Bruce was born and raised in
Giffnock, near
Glasgow, and from the age of nine, he attended
Hutchesons' Boys' Grammar School before training and working as a chartered accountant for a couple of years. His next job was washing cars, following which he began his broadcasting career with the Hospital Broadcasting Service in Glasgow in the early 1970s. In 1977, Bruce became a staff announcer for BBC Radio 4 Scotland and a TV continuity announcer for
BBC One Scotland and
BBC Two Scotland. Following the launch of
BBC Radio Scotland in November 1978, he became one of the original presenters of
Nightbeat, alongside Iain Purdon.
Charles Nove subsequently joined the presentation rota. He also presented a Saturday morning show. In 1980, he took on the mid-morning slot and then, in 1983, he presented a daily afternoon entertainment show. He hosted his mid-morning show on the
BBC World Service in the late 1980s.
BBC Radio 2 History Bruce's first broadcasts were from Scotland when he took over the presentation of
Radio 2 Ballroom from Scotland after the death of Radio Scotland's announcer/presenter of Scottish Dance Music programmes, David Findlay. He presented
Radio 2 Ballroom programmes regularly from November 1980 until 1982. He became a
stand-in presenter on
Radio 2, mainly covering for
Ray Moore on the
Early show. Bruce also presented shows for Radio Scotland from
London. Bruce became a regular presenter for Radio 2 in January 1984 when he assumed hosting duties for the Saturday late night show in addition to his continuing show on Radio Scotland. In January 1985, Bruce left Radio Scotland and took over from
Terry Wogan on
The Radio 2 Breakfast Show, being replaced himself by
Derek Jameson in April 1986. He then began his first stint on the mid-morning show which lasted until the end of March 1990, when he took over the late show until the end of that year. He then hosted the early show throughout 1991, and on 6 January 1992 he returned to the mid-morning slot. While Bruce was on holiday in August 2007,
Davina McCall sat in for him. This attracted more than 150 complaints from listeners. During his show on 21 April 2008, theatre producer
Bill Kenwright told Bruce that
Elvis Presley once visited
London in 1958, and was taken on a tour of the city by
Tommy Steele. Presley in fact never visited England in his lifetime and the claim caused considerable controversy. In December 2008, a crew of fishermen listeners were inadvertently relaying the show to every ship and coastguard station for miles around. It was not possible to contact the vessel, so a request was made to Bruce, who duly said: "If you are on a ship near the Small rocks, please turn me off." On
April Fools' Day 2011, Bruce's radio show was presented by comedian
Rob Brydon impersonating Bruce throughout. Brydon interviewed "Sir
Terry Wogan" (impersonated by
Peter Serafinowicz), and Bruce himself appeared at the end of the show as his "brother Kenn with two Ns". As a result of restrictions imposed due to
COVID-19, from 23 March 2020 to 31 May 2021, Bruce self-isolated and presented his show from home. He has spoken about
remote work to the BBC website, saying: "We get a lot more people just asking for a simple hello or a mention for relatives just because they are not seeing them as much as they could. Particularly working from home, I sympathise with that, because there are lots of people I'm not seeing. We are all kind of feeling we are in this together, so it has brought broadcaster and listener rather closer together. It has made us have to be a little bit more creative with what we include in the programme. We do a lot more saying thank you to people who are keeping our essentials services going, and we are also giving people ideas of things to do while they are in
lockdown". Bruce returned to broadcasting from Wogan House in June 2021. Bruce announced on 17 January 2023 that he would be leaving BBC Radio 2 in March of that year to pursue other opportunities outside the BBC, including hosting a new mid-morning show for
Greatest Hits Radio, replacing
Mark Goodier (who then moved to weekends). Bruce presented his final Radio 2 show on 3 March. His final track played was "
Golden Slumbers"/"
Carry That Weight"/"
The End" by
the Beatles.
Programme format and features Bruce's show emphasises music, and on Radio 2 he included regular live performances. Competitions have usually been music-based, with a
love song and dedications feature at 10:15 am on the previous Radio 2 show. Other regular features previously included the
Record of the Week and the
Album of the Week and the
Tracks of My Years, where a celebrity picked two songs each day for their particular meaning.
The Love Song was previously played at 10:15 am each day, preceded by dedications, although a number of songs in the rotation are not romantic love songs. The show also includes a daily quiz,
PopMaster. It previously included other competitions such as
Spin It to Win It and ''Words Don't Come Easily
, although these were dropped in 2007 following the phone-in scandal. PopMaster'' returned in early 2008, although the other competitions did not. The comedian and impressionist
Rob Brydon, who is noted for his mimicry of Bruce, sat in for him on 25 August 2008 and again as an
April fool prank in 2011 when Brydon impersonated Bruce throughout.
PopMaster PopMaster has run as a feature of Bruce's show since 16 February 1998. With questions set by music expert
Phil Swern, it offers a
smart speaker for successfully completing the Three-in-Ten bonus round. If the listener fails, they are awarded a set of Bluetooth headphones (replacing the previous consolation prizes of a Bluetooth speaker, and before that an MP3 player). An earlier consolation prize, a "Space" radio, has been known to appear on
eBay, to Bruce's amusement. The losing contestant is given a T-shirt with "One Year Out" printed across the front (a catchphrase Bruce uses in the quiz when a contestant trying to place the year a song was in the charts is out by one year). This consolation prize replaced a CD wallet as of 27 February 2012. The public phone-in PopMaster quiz was suspended after airing on 18 July 2007. A celebrity version was introduced on 20 July and continued until 18 January 2008. "Three-in-Ten" was not held in the celebrity version and there was no tie breaker in the event of a draw. It was rumoured that members of the public would be able to play again before Christmas 2007 but this did not happen. Following an announcement by Bruce on 7 January 2008, the regular format returned on 21 January. The game returned with new dramatic, orchestral and guitar-based jingles. Bruce himself was a
PopMaster contestant during his show on 17 May 2013, when he took part in a special
Eurovision edition of the quiz, live from
Malmö, Sweden. Bruce competed against
Paddy O'Connell, with
John Kennedy O'Connor chairing the quiz.
Greatest Hits Radio On 3 April 2023, Bruce began broadcasting on
Greatest Hits Radio with his first song being "
Come Together" by
The Beatles. The show now runs weekdays 10am - 1pm and includes PopMaster at 10.30.
Other appearances Bruce presented BBC
Proms in the Park for many years. From 1988 to 2022, he was Radio 2's commentator for the
Eurovision Song Contest, having taken over from fellow broadcaster and friend
Ray Moore. In 1998, he shared this role with being UK spokesman for that year's contest, reading out the points for the UK telephone vote, taking it over from
Colin Berry, who then returned the following year. He presented the Eurovision Song Contest Previews from 1989 to 1991 on
BBC1. He was a regular presenter of the long-running
Friday Night is Music Night. He has occasionally made appearances in "Dictionary Corner" on
Channel 4's
Countdown, the most recent stint being during the week of 11 February 2013. When the original presenter
Richard Whiteley died in 2005, Bruce said: "[he was] such a nice man – that was the defining quality of him, a genuinely nice man. And he had no real ego." In November 2007, he appeared on a
Never Mind the Buzzcocks special for
Children in Need. Bruce holds a
PCV (Passenger Carrying Vehicle) driving licence and is the co-owner of a number of
AEC Routemaster buses with
Charles Nove,
Alan Dedicoat and
Steve Madden. He has referred to the buses as "a fantastic piece of engineering and such fun to have". On 3 March 2008, Bruce took part in
Ready, Steady, Cook, broadcast on
BBC Two, with
Lynn Bowles. On 30 December 2012, Bruce won an edition of
Celebrity Mastermind, with his specialist subject being the
Jeeves novels of
P.G. Wodehouse. In 2014, Bruce narrated the
BBC One game show
Reflex. He appeared in celebrity episodes of
The Chase on 4 October 2014 and 12 December 2021. Bruce featured with his son Charlie on the fifth series of ''
Big Star's Little Star and in October 2018, he made a cameo appearance on Hollyoaks''. In 2022, Bruce was interviewed for the BBC One documentary
Farming England: Farming on the Spectrum – Oxfordshire, in which he spoke about Pennyhooks Farm and his then-18-year-old son Murray, who was one of several non-verbal people working on the care farm. In February 2023, Bruce appeared with Murray in the first part of a
BBC Two documentary series, presented by
Chris Packham, titled
Inside Our Autistic Minds. On 27 June 2023, Bruce narrated the one-off More4 documentary
Sounds Like the 80s. In the spring of 2023 Bruce presented six episodes of PopMaster TV on
More4 with a repeat on
Channel 4. A second series began on 13 May 2024. ==Accolades and other work==