In 1933 the BBC acquired
St. George's Hall, a theatre in
Langham Place opposite Broadcasting House, for broadcasts of vaudeville, comedy and revue shows. In 1936 the first large scale theatre organ in the country to be specially designed and built exclusively for broadcasting - typically regarded as the original BBC Theatre Organ - was installed. It was another Compton - specifically a four manual Compton Melotone and Electrostatic Organ with 23 units, capable of producing a wider range of sounds during performances. In 1936
Reginald Foort was appointed resident organist, and the organ was first used in a broadcast on 20 October 1936, played by Foort and three other well-known organists of the day:
Quentin Maclean, Reginald Porter-Brown and Harold Ramsay. From 1936 the BBC Theatre Organ was used for frequent broadcasts by many organists, including
Fredric Bayco, Dudley Beaven (who used it for the first episode of
Music While You Work in June 1940), Harold Robinson Cleaver,
Frederic Curzon,
Florence De Jong,
Reginald Dixon,
Reginald New,
George Pattman,
Dudley Savage, Donald Thorne, and
Sidney Torch. As staff organist Foort performed in the vast majority of broadcasts, followed by, though overlapping with, his eventual successor
Sandy MacPherson from July 1937. In the first two years Foort gave over 400 solo broadcasts and introduced 72 guest organists to the BBC Theatre Organ. When the BBC briefly switched to broadcasting only light music at the outbreak of war in September 1939, MacPherson played up to twelve hours per day whilst the organisation hastily evacuated its staff from London to various locations around the British Isles. ==Foort's Travelling Moller==