Heath was inspired by
Glenn Miller and his Army Air Force Band, and spoke with Miller at length about forming his own band when Miller toured Britain with the
United States Army Air Force Orchestra. Heath admired the immaculate precision of the Miller ensemble, and felt confident that he could emulate Miller's great success with his own orchestra. In 1944, Heath talked Douglas Lawrence, the Dance Music Organiser for the BBC's Variety Department, into supporting a new band with a broadcasting contract. Lawrence was sceptical as Heath wanted a much larger and more jazz orientated band than anyone had seen in Britain before. came to UK as musical director for the film
London Town (1946) starring comedian
Sid Field. This film was intended to be Britain's first attempt to emulate the American film musicals of studios such as
MGM and Camarata commissioned Heath to provide his band as the nucleus for the film's orchestra. In 1947, Heath persuaded impresario
Val Parnell, uncle of the band's star drummer
Jack Parnell, to allow him to hire the
London Palladium for alternating Sundays for his Sunday Night Swing Sessions. The band caused a sensation and eventually played 110 Sunday concerts, ending in August 1955, consolidating the band's popular appeal from the late 1940s. These concerts allowed the band to play much more in a jazz idiom than it could in ballrooms. In addition to the Palladium Sunday night concerts the band appeared regularly at the
Hammersmith Palais and toured the UK on a weekly basis. ==1950s and US tour==