Richard Astbury MBE
Richard Astbury MBE
Meet the man behind the microphone
Listen below to an edited version of his last programme on the network.
As well as classical music, Richard has another passion, making marmalade. Here's this year's label.
Contact him at mail@richardastbury.co.uk
Richard was born in Worcestershire in July 1944, the son of a bank manager. Richard broke the family mould by attending drama school in Birmingham and subsequently became an actor.
Having experienced television drama Richard then moved into radio with the British Forces Broadcasting Service (BFBS) in 1969 with postings to Cyprus, Cologne, Berlin, Belize, Gibraltar, The Falkland Islands and Malta, which he physically closed in March 1979.
In 1985 Richard took a sabbatical running Riviera Radio in Italy, beamed to the French Riviera. He returned to manage BFBS in London in 1987. It was then that he was recruited into television as the anchor-man on the current Forces magazine programme BFBS Reports.
In October of 1993 he became Head of Combined Services Entertainment (ex ENSA) which stages shows and visits to British Forces locations in The Falklands, Iraq, Afghanistan, Germany, Cyprus, Bosnia, and Naval ships at sea. In the summer of 1998 Richard left to concentrate more on radio and TV.
Richard has presented on Classic FM's Breakfast Show and BBC TV interviewing Princess Margaret to mark the 50th Anniversary of VE day in May 1995. In August that year another invitation came from Buckingham Palace to interview Prince Philip in celebration of VJ day. Both programmes were broadcast on BBC One and have been repeated.
Richard was awarded the MBE in the 2005 New Year's Honours List for 'his outstanding contribution to the welfare of HM Forces as a BFBS programme presenter'.
He retired as a staff presenter to go freelance in June 2006 and can be seen regularly presenting BFBS Reports on BFBS TV.
For over 10 years, up until February 2009 Richard produced and presented "Asters Classics" on BFBS Radio Two, but this ceased when the network was reshaped.
Richard spent 12 years in Germany, ten in Cologne where he became well known in the 70's for his Housewives Show broadcast daily from the studios in Marienburg.
This prompted the recording of his record "The Drinking Man's Diet", along with two other long-playing compilations and records of a risqué nature!!
Listen to "The Drinking Man's Diet" and "Hang On With Asters" on the right.
Richard made a name for himself with the way he used to talk to the wives on the phone, again with the risqué contents that attracted the attention, not only of the British Forces, but many hundreds of thousands of German listeners.
Richard was also well known for his weekly Sunday programme "Pop Around Europe", playing hits from the European charts.