Record

Performance TitleSecond Daily Mirror Grand 'Gugnunc' Sing-Song Party
Performance Date14 April 1928
Performance DaySaturday
Performance Time15:00
Main PerformersNoni and Horace,
Harry Moore,
Cornalla and Eddie,
Uncle Dick,
Will Hay - performers,
Carmen Hill - vocal,
R Arnold Greir,
J W Lamb - organ
Secondary PerformersDoris Sheppard - piano
Orchestra or BandBBC Dance Orchestra
ConductorsJack Payne
Set List'Rule Britannia',
'Childhood's Memories (Jack Payne, BBC Orchestra),
'Nursery Rhymes' (Jack Payne, BBC Orchestra),
'Where Go The Boats ?' (Carmen Hill),
'Young Night Thought' (Carmen Hill),
'Good And Bad Children' (Carmen Hill),
'Marching Song', R L S, Graham Peel (Carmen Hill),
'Constantinople' (Jack Payne, BBC Orchestra),
'Dance Music' (Jack Payne, BBC Orchestra),
'Oh Dear, What Can The Matter Be?' (Carmen Hill),
'The Cuckoo' (Carmen Hill),
'Land of Hope And Glory', Elgar,
'The Chortle',
'All Join in and Be Happy', Jack Payne, Reg Connelly,
'It Don't Do Nothing But Rain' (Jack Payne, BBC Orchestra),
'God Save the King' (The National Anthem)
Performance NotesThe strange name of this event comes from the Daily Mirror's 'Pip, Squeak and Wilfred' newspaper cartoon which ran from 1919-1956 drawn by Bertram Lamb and Austin Bowen Payne. The cartoon also featured in the Sunday Pictorial in the early years. It concerned the adventures of an orphaned family of animals. Pip, who assumed the "father" role, was a dog, while the "mother", Squeak, was a penguin. Wilfred was the "young son" and was a rabbit with very long ears.

In 1927, the Pip, Squeak and Wilfred club began and was named the Wilfredian League of Gugnuncs (WLOG). The club organised many competitions and events for thousands of members, especially at the British South Coast Seaside resorts. "Gugnuncs" is a combination of two baby-talk words used by Wilfred, who as a toddler-aged child cannot speak yet. Nunc being his version of Uncle. There was a WLOG member's badge in blue enamelled metal, featuring the long ears of Wilfred. Among the WLOG rules was one to never eat rabbit.

The Gugnunc parties were held between 1927-1929 at the Royal Albert Hall raising funds for children’s hospitals and charities.

The Handley Page H.P.39 biplane (1929) was nicknamed the Gugnunc.
Related Archival MaterialProgramme (RAHE/1/1928/34)
Catalogue
Reference NumberTitleDate
RAHE/1/1928/34Grand Gugnunc Party - Souvenir Programme14 April 1928
Work
Ref NoTitleNo of Performances
YmomuzohipiemSecond Daily Mirror Grand 'Gugnunc' Sing-Song Party1
Performers
CodeName of Performer(s)
DS/UK/1121Daily Mirror; Gugnuncs; 1919-1956; British newspaper cartoon strip
DS/UK/1583Hill; Carmen (fl 1883-1924); Scottish singer
DS/UK/1586Greir; Robert Arnold (fl 1914-1967); English organist
DS/UK/3784Payne; Jack (1899-1969); British dance music bandleader
DS/UK/3785British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC); BBC Show Band; fl late 1920s-1950s; British television and radio broadcaster
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