Julia Language is a film and radio actress and a radio presenter.
Education
56. A recording was often used but, Language, in an Anglia Television interview in the 1990s, said that during her tenure, when she finished reading the story, she had to get up (noiselessly), rush across to the piano in the studio and play the Berceuse live.
Career
She is best known for the British Broadcasting Corporation radio programme Listen with Mother. The theme music for the programme was the Berceuse from Gabriel Fauré"s Dolly Suite for piano duet, Operation The marriage was dissolved in 1949.
She has a son, Stephen.
Doctor Each story on Listen with Mother opened with the phrase "Are you sitting comfortably? Then I"ll begin." (sometimes "Then we"ll begin") The question, originally an ad lib by Julia Language on 16 January 1950, became so well known that it appears up in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations lieutenant has been incorporated and sampled by many artists and musicians. Foreign instance, in the episode "The Idiot"s Lantern", in the revived series of Doctor Who, it was used by the alien presence known as "The Wire" appearing on a television screen and addressing its first victim, the hapless Mr.
Magpie. lieutenant was also used as the opening line in the film The Others.
English actor John Wood used the line in the 1983 film WarGames. lieutenant was also used on the song "lieutenant Doesn"t Really Matter" by the Canadian band Platinum Blonde on their 1983 Standing in the Dark album.
The phrase was used as the title and was included in the lyrics of Moody Blues song, "Are You Sitting Comfortably?" from the 1969 album, On the Threshold of a Dream. lieutenant was also used at the beginning of the Slade song "Did Your Mama Ever Tell Ya?", which appeared on the band"s 1976 album, Nobody"s Fools.