9th January 2025
John Wyver writes: AP's evening of Monday 9 January 1939 featured two contrasting musical offerings: Schubert Night, which combined a biography of the composer with performances, and Lambeth Keeps on Walking, a similarly hybrid feature and variety line-up presented by
more
8th January 2025
John Wyver writes: on the afternoon of Friday 8 January 1937 Dallas Bower produced Burnt Sepia, a half-hour variety line-up billed as, in the racially derogatory language of the day, ‘an all-coloured cabaret’. This was television’s first variety programme featuring
more
7th January 2025
John Wyver writes: on Friday 7 January 1938, when Alexandra Palace broadcast a circus OB, a Pepler masque from Aesop's Fables, a fashion show, and Archie Harradine revue and a dramatisation of W.W. Jacobs's horror story 'The Monkey's Paw',
more
6th January 2025
John Wyver writes: on the evening of Friday 6 January 1939, after one of this year's return visits to Bertram Mills's Circus, Alexandra Palace offered the eigth edition of News Map, in this case with the journalist and scholar Elizabeth
more
5th January 2025
John Wyver writes: One of the things I love about researching early television is how bare programme listings can lead down the strangest and most unlikely rabbit holes. Take the line-ups for the two Picture Page editions on Tuesday 5
more
4th January 2025
John Wyver writes: the afternoon of Tuesday 4 January 1938 saw the first outside broadcast visit to Bertram Mills's Circus at Olympia (above), from where broadcasts would be shown across the next five days. This first transmission featured the opening
more
3rd January 2025
John Wyver writes: the evening of Tuesday 3 January 1939 saw a studio repeat presentation of Denis Johnston's contemporary comedy The Moon in the Yellow River, produced for the cameras by the author himself. The satire had been first
more
2nd January 2025
John Wyver writes: 'ls the 'straight from the theatre' stuff going to be satisfactory?' That was the question Grace Wyndham Goldie posed following the live broadcast of Twelfth Night from the Phoenix Theatre (above) on the evening of 2
more
1st January 2025
John Wyver writes: In keeping with the aspirational tenor of Alexandra Palace's lifestyle programming for its professional middle-class viewers, each winter there was at least one studio broadcast for those looking forward to, or dreaming about, a ski-ing holiday across
more
31st December 2024
John Wyver writes: New Year's Eve 1938 saw one of BBC Television's two outside broadcast units parked round the corner from Grosvenor House on London's Park Lane. For 35 minutes from 11.30pm, from the swanky ballroom there Leslie Mitchell hosted
more