Christmas memories from P.E.I.'s Sleepytown Express - Action News
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Christmas memories from P.E.I.'s Sleepytown Express

Remember The Sleepytown Express? Many Islanders still fondly remember the P.E.I. radio show especially Betty Rogers Large's Christmastime interviews with Santa Claus.

'How special it must have been for people to have Santa come into their home'

You can listen online to some of Betty Rogers Large's broadcasts of The Sleepytown Express from years gone by.

The sound crackles and buzzes, but come ChristmastimeIslanderKathy Largestill listens to archivedrecordings of her mother interviewing Santa Claus.

Betty Rogers Large was the longtime host and producer of The Sleepytown Express, a much-beloved P.E.I. radio show that aired on P.E.I. radio stationCFCYfrom the early 1930s to 1960s.

Often people would recognize her by that voice all through her life. And she enjoyed that, she loved the role. Kathy Large

"In those early days of radio, it was true magic that that sort of thing got on the air," Large said. "It literally came out of thin air and people were just amazed by the new technology."

In an interview withCBC Radio:Mainstreet, Large an award-winning broadcaster herself saidher mother, who became known as The Storyteller,introduced heryoung listeners to manycharacters of her own imagination includingthe Bubble Fairy and Mickey the Elf.

Recording bed-time stories

The Sleepytown Express started out as a very simple show, said Large.

Her grandfather, Keith Sinclair Rogers, who founded and operated CFCY,wanted to test his new station so he ran a microphone to his childrens' bedroom and recorded 12-year-old Betty reading stories to her younger brother.

"She would just read for a long time and he would have a voice track to test the station," Largesaid.

As the years went onand the station got into proper broadcasting, Rogers Large began telling her own stories on air.

Whatlisteners didn't know wasall the characters were played by people working at the stationor recruited to fill the part, said Large.

"The elf Mickey at one point was George Scantlebury, who lived across the street from the station," she said.

Talking to Santa

But the highlight of The Sleepytown Express wereher mother's annual interviews with Santa, said Large

CFCYhad convinced its young audience that the station had a direct link to the North Pole.Every Christmas, her mother would not only talk to Santa but also invite children to send in their telegrams to him.

Letters arrived from as far as the Magdalen Islands, said Large.

The showeven heard from people who didn't haveelectricityand wouldcrank their radio to listen to the show.

"It gives you a sense of how special it must have been for people to have Santa come into their home, maybe hear their name on the radio," Large said.

"At Christmastime, it was on the radio every night after supper, just at the right time for bedtime stories."

The Storyteller

Rogers Large would broadcast for50 years, eventually publishing a book about her time on the radio, Out of Thin Air.

While she had many roles at the station, being The Storyteller was always her favourite, her daughter said.

"Often people would recognize her by that voice all through her life. And she enjoyed that, she loved the role."

Eager to hear one of these vintage recordings? Click here for some compilations of The Storyteller's Christmas broadcasts.

Listen to Mainstreet on CBC Radio weekdays from 4 to 6 p.m.

With files from CBC Radio: Mainstreet