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1937 in British television

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This is a list of events related to British television in 1937.

Events

January

  • 19 January – BBC Television broadcasts The Underground Murder Mystery by J. Bissell Thomas from its London station, the first play written for television.
  • 21 January – BBC Television begins broadcasting Cook's Night Out with restaurateur Marcel Boulestin, probably the first television cookery series.

February

  • 6 February – The BBC Television Service drops the Baird system in favour of the Marconi-EMI 405 lines system.

April

  • 14 April – An exhibition snooker match between Horace Lindrum and Willie Smith is shown on the BBC. This is the first time that snooker is shown on television.

May

  • 12 May – The BBC use their outside broadcast unit for the first time, to televise the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. A fragment of this broadcast is one of the earliest surviving examples of British television, filmed off-screen at home by an engineer with an 8 mm cine camera. A short section of this footage is used in a programme during the week of the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and this latter programme survives in the BBC's archives.
  • 14 May – The BBC Television Service broadcasts a thirty-minute excerpt of Twelfth Night, the first known instance of a Shakespeare play on television. Among the cast are Greer Garson and Peggy Ashcroft who appears in a 1939 telecast of the entire play.

June

  • 18 June – Broadcast of the Agatha Christie play Wasp's Nest, the only instance of Christie adapting one of her works for television, a medium she later came to dislike.
  • 21 June – Wimbledon Championships (tennis) first shown on the BBC Television Service.

September

  • 16 September – Football is televised for the first time. It is a specially-arranged friendly match between Arsenal and Arsenal Reserves at Highbury.

November

  • 11 November (Armistice Day) – BBC Television devotes the evening to a broadcast of Journey's End by R. C. Sherriff (1928, set on the Western Front (World War I) in 1918), the first full-length television adaptation of a stage play and the first time that a whole evening's programming has been given over to a single play. Reginald Tate plays the lead, Stanhope, a role he has performed extensively in the theatre.

December

  • 31 December – 2,121 television sets have been sold in England.

Debuts

  • 19 January – The Underground Murder Mystery (1937)
  • 12 April – Cabaret Cruise (1937-1939; 1946; 1949)
  • 17 April – The Disorderly Room (1937–1939)
  • 24 April – For the Children (1937–1939, 1946–1952)
  • 14 May - Twelfth Night (1937)
  • 19 May – The School for Scandal (1937)
  • 18 June – Wasp's Nest (1937)
  • 7 July – How He Lied to Her Husband (1937)
  • 21 October – Night Must Fall (1937)
  • 11 November – Journey's End (1937)
  • 14 December – Tele-Ho! (1937)
  • 20 December – The Ghost Train (1937)
  • Unknown – Sports Review (1937)
  • Unknown – Starlight (1937-1939; 1946-1949)

Continuing television shows

1920s

  • BBC Wimbledon (1927–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–present)

1930s

  • Picture Page (1936–1939, 1946–1952)

Births

  • 1 January – Anne Aubrey, actress
  • 7 January – Ian La Frenais, comedy scriptwriter
  • 9 January – Michael Nicholson, journalist (died 2016)
  • 30 January – Vanessa Redgrave, actress
  • 7 February – Peter Jay, economist, broadcaster and diplomat (died 2024)
  • 25 February – Tom Courtenay, actor
  • 8 March – Justine Lord, actress
  • 27 March – Alan Hawkshaw, theme tune composer (died 2021)
  • 9 April – Valerie Singleton, presenter
  • 11 April – Jill Gascoine, actress and novelist (died 2020)
  • 26 April – Gareth Gwenlan, Welsh-born television comedy producer and executive (died 2016)
  • 1 May – Una Stubbs, actress (died 2021)
  • 12 May – Susan Hampshire, actress
  • 19 May – Pat Roach, actor and wrestler (died 2004)
  • 5 August – Carla Lane, comedy writer (died 2016)
  • 6 August – Barbara Windsor, actress (died 2020)
  • 18 August – Willie Rushton, comedian, actor and writer (died 1996)
  • 20 August – Jim Bowen, comedian and host (died 2018)
  • 2 September – Derek Fowlds, actor (died 2020)
  • 5 September – Dick Clement, comedy scriptwriter
  • 16 September – Bella Emberg, born Sybil Dyke, comedy actress (died 2018)
  • 14 November – Alan J. W. Bell, director and producer (died 2023)
  • 17 November – Peter Cook, comedian and writer (died 1995)
  • 27 November – Rodney Bewes, actor (died 2017)
  • 29 November – Ingrid Pitt, actress (died 2010)
  • 20 December – Charles Denton, producer
  • 29 December – Barbara Steele, actress
  • Brian Cooke, scriptwriter
  • Geoffrey Hinsliff, actor (died 2024)

References

References

  1. Fisher, David. (2011-12-30). "1937". Terra Media.
  2. "BBC Television - 21 January 1937 - BBC Genome".
  3. (11 April 1937). "Television". The Observer.
  4. "Wimbledon and the BBC 1927–2017". BBC.
  5. (16 September 2002). "Happened on this day – 16 September". BBC Sport.
  6. (1937-11-12). "Televised Drama; ''Journey's End''". [[The Times]].
  7. Vahimagi, Tise. (1994). "British Television: An Illustrated Guide". Oxford University Press; [[British Film Institute]].
  8. (11 December 2020). "Obituary: Dame Barbara Windsor".
  9. "Jim Bowen obituary".
  10. (28 January 2018). "Bella Emberg: Actress who became a comedy hero thanks to Blunder Woman".
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