OTD in early British television: 13 March 1933

13th March 2025

John Wyver writes: At 11pm on Monday 13 March 1933, the BBC’s 30-line transmission from Studio BB in the basement of Broadcasting House featured selections from ‘The British Theatrical Loan Exhibition’ that was currently on view at Dudley House in Park Lane.

The presentation also featured the then 31-year-old Ralph Richardson, attired in the costume of Benedick as famously played by Sir Henry Irving (above, detail) giving a few lines from act 2 scene 3 of Much Ado About Nothing, although as a previous blog post revealed, this was not the first Shakespeare performance on British television.

Nor was this the first broadcast showcasing artworks and precious objects from a major London exhibition. That tradition began the previous October, with selections introduced by Lord Lee of Fareham from the ‘Art Treasures Exhibition’ at Christie’s, and had continued in January 1933 with pieces from ‘The Loan Exhibition of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth’.

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OTD in early British television: 12 March 1938

12th March 2025

John Wyver writes: Closing out transmissions on Saturday 12 March 1938 was An Exhibition of Catch-as-Catch-Can Wrestling, featuring a bout in the studio between Earl McCready, heavyweight champion of the British Empire who hailed from Canada, and the South African grappler Percy Foster. Remarkably, a photograph exists of this contest, which is reproduced above, and for more about wrestling in 1938, go here.

Catch-as-Catch-Can Wrestling, or Catch Wrestling, is apparently (thanks Wikipedia) ‘an English wrestling style where wrestlers aim to win by pinning or submitting their opponent using any legal holds or techniques. It emphasizes adaptability and seizing opportunities during the match, with fewer restrictions than other wrestling styles.’ Following this March debut on screen, the sport was a popular attraction for pre-war television, and was one strand in the new medium’s apparent fixation with looking at bodies in motion.

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OTD in early British television: 11 March 1938

11th March 2025

John Wyver writes: Across the winter of 1937-38, the Television service broadcast Pre-view on Friday afternoons and evenings. Featuring interviews, rehearsals and test sequences from the forthcoming attractions of the following week, the strand was an attempt to encourage more viewing, and of course more sales of sets.

The format of the show, hosted by one of the women announcers, either Elizabeth Cowell or Jasmine Bligh, started out conventionally, but became increasingly eccentric as the series ran on. The 15th edition on 11 March 1938 was built around a comic guessing game in which Jasmine (see above in a generic shot taken from the screen at some point in 1937) and actor Charles Heslop as ‘Mr Viewer’ had to identify programmes in the coming week from visual clues.

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OTD in early British television: 10 March 1939

10th March 2025

John Wyver writes: Friday 10 March 1939 saw the publication of Radio Times issue no 806. Around one-third of the copies distributed in the south of England carried television listings and the ‘diary column written by ‘The Scanner’.

These ‘television editions’ are a key element of the pre-war medium, not least because they would have been seen more regularly by far more people than would have had domestic receivers, of which there were perhaps just 18,000 in spring 1939. For many people, these magazines defined what television was.

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OTD in early British television: 9 March 1938

9th March 2025

John Wyver writes: The Spring 1938 Craftsmen at Work series featured demonstrations in the AP studio of a potter at work at a wheel, of whisket-making (constructing baskets from strips of oak), withy-weiving (working with willow) and, on 9 March, a blacksmith. The series was one element of television starting to look beyond London and embrace rural England, also apparent in the monthly OB broadcasts On the Farm.

For the blacksmith, a furnace was installed in the lower scene dock, although it proved hard to get the camera sufficiently close to see details. As a critic recorded,

The swift balanced movements of the man, and his shadow against the wall were decorative and exciting to watch, but of the actual job in hand, we could see little or nothing.

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OTD in early British television: 8 March 1939

8th March 2025

John Wyver writes: The 8 March 1939 edition of the popular magazine The Bystander carried a quarter-page ad for the recently-installed television studio at Selfridge’s in London’s Oxford Street. ‘TELEVISION IS *HERE’, it proclaimed. ‘You can’t shut your eyes to it!’

By *HERE the ad meant the department store that had been a site strongly associated with television ever since John Logie Baird’s first demonstrations of his 8-line system back in March 1925. Extending its celebration of all things modern, Selfridge’s had frequently hosted further demonstrations and was a key central London sales site for receivers.

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OTD in early British television: 7 March 1932

7th March 2025

John Wyver writes: The National and Regional programmes on the afternoon of Monday 7 March 1932 carried a radio broadcast of a violin and piano recital given by Helen Luard and May Jardine. But their programme of Beethoven and Handel was also one of a series of simulcasts with the Baird 30-line television operation.

The Baird company, which in the spring of 1932 was still operating the 30-line service that would be taken over by the BBC later in the year, had introduced a portable scanner to the BBC studios at Savoy Hill in the summer of 1931. In mid-August this was first used to broadcast images of a late evening radio broadcast by Jack Payne and his dance band.

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OTD in early British television: 6 March 1939

6th March 2025

John Wyver writes: Late – well, 10.24pm, delayed because of a boxing bout – on the the evening of Monday 6 March 1939, the fifth edition of a series called Guest Night (above) gathered six guests and host A.G. Street to discuss ‘the refugee problem’. This was just 9 days before German troops marched into Czechoslovakia, prompting a significant increase in the number of people fleeing the Nazis.

Guest Night was a bit like Channel 4’s celebrated After Dark series, bringing together a disparate group of people to discuss a theme, albeit with a roughly 45-minute time slot. As can be seen from the photograph, the set was a comfortable middle-class drawing room, perhaps one rung above the kind of domestic setting where many of the audience would be watching.

There are no recordings or transcripts, but it is intriguing just to recognise that television was tackling a subject that remains at the forefront of political discussion today. Among the questions they addressed apparently were, What does England look like and feel like to those who seek asylum within her shores? What is the attitude of English people to these strangers and refugees?

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OTD in early British television: 5 March 1939

5th March 2025

John Wyver writes: The evening of Sunday 5 March 1939, from 9.08pm to 10.54pm, was taken up with a studio restaging of Little Ladyship (above), written by Ian Hay after the Hungarian original by Istvan Bekeffi and Adorjan Stella. For one night only Gardner Davies’ successful staging had been translated by producer Lanham Titchener from the Strand Theatre to the AP studios.

A little over a week later, the show prompted a letter to the press from theatrical impresario Emile Littler, complaining that while conventional theatres were barred by law from opening on Sundays, there was no such restriction on television. Littler’s letter was one salvo in a campaign that would only reach a successful conclusion 33 years later.

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OTD in early British television: 4 March 1939

4th March 2025

John Wyver writes: Having celebrated yesterday, with the post on Teresa Deevey’s The King of Spain’s Daughter, the breadth of the television drama produced at AP before the war, here is a recognition of how formally innovative it could also be.

First shown on Saturday 4 March 1939, Condemned to be Shot was billed as ‘a play in the first person’ by R.E.J. Brooke (presumably actor Reginald Brooke, playing ‘An officer’), with Jan Bussell as the producer.

At the start, an announcer informed viewers that the short play ‘is in the nature of a new experiment in dramatic production by television. Viewers will be invited by the chief character to put themselves in his place.’

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