‘A Friend At Your Bedside’ Alan Hardy was radio host for over 50 years

Tributes have been paid following the death of Alan Hardy; the co-founder of West Middlesex Hospital’s well-known hospital radio station Radio West Middlesex.
          Alan, who was 71 and lived in Whitton, created the station  at the hospital in Isleworth together with his life-long friend Chris Payne in  1967, a year after they met as apprentices studying electronics at the EMI  factory in Hayes.
      
For more than 50 years, amid an ever-changing line-up of volunteer presenters, Alan remained a constant presence in the studio – either behind the microphone as the host of his own Saturday morning show Needle Talk, or providing reassuring support to others in his roles as programme controller and chairman.

          
He was also an incredibly familiar and popular figure, both  within and outside the hospital. This was thanks especially to his appearances  at a succession of local events such as the annual Hospital Open Day, St  Margarets Fair in Richmond, and Norwood Green Village Day in Ealing, which  helped to raise the funds necessary to keep the station on the air.
      
Popular shows available for patients to listen to while  staying in the hospital include Jurassic Jukebox, Freetime, and Bollywood Mix,  as well as the staple offering of nightly request shows during which teams of  volunteers pay a visit to the wards to chat with them and collect their  favourite songs and dedications.
      
Interspersed among the shows and music, listeners can also  enjoy a number of informative segments such as Friday night special featuring  interviews with well-known celebrities and local figures, as well as promos for  local charities, services and upcoming events.
      
From its inception to the present day Alan’s ethos for Radio  West Mid (as the station is more locally known) has been to entertain and  inform patients, as well as comfort them during times of struggle – living up  to its slogan of: ‘A Friend At Your Bedside’.
      
With not even a studio to its name when it began, Alan  started off recording shows on tape, after work in his bedroom, which he did  for the first five years of its existence.
      
The first studio, built in the mid-1970s, saw the station’s gradual expansion and enabled more programmes to be broadcast live, before finally achieving 24-hour broadcast ability in 2003. The installation of Hospicom, a bedside entertainment system, also widened its audience reach, as did the introduction of online streaming in recent years.
 
          
Alan was undoubtedly the most enthusiastic advocate of the  station’s mission statement and went to great lengths to instil the same belief  in all of the presenters and volunteers he worked with and mentored.
      
Noteable among their number is comedian and actor Sanjeev  Bhaskar, who on learning of Alan’s death, offered the following thoughts on a  tribute site set up in his memory: ”Very  sad news indeed. I have always retained such fond memories of volunteering at  Radio West Mid and of Alan’s generosity towards me and giving me the  opportunity to present a show.
  
“His counsel was  always wise and despatched with great humour. I’d always harboured a  desire to pop back in and present a show and if it ever happens it will be  bittersweet with Alan’s absence.”
          
A lover of music,  especially artists including The Beach Boys and Marvin Gaye, Alan was also a  great supporter of his local church, as well as a keen traveller who  particularly enjoyed roaming across the United States of America for weeks at a  time, visiting sites of musical and historical significance.
          
Tuesday night  request show host Chris Longhurst, who has been a member of the station for  five years, summed up how much Alan’s death has affected everyone associated  with the team both past and present.
          
He said: “Alan had  been unwell for some time, but his loss still came as a huge shock to us all. It’s  not an exaggeration to say that he was the glue which held Radio West Middlesex  together and epitomised all that is good about hospital radio.
  
“The ongoing  Coronavirus crisis has meant we have been unable to give him the memorial he  fully deserves, but we most certainly will when the appropriate time comes.  Meanwhile we are continuing to programme our system to keep the music playing  for patients as we know that is what he would have wanted.
  
“It was a huge  honour to have known Alan and to have benefitted from his knowledge and support  and I know this is a feeling which is shared by all my colleagues. His legacy  is very much safe in our collective hands.”
          
Alan died  following a short illness on March 20 and is survived by his brother David. His  funeral took place at South West Middlesex Crematorium on April 3.
          
An online charity donations page in aid of Cancer  Research UK has been created in Alan's memory and his family asks that any  tributes are in the form of donations on this site If you would like to donate  please visit this website and enter Alan's name to gain  access to his particular donation page.
          
A three page tribute  to Alan has also been set up by Chris Payne and his wife Mary. It is available  to view here https://www.radiolondon.co.uk/kneesflashes/happenings/2012julyon/alantributes/alanobit.html
          
For more information about Radio West Mid – as well as to listen live - visit http://radiowestmiddlesex.org.uk/
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April 29, 2020