After leaving school, he worked as a clerk in a steelworks in Sheffield while learning to
play musical instruments and sing in choirs during his spare time. In order to earn enough to pay for singing lessons, he formed a
dance-band and eventually enrolled in the Sheffield School of Music. He auditioned for the Carl Rosa Opera Company and was engaged
as a chorister, subsequently playing small parts and eventually making his debut as a principal in the role of Rodolfo in La bohème.
Before World War II, he also sang with the Sadler's Wells company. He also sang with a dance band on BBC radio.
After the war he became Principal Tenor at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, making his debut as Calaf in Turandot. He sang major
tenor roles from 1951 to 1953 but left after a difference with the management and never returned.
In 1952 during Rigoletto at Covent Garden, while he was singing 'Questa o quella', Midgley swallowed his moustache. This incident made
newspaper headlines all over the world and the story has become a classic. But far from being amusing, it was very worrying. Midgley
completed the first act, and the opera house staff were able to retrieve some of the offending article in the interval, but the next
day an operation to remove the gauze was needed. For Midgley it was a case of 'the show must go on', but the accident caused him much
discomfort for some months after.
He was married to the pianist Gladys Vernon, and his daughter Maryetta Midgley and his son Vernon Midgley became accomplished singers
in their own right. He once appeared with his wife and children on the long-running BBC Radio programme "Friday night is music night",
the only occasion on which all four Midgleys were to perform together.
He died in 1980 having that day completed another of his very popular Radio 2 Series, 'Walter Midgley remembers'.
Reference