Legendary Melbourne + Adelaide radio voice-over man Jim ‘Bero’ Berinson passes away aged 92

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BERO.jpgMany in the industry, particularly in Melbourne and Adelaide, will be saddened to hear of the passing of legendary radio voice-over man, Jim ‘Bero’ Berinson, who has passed away peacefully at the age of 92.

In the early 70s Bero teamed up with Street Remley, working in Melbourne and then Adelaide, to create the greatest radio production and writing business in the country.

 

Bero began life as an opera singer and singing taxi driver in Perth in the 1950s. A 3AK radio executive was a passenger one day and liked his voice so much, he asked him to come to Melbourne for an audition.

When 3AK became a ‘daylight’ station in 1957, its very first breakfast team was Berinson and Lennie Holmes.

Showcasing his singing talent Bero later went on to star in live variety show TV Showboat, which aired during 1960 on the ABC.

In the early 70s he teamed up with Street Remley, working in Melbourne and then Adelaide, to create the greatest radio production and writing business in the country.

Phillip Webster was a young engineer at Remleys when he first came in contact and Phillip was one of the many Bero mentored. Many of today’s engineers and radio writers owe a great deal to Bero.

 

When James Rickard, until recently ECD at KWP! Adelaide, first met Bero he was terrified. Says Rickard: “He was a legend and I was an inexperienced writer. I nervously handed him my script and he asked me how I wanted it read. While feverishly genuflecting and apologising, the best I could offer was a few stammering words and little or no direction. He told me in no uncertain terms, ‘It’s not enough to write it son, you must know how it sounds.'”