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HISTORY
The Time of My Life
 
East End of London: 1910s and 1920s
West Yorkshire Mill Towns: 1930s
Belfast: 1930s
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Activities
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Fraserbrugh during World War 2
The D-Day Landings: 1944
Tiger Bay, Cardiff: 1950s
Rural Dorset after World War 2
Migration to Bradford: 1960s
Liverpool: 1960s and 1970s
The Protest Generation in London: 1970s
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Belfast: 1930s

Programme Outline

Summary

Sheila Hughes and Albert Haslett tell Clare Crockett about Ireland in the 1930s and the war years, focusing on leisure pursuits.

Sheila Hughes was born in 1928 and Albert Haslett was born in 1926. They both talk about growing up in and around Belfast. Sheila comes from a ‘theatre family’, and her experiences of growing up are far from typical. Albert describes the entertainment that poor children enjoyed.

Sheila’s story

Sheila was born into the theatre: her father was the manager of the Empire theatre in Belfast. She first performed on stage at the age of 12 in a show called Goody Two Shoes. By the age of 15, she was a dancer. During the Second World War, her parents sent her to tour with a company in the Irish Republic, a neutral country, so that she would be safe. Belfast was bombed heavily during the war because of its shipyards.

Sheila would regularly play to packed houses. The theatre was then the main form of entertainment. Sheila retired from the theatre in 1951.

The Empire theatre, where Sheila worked, has now been pulled down — a sign the impact of television on the entertainment industry.

Sheila said that when she was growing up, teenagers were under strict parental control. When Sheila performed for the US troops during the war, she and the other dancers were closely chaperoned. (A chaperone is an older person who accompanies young people at a social gathering to ensure proper behaviour.)

Albert’s story

Albert was born in a two-up-two-down house on the Shankhill Road. He described the period as the ‘Hungry 30s’: there were high levels of unemployment and many people were very poor. His mother and father, five brothers and four sisters shared two bedrooms. He remembers a childhood with very little money for sweets or toys. Albert describes the games he played in the street during the 1930s. He played with cigarette cards, a ‘gaitor’ (chariot) made from junk found in the street, and a ‘piggy’ (carefully shaped pieces of wood) which was hit with a stick.