Alan McGilvray
Alan David McGilvray AM MBE (6 December 1909 – 17 July 1996) was an Australian cricketer who played several first-class seasons for New South Wales in the mid-1930s before becoming the doyen of Australian cricket commentators. He became identified as the voice of Australian cricket through his ABC radio broadcasts. BiographyMcGilvray was born in Paddington, a suburb of Sydney, one of four children of Dumfries-born Thomas McGilvray, owner of a city shoe warehouse.[1] The family were keen on cricket: "he played as a child in New South Wales with his father, Thomas, bowling to him, and his brother Norman keeping wicket behind the kerosene can."[2] He was educated at Newington College (1923–24)[3] and Sydney Grammar School. He captained New South Wales in the 1935–36 and 1936–37 seasons.[4] His radio commentary career spanned over 50 years, starting in an era where the only communications between England and Australia were ball-by-ball telegraph cables which were embellished with sound effects and commentary to give an impression of being at the game. This technique, known as synthetic cricket broadcasting, was first used by commercial Australian radio 3DB in 1930 and adopted by the Australian Broadcasting Commission in 1934.[5] By the 1938 Ashes series in England, short wave reception to Australia had improved significantly and commentary started moving to conventional broadcasting. McGilvray called every Test in Australia from the Second World War until his retirement in 1985.[6] An example of his distinctive commentary style is as follows:
As well as editing numerous ABC Cricket Books, McGilvray wrote a number of cricket books himself including:
During the 1970s, when "traditional" cricket was in stiff competition with Kerry Packer's "World Series" initiative, ABC radio's cricket commentary featured a musical jingle whose words were "The game is not the same without McGilvray". McGilvray was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1974[8] and a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1980.[9] On his retirement in 1985 at the Sydney Cricket Ground, the Prime Minister Bob Hawke made a farewell speech after which McGilvray received a standing ovation from the crowd. He died in Darlinghurst, Sydney, in 1996, aged 86. See alsoNotes
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