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Capt. Ewart Kempson
He
was selected to officiate as non-playing captain : at once a Good
and a Bad thing. Good because, save for Selby Wraith, his
favourite Newcastle partner, there is not a front ranker in
England who can play Kempson adequately ; bad because, there are
few finer card players in the country than the slim, smart,
flippant Kempson.
"
E.K.'s " motto is " I call A Spade, ` A Spade' . . . and
Two Spades, `Two Spades.' " But half his non Kempson partners
think he has a forcing opening ; and the other half think he has 8
playing tricks. In fact, he is likely to have six playing tricks
with anything from one and a half to five quick tricks.
Kempson,
born at the close of the Naughty Nineties in Worcestershire,
collected his commission in the Indian Army he served in a Rajput
Regiment of Light Infantry. About him there clings an un
mistakable trace of the pukka: a
certain
unconscious arrogance which his bonhomie saves from offence.
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In
his own area Northumbria and, to a great extent, Northern
Ireland Kempson is the biggest bridge god there is. His
devastating psychics, his spectacular card play have won him
golden opinions ; his sensational victories in the old days over
various South teams of Internationals have gained him a niche in
the hall of bridge fame which` only his absence from major
tournaments prevents from becoming a full-size statue.
Ewart
Kempson, both in writing he vies with Simon as our most
entertaining bridge journalist and in speech has an incurable
facetiousness which often rises into wit. His dark eyes gleaming
with schoolboy malice, he pulls the legs
of the
most pompous and his occasional outbursts of under graduate
humour give his sub-editors more than occasional
headaches.
Even in a needle match, Kempson rags about. Only rarely does he go
into a trance, plucking his bushy
eyebrows
for inspiration.
No sketch of E.K. would be complete without a line of reference to
his wife and his dogs: the
former,
Lyn, a charming and passionately Kempson-minded bridge player from
Canada ; the latter a couple of Chow-chows as superb as the
Kempson squeeze play.
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NORTH
v SOUTH 1946

"I
must captain the North
team, paying special attention
to
the psychological angle." Ewart Kempson.
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(The first
person in this country to broadcast on Contract Bridge, way back
in the 'twenties, was Ewart Kempson. In the two years preceding
the war he gave a fortnightly series of Bridge Half Hours on
National and Regional programmes. As he represents the views of a
great number of listeners, he is eminently fitted to submit this
critical survey of the current series of bridge broadcasts.-ED.)
BRIDGE went on the air in a big way on Monday, 29th October, 1945.
Starting with a listening audience of a few thousand, this weekly
feature has grown steadily in popularity and is at present
attracting an audience of more than one million ; throughout the
country, bridge players (and many who have never played bridge in
their lives) make a point of listening to "Bridge on the Air
" at 11.3 every Monday night ; it is hardly an exaggeration
to say that it has become part of their lives, and many a rubber
is interrupted to listen to the experts, chief of whom are M.
Harrison Gray and Terence Reese, who take it in turn to be master
of ceremonies.
Before the war the B.B.C. gave occasional running commentaries on
important bridge matches, and, more often than not, the
commentator was a nationally known B.B.C. personality who, despite
his charm of manner and excellent style of delivery, completely
failed to convince listeners that he knew much about
the game.
Adverse comment was heard in bridge circles and only a handful of
people bothered to listen.
In future bridge commentaries, it is probable that the
commentators will be experts, and features of this kind will then
attract the vast majority of bridge players.

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The
contest, an English Bridge Union event, was run under the auspices
of the North Eastern Contract Bridge Association, whose president.
Mr. V. Ewart Berry, has done much for bridge and bridge players in
the North East.
South won by 2680 imps
"It
is only on short loan, Walshie!" Ewart Kempson
Kempson writes about the North v South Match 1946
After weeks of planning, the morning of the match arrives.
There
is a last minute rush for tickets; will I leave three for Mrs.
Jones with the hall porter, two far Mr. Brown at the "
Chronicle " Office? Will I please change these first session
tickets to fourth session?
There
Is the Cup to collect, newly polished, from the jewellers. There
are the positions of the players to post an the special boards;
there are detailed instructions to the recorders.
The
match begins and I must keep my eye an the score, see that tea is
served to players and recorders, play a bit myself, dash off to
write an article for the "North Mail and Journal,"
telephone a story to other Kemaley newspapers, telephone a short
story for the " Daily Telegraph." Collect the South
players and give them dinner. Give a little thought to the 20
minutes broadcast. |
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The 1st local association
to be created was the North Eastern
with its H.Q. at Newcastle.
The guiding star of this body was,
inevitably, the phoenix of bridge. Ewart Kempson.
EBU 'Contract Bridge Journal' October
1948.
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