16th September 2025
John Wyver writes: On Friday 16 September 1938 a television OB unit was among newsreel cameras at Heston Aerodrome to provide live coverage of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s return from meeting Adolf Hitler at Berchtesgaden. You can see the
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15th September 2025
John Wyver writes: For just over half an hour from 5.29pm on Wednesday 15 September 1937, a test outside broadcast from the Arsenal Football Club at Highbury showed part of a match between Arsenal Reserves and Millwall Reserves. Unbilled in
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14th September 2025
John Wyver writes: Here's a curiosity that stretches across pre- and post-war, and the latter part of which I owe to the scholar Geoff Brown. On the afternoon of Tuesday 14 September 1937, Dallas Bower produced for the AP television
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13th September 2025
John Wyver writes: Running at 56 minutes when it was first transmitted on Tuesday 13 September 1938, Felicity’s First Season by Charles Terrot has a claim to being the first full-length play written for television. The script, however, preserved on
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12th September 2025
John Wyver writes: It's Tuesday 12 September 1939, and we are a week and two days into the war. Television came off the air on the Friday before Neville Chamberlain's declaration, but thanks to the excellent work of Andrew S.
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11th September 2025
John Wyver writes: The evening of Wednesday 11 September 1935 saw the final 30-line broadcast from the BBC studio in Portland Place. There had been regular BBC transmissions since August 1932, but now following the Selsdon Report's recommendation that a
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10th September 2025
John Wyver writes: The evening schedule on Wednesday 10 September 1937 featured a 9-minute talk by Anthony Bertram titled What is Good Design? The producer was Mary Adams, and the PasB detailed that the broadcast was 'illustrated by examples of
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9th September 2025
John Wyver writes: As promised yesterday, this is the fascinating text of Grace Wyndham Goldie's LIstener column, 'The Drama of Television', dated 9 September 1936, with her first thoughts about the new medium. As the weekly's radio drama critic,
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8th September 2025
John Wyver writes: Today and tomorrow I want to highlight two early columns about television by the doyenne of pre-war critics, Grace Wyndham Goldie. And I want to do so by showcasing them in, as it were, reverse order, with
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7th September 2025
John Wyver writes: The Wednesday evening of 7 September 1938 featured a 18-minute talk by portraitist and muralist Edward Halliday titled Masterpieces on Your Walls. Using sixteen examples, he discussed 'the advantages of modern colour reproductions which bring a
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