7th February 2025
John Wyver writes: the afternoon of Monday 7 February saw the first presentation of The Three Bears, an original short ballet for the screen by choreographer Joy Newton. This was not, as the News Chronicle claimed, 'the first ballet
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6th February 2025
John Wyver writes: readers of The Era daily on Wednesday 6 February 1935 enjoyed two stories about television that, exactly 90 years on, suggest how unstable the very idea of television was then. Under the heading "Tellies" there was speculation
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5th February 2025
John Wyver writes: The evening of Sunday 5 February 1939 was taken up with a 105-minute version of Shakespeare's The Tempest, with John Abbott as Prospero and actor, writer and poet Stephen Haggard as Ariel. Playing Caliban was
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4th February 2025
John Wyver writes: What is arguably the origin moment of one the simplest and most obvious television techniques occurred in a broadcast talk on the evening of 4 February 1938.
The esteemed art historian R.H. Wilenski was reviewing the
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3rd February 2025
John Wyver writes: 'Oho! Here's another television experiment,' is how Grace Wyndham Goldie began her review of Death at Newtownstewart, first broadcast on the afternoon of Friday 3 February 1939. The critic's top line response was that, 'it failed.'
Nonetheless,
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2nd February 2025
John Wyver writes: On Wednesday 2 February 1938 The Times reported that, 'A television set with a screen about twice the size of that in the standard home receiver was demonstrated by the Marconi-EMI company in London last night.' This
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1st February 2025
John Wyver writes: In the depths of winter, on the afternoon of Wednesday 1 February 1939, one of the mobile outside broadcast units made a first visit to Bulls Cross Farm at Waltham Cross, just off the A10 10 miles
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31st January 2025
John Wyver writes: Since the end of November I have been posting most days about an aspect of British television before the Second World War. Through January I have managed a post each day, and here I have brought together
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31st January 2025
John Wyver writes: The last day of January 1935 was publication day for one of the most consequential documents in British television history: the Report of the Television Committee chaired by Lord Selsdon. Among other matters, this determined that
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30th January 2025
John Wyver writes: another significant moment for the 'high definition' service from Alexandra Palace. Saturday 30 January 1937 was the last day on which the Baird system for producing and transmitting 240-line images was used. After this, AP relied
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