OTD in early British television: 17 August 1939

17th August 2025

John Wyver writes: 'Television set for £23', promised a 17 August 1939 Daily Telegraph article penned by the paper's well-informed radio correspondent L. Marsland Gander. He was writing ten days ahead of the popular trade fair Radiolympia which attracted thousands more

OTD in early British television: 16 August 1937

16th August 2025

John Wyver writes: After a three week break. a full schedule began again from AP on the afternoon of Monday 16 August 1937. Two afternoons of Davis Cup tennis and some test broadcasts had been the only offering for more

OTD in early British television: 15 August 1938

15th August 2025

John Wyver writes: Late on the evening of Monday 15 August 1938 (well, late for AP, in fact 10.12pm), Marjan Rawicz and Walter Landauer gave a short recital on two pianos. They were also studio guests the following afternoon, presumably more

OTD in early British television: 14 August 1939

14th August 2025

John Wyver writes: Late evening on Monday 15 August 1939 saw a mobile control unit in Hammersmith for an hour-long outside broadcast from the Palais. Viewers saw dancing including the 'Palais Glide', 'Big Apple', , 'Jitter Bug', and 'Boops-a-Daisy', as more

OTD in early British television: 13 August 1939

13th August 2025

John Wyver writes: The evening schedule of Sunday 13 August 1939, with the war little more than a fortnight away, was taken up with a production of James Bridie's fantasy Tobias the Angel. Frank Napier's production for the Regent's Park more

OTD in early British television: 12 August 1939

12th August 2025

John Wyver writes: The afternoon of Saturday 12 August 1939, three weeks before the declaration of war, saw one of the BBC's mobile control units in Kensington Gardens for a leisurely hour-long outside broadcast from the edges of the Round more

OTD in early British television: 8 August 1939

8th August 2025

John Wyver writes: Intimate Interlude on the evening of Tuesday 8 August 1939 offered a bill featuring Mexican magician Kantu and Polish dancers Halima and Konarski, along with the mime artist Sherkot. As a vaudevillian whose act was almost entirely more