D-Day: BBC to
mark 70th anniversary
The 70th anniversary of the 1944 D-Day landings is to
be marked by a series of programmes on BBC TV and radio.
Chris Evans will broadcast his Radio 2 breakfast show live
from the Normandy beaches on 6 June, while Huw Edwards will present the
corporation's coverage of the day's commemoration ceremonies.
A service
of remembrance will also be broadcast live from Bayeux Cemetery. Sophie Raworth
will present four BBC One programmes about the event in the week leading up to
the anniversary. On BBC Two, historian James Holland will take a fresh look at
the wider 77-day campaign in one-off documentary Normandy 44.
Other
offerings on Radio 2 include a Jeremy Vine show broadcast from HMS Belfast and
a Friday Night is Music Night from the Royal Albert Hall. Vine will host the
event with Dermot O'Leary and Louise Minchin, with performances from folk
singer Seth Lakeman and the BBC Concert Orchestra.
Radio 4,
meanwhile, will air D-Day Dames, a documentary about US women war
correspondents working in London in June 1944. The June 6 attack saw more than
156,000 Allied troops storm the beaches of France and marked the beginning of
the end of World War II.
This year's
commemoration ceremonies at Arromanches, France, will be the biggest since the
60th anniversary of D-Day in 2004. "We all owe so much to the brave
servicemen and women who took part in the D-Day campaign," said Danny
Cohen, director of BBC Television. "It is a privilege to commemorate and
mark this incredibly important anniversary with a range of programming across
BBC TV, radio and online."
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