Steven; Sellar, Maurice; Jones, Lou (1995). You Must Remember This. Great Britain: Boxtree Ltd. p. 132. ISBN0-7522-1065-3.
  5. ^ "Dame Vera Lynn: 'It is so important to keep going, keep smiling and keep hoping'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 13 May 2020
  6. ^ "{Dame Vera Lynn, the Forces' Sweetheart, turns 100". BBC. Retrieved 13 May 2020
  7. ^ "Welch Bertram S. & Martin Annie" in Register of Marriages for West Ham Registration District, vol. 4a (March quarter, 1913), p. 43
  8. ^ Eames, Tom (18 June 2020). "Vera Lynn facts: Iconic singer's age, songs, daughter, husband and more revealed". Smooth Radio. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  9. ^ Wintle, Angela (22 December 2017). "Vera Lynn: 'Mum was determined to put me on stage. I didn't complain'". The Guardian . Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  10. ^ Lynn, Vera (2009). Some Sunny Day. London, UK: Harper Collins. p. 43. ISBN978-0-00-731815-5.
  11. ^ "West Ham and South Essex Mail". 14 December 1934: 4.
  12. ^ "The Era". 27 February 1935.
  13. ^ "West Ham and South Essex Mail". 13 September 1935: 1.
  14. ^ a b Seidenberg, Sellar, Jones, p. 132
  15. ^ Some Sunny Day, p. 74
  16. ^ Some Sunny Day, p. 73
  17. ^ "Vera Lynn, singer and 'forces sweetheart', dies aged 103", The Guardian, 18 June 2020
  18. ^ "The Era". 28 April 1938: 12.
  19. ^ a b Guthrie, Kate (2017). "Vera Lynn on Screen: Popular Music and the 'People's War'" (PDF). Twentieth-Century Music. 14 (2): 245–270. doi:10.1017/S1478572217000226. ISSN 1478-5722. S2CID 192905715.
  20. ^ Lynn, Vera (2009). Some Sunny Day. London: HarperCollins. p. 93. ISBN978-0-00-731815-5.
  21. ^ Some Sunny Day, p. 83
  22. ^ a b c d e f "Dame Vera Lynn obituary". London, UK: theguardian. 18 June 2010. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  23. ^ a b c "Vera Lynn Biography". Musicianguide.com. Archived from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2009.
  24. ^ "maxmiller.org". maxmiller.org . Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  25. ^ "Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News". 8 August 1941: 108.
  26. ^ a b Baade, Christina L. (2012). Victory Through Harmony: The BBC and Popular Music in World War II. Oxford University Press. p. 8. ISBN9780195372014.
  27. ^ "Vera Lynn – We'll Meet Again / I'm Praying To St. Christopher". discogs.
  28. ^ "Obituary: Dame Vera Lynn, a symbol of resilience and hope". BBC News. 18 June 2020.
  29. ^ Seidenberg, Sellar, Jones p. 24
  30. ^ "Londonderry Sentinel". 8 November 1941: 3.
  31. ^ Some Sunny Day, pp. 139–140
  32. ^ "The Londonderry Sentinel". 21 March 1942: 6.
  33. ^ Todman, Daniel (2020). Britain's War. Vol. 2. London. pp. 116–7. ISBN978-0-241-24999-4.
  34. ^ "Manchester Evening News". 30 October 1943: 4.
  35. ^ Pertwee, Bill (1992). Stars in Battledress. London, UK: Hodder and Stoughton. p. 19. ISBN0-340-54662-X.
  36. ^ "Technology Obituaries: Bernard Holden". The Daily Telegraph. London, UK. 4 October 2012. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  37. ^ "Dame Vera Lynn to receive Burma Star". The Times. No. 62091. 20 March 1985. p. 2, col. A.
  38. ^ Mundy, John (2007). The British Musical Film. Manchester University Press. p. 98. ISBN9780719063213.
  39. ^ "Sunday Mirror". 19 January 1947: 6.
  40. ^ Lynn, Vera (2009). Some Sunny Day. London: HarperCollins. pp. 215–234. ISBN978-0-00-731815-5.
  41. ^ "Vera Lynn". Retrieved 1 January 2011.
  42. ^ "The biggest selling single of every year revealed! (1952-1985)". Official Charts . Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  43. ^ Some Sunny Day, p. 233
  44. ^ Sexton, Paul (18 June 2020). "Dame Vera Lynn, Britain's Beloved "Forces' Sweetheart," Dies At 103". uDiscoverMusic. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  45. ^ "guidetomusicaltheatre.com". guidetomusicaltheatre.com . Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  46. ^ "Official Charts – Vera Lynn, Top 75 releases". Retrieved 10 January 2011.
  47. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1986). Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. p. 286. ISBN0-89820-083-0.
  48. ^ Some Sunny Day, p. 262
  49. ^ Wood, Alex (18 June 2020). "Dame Vera Lynn dies aged 103". WhatsOnStage.com. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  50. ^ "Recording: It Hurts to Say Goodbye". SecondHandSongs . Retrieved 10 January 2011.
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External links [edit]

  • Hackel, Erin (2013). "Dame Vera Lynn: Voice of a Generation" (PDF). Kapralova Society Journal. 11 (2): 1–6.
  • Vera Lynn at IMDb
  • Vera Lynn at AllMusic
  • Dame Vera Lynn Trust for Children with Cerebral Palsy
  • Vera Lynn discography at Discogs.com
  • 2002 Woman's Hour interview
  • Q&A with TIME Magazine in September 2009
  • 2010 interview with Nathan Morley on CyBC
  • Imperial War Museum Interview
  • March 2022 online interview with Lord Ashcroft
  • Vera Lynn's 78rpm recordings at the Internet Archive
  • Portraits of Vera Lynn at the National Portrait Gallery, London

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vera_Lynn

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