My name is Hywel Gwynfryn and I'm a broadcaster at the BBC BBC Cymru here in the capital, Cardiff where I live as well as work But my journey starts back in 1942 That's when I was born in Llangefni, in Anglesey A small island on the north coast of Wales. Then I went to primary school when I was about six and I had to learn English because Welsh was my first language Welsh was the language we spoke as a family and at home and it had been that way for years certainly, when I was at school in Llangefni around 95% of the island's population spoke Welsh but that figure has dropped quite a lot since then Anyway, after primary school I went to secondary school and I thoroughly enjoyed myself there because it was there that I developed an interest in acting and I also had the chance to visit the studios in Bangor and be a radio actor My mother was an actress herself and I would go with her to the studio to watch the other actors while I sat quietly in the corner and then one day, I had the chance to act and I remember it well the producer came up to my mother to ask if she knew anyone who would like to act on the radio it was the part of a boy in the soap opera "Teulu'r Siop" (The Shop Family) the first radio soap opera in Welsh, as it happens and she said "well Hywel", that was me "Hywel's an actor" "Maybe he'd be interested" And then Wilbur Lloyd Roberts gave me the script and I read the script straight away and he said "well, the boy can act" I didn't know how he could possibly know that but it was a truly accurate prediction because what happened later on, to fast forward a little bit I came here to Cardiff in 1960 to study at the (Royal Welsh) College of Music and Drama not to study acting, funnily enough but to become a drama teacher And by the way, the college itself was in the castle here in Cardiff inside the castle walls and it was a very happy two years. At the end of that spell I then got my certificate that proved that I was good enough to be a drama teacher and I actually had a job to go to A certificate as well as a job to go to just down the road in Kenfig Hill but what happened was that I had started working part time that summer during the evenings to earn some money before going on to start as a teacher And who came in to the place where I was working The Borough Arms here in Cardiff but a crew from the BBC and to cut a long story short they asked me to go over to the studio in two months time in order for me, or so I thought to have the chance to talk about my work but when I arrived, what they wanted was for me to form part of the "Heddiw" (Today) team a daily news roundup and I was to go out of the studio and bring a part of Wales far away from the studio into the studio and onto the programme I received a job offer for three months and since then I've been working with the BBC for fifty years in fact, this year I'm celebrating fifty years as a presenter through the medium of Welsh, no less I've been very lucky in the sense that, effectively I've been paid all these years to speak my own language or rather, to listen to other people speaking Welsh So what have I done? during this time, I've been around the world I've been to Florida in the USA I've also been to Patagonia in South America I've been as far as Sarawak and Borneo I've travelled around Europe filming programmes for children back in the 70s then in the 80s I made a programme called "Ar dy Feic" (On Your Bike) and I went as far as Beijing in China and it was an experience and a half which I remember well So I count myself very fortunate to not only have been able to do what comes naturally to me that is, to speak nineteen to the dozen but I've had such interesting work and such a variety of work too and I would later go down another route and I started to write books I've written a book about Hywel Griffith a very famous actor in a film I'm sure you all know, 'Ben Hur', with Charlton Heston well in that film Huw Griffith won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor well, I could obviously go on for hours talking about what I've done but that's a little snippet of my story it's been a pleasure chatting to you what's more, in my own language there are currently about half a million of us here in Wales who speak the Welsh language and even though its numbers are dwindling there are significant campaigns to keep it alive So thank you very much for listening thank you for listening Goodbye!