Peggy Cochrane was born in
Streatham, London, the daughter of a
civil servant, and was a musical
child prodigy. She won a scholarship to the
Royal Academy of Music aged eight; won open competitions on both violin and piano on the same day, aged 14; and was awarded the prize as the most distinguished scholar at the college. She made her first broadcasts on
BBC radio in 1924, in violin recitals. That year, she also married her first husband, Dr Disney Hubert Dusch Cran
M.D., a consultant physician from Edinburgh who specialised in
paediatrics and was
mentioned in dispatches for his service in the
Great War. In the later 1920s and early 1930s, she featured regularly on BBC radio, and in cabaret with William Walker and
Patrick Waddington, as That Certain Trio (and with Waddington as That Certain Pair after Walker left the act). She composed and performed short pieces for children, and was able to move from playing a classical violin concerto in concert during the day, to performing on piano in hotel cabarets in the evening, occasionally with cellist
Gwen Farrar. She separated from her husband in spring 1938; on 21 October 1938, he took his own life at their home in West London, aged 50. Payne and his wife divorced, and Payne and Cochrane married in 1940. Cochrane continued to perform, broadcast and record through the 1950s, releasing the
EP Cocktails with Cochrane in 1958 and writing music for films and television. In 1959, she appeared as the guest on
Desert Island Discs. After Payne's death, Cochrane published an autobiography,
We Said it with Music - the Story of Peggy Cochrane and Jack Payne, in 1979. Cochrane died in
Bognor Regis in 1988, aged 86. ==References==