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List of years in television: Difference between revisions

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*'''[[1953 in television|1953]]''': First broadcast of ''[[Panorama (TV series)|Panorama]]''; the [[Coronation of the British monarch|coronation]] of [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II]] is the first of its kind to be broadcast on television; the first U.S. telecast of ''[[Hamlet]]'' takes place on NBC, starring actor [[Maurice Evans (actor)|Maurice Evans]] and running two hours; ''[[You Are There (series)|You Are There]]'' moves from radio to TV, now hosted by [[Walter Cronkite]] on CBS; the [[Academy Awards]] ceremony is telecast for the first time; ''[[Topper (TV series)|Topper]]'', a TV [[sitcom]] inspired by [[Topper (film)|the 1937 film of the same name]], premieres on CBS, with [[Leo G. Carroll]], [[Robert Sterling]], and [[Anne Jeffreys]] playing the roles made famous by [[Roland Young]], [[Cary Grant]], and [[Constance Bennett]]. It runs two years.
*'''[[1953 in television|1953]]''': First broadcast of ''[[Panorama (TV series)|Panorama]]''; the [[Coronation of the British monarch|coronation]] of [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II]] is the first of its kind to be broadcast on television; the first U.S. telecast of ''[[Hamlet]]'' takes place on NBC, starring actor [[Maurice Evans (actor)|Maurice Evans]] and running two hours; ''[[You Are There (series)|You Are There]]'' moves from radio to TV, now hosted by [[Walter Cronkite]] on CBS; the [[Academy Awards]] ceremony is telecast for the first time; ''[[Topper (TV series)|Topper]]'', a TV [[sitcom]] inspired by [[Topper (film)|the 1937 film of the same name]], premieres on CBS, with [[Leo G. Carroll]], [[Robert Sterling]], and [[Anne Jeffreys]] playing the roles made famous by [[Roland Young]], [[Cary Grant]], and [[Constance Bennett]]. It runs two years.
*'''[[1954 in television|1954]]''': First broadcast of ''[[The Tonight Show]]'', Walt Disney's [[Disney anthology television series| television show]] begins airing on ABC in black-and-white, though many of the programs are made in color, the anthology ''[[Producers' Showcase]]'', which features both adaptations of plays and musicals as well as documentaries, premieres in color on NBC and is telecast every three weeks: many classical music arists make their first network television appearance on this program; ''[[Face the Nation]]'' premieres and is still running sixty years later; [[NTSC]] video standard for [[color television]] is introduced, and [[National Educational Television]] (NET), the ancestor of PBS, is launched; the first filmed musical version of ''A Christmas Carol'', starring [[Fredric March]] as Scrooge and [[Basil Rathbone]] as Marley's Ghost, airs in color on CBS's anthology, ''[[Shower of Stars]]''; neither March nor Rathbone have ever acted on television; this is one of CBS's first color broadcasts. It will be repeated twice in later years. [[Leonard Bernstein]] appears on television for the first time, in a lecture on [[Symphony No. 5 (Beethoven)|Beethoven's Fifth Symphony]] that is telecast on the program ''[[Omnibus (U.S. TV series)|Omnibus]]''. The lecture makes such an impact that it is still talked about more than fifty years later; Bernstein will make more appearances on ''Omnibus'' between 1954 and 1958; ''[[Lassie (1954 TV series)|Lassie]]'' premieres and begins a nineteen-year run on television; its casts change over the years, but the basic premise does not; in a critical analysis telecast on ''[[See It Now]]'', [[Edward R. Murrow]] demolishes the tactics of Senator [[Joseph McCarthy]] during his witchhunt for Communists in the US; the McCarthy hearings begin; [[Maurice Evans (actor)|Maurice Evans]] and [[Judith Anderson]] bring their famous ''[[Macbeth]]'' to television in a live ''[[Hallmark Hall of Fame]]'' production on NBC; the 1954 ''[[Tournament of Roses Parade]]'' becomes the first parade ever telecast in color; a live, somewhat revised version of [[Victor Herbert]]'s ''[[Babes in Toyland (operetta)|Babes in Toyland]]'' is telecast as a special.
*'''[[1954 in television|1954]]''': First broadcast of ''[[The Tonight Show]]'', Walt Disney's [[Disney anthology television series| television show]] begins airing on ABC in black-and-white, though many of the programs are made in color, the anthology ''[[Producers' Showcase]]'', which features both adaptations of plays and musicals as well as documentaries, premieres in color on NBC and is telecast every three weeks: many classical music arists make their first network television appearance on this program; ''[[Face the Nation]]'' premieres and is still running sixty years later; [[NTSC]] video standard for [[color television]] is introduced, and [[National Educational Television]] (NET), the ancestor of PBS, is launched; the first filmed musical version of ''A Christmas Carol'', starring [[Fredric March]] as Scrooge and [[Basil Rathbone]] as Marley's Ghost, airs in color on CBS's anthology, ''[[Shower of Stars]]''; neither March nor Rathbone have ever acted on television; this is one of CBS's first color broadcasts. It will be repeated twice in later years. [[Leonard Bernstein]] appears on television for the first time, in a lecture on [[Symphony No. 5 (Beethoven)|Beethoven's Fifth Symphony]] that is telecast on the program ''[[Omnibus (U.S. TV series)|Omnibus]]''. The lecture makes such an impact that it is still talked about more than fifty years later; Bernstein will make more appearances on ''Omnibus'' between 1954 and 1958; ''[[Lassie (1954 TV series)|Lassie]]'' premieres and begins a nineteen-year run on television; its casts change over the years, but the basic premise does not; in a critical analysis telecast on ''[[See It Now]]'', [[Edward R. Murrow]] demolishes the tactics of Senator [[Joseph McCarthy]] during his witchhunt for Communists in the US; the McCarthy hearings begin; [[Maurice Evans (actor)|Maurice Evans]] and [[Judith Anderson]] bring their famous ''[[Macbeth]]'' to television in a live ''[[Hallmark Hall of Fame]]'' production on NBC; the 1954 ''[[Tournament of Roses Parade]]'' becomes the first parade ever telecast in color; a live, somewhat revised version of [[Victor Herbert]]'s ''[[Babes in Toyland (operetta)|Babes in Toyland]]'' is telecast as a special.
*'''[[1955 in television|1955]]''': First broadcast of ''[[The Honeymooners]]'', ''[[Alfred Hitchcock Presents]]'' and ''[[Gunsmoke]]'', which becomes the longest-running TV Western ever made (nineteen years); [[ITV (TV network)|ITV]] launches in the UK; ''[[Captain Kangaroo]]'' premieres on CBS and becomes the most successful network children's morning show until ''[[Sesame Street]]'', running for twenty-nine years; the first live broadcast of the 1954 Broadway musical ''[[Peter Pan (1954 musical)|Peter Pan]]'', with [[Mary Martin]], is telecast on ''Producers' Showcase'', becomes the highest rated television program up to then and is restaged live, by popular demand, less than a year later; [[Tchaikovsky]]'s ballet ''[[The Sleeping Beauty (ballet)|The Sleeping Beauty]]'' is telecast for the first time in a 90-minute version on ''Producers Showcase'' that stars [[Margot Fonteyn]]; ''[[Famous Film Festival]]'' shows commercial network telecasts of British films on U.S. TV, but many are either severely cut or divided into two segments; the series lasts only one season; the first incarnation of ''[[The Mickey Mouse Club]]'' premieres on ABC daytime TV; it makes [[Annette Funicello]] famous; [[Jose Ferrer]] reprises his Tony and Oscar-winning role as ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac]]'' in a 90-minute live version of the play on NBC's ''Producers' Showcase'', with [[Claire Bloom]] as Roxane; [[Frank Sinatra]] stars in a musical version of [[Thornton Wilder]]'s ''[[Our Town]]'', presented on ''Producers' Showcase''. In a daring move for its time, CBS's anthology ''[[Camera Three]]'' telecasts a one-hour version of Shakespeare's ''[[Othello]]'' with African-American actor [[Earle Hyman]] in the title role.
*'''[[1955 in television|1955]]''': First broadcast of ''[[The Honeymooners]]'', ''[[Alfred Hitchcock Presents]]'' and ''[[Gunsmoke]]'', which becomes the longest-running TV Western ever made (nineteen years); [[ITV (TV network)|ITV]] launches in the UK; ''[[Captain Kangaroo]]'' premieres on CBS and becomes the most successful network children's morning show until ''[[Sesame Street]]'', running for twenty-nine years; the first live broadcast of the 1954 Broadway musical ''[[Peter Pan (1954 musical)|Peter Pan]]'', with [[Mary Martin]], is telecast on ''Producers' Showcase'', becomes the highest rated television program up to then and is restaged live, by popular demand, less than a year later; [[Tchaikovsky]]'s ballet ''[[The Sleeping Beauty (ballet)|The Sleeping Beauty]]'' is telecast for the first time in a 90-minute version on ''Producers Showcase'' that stars [[Margot Fonteyn]]; ''[[Famous Film Festival]]'' shows commercial network telecasts of British films on U.S. TV, but many are either severely cut or divided into two segments; the series lasts only one season; the first incarnation of ''[[The Mickey Mouse Club]]'' premieres on ABC daytime TV; it makes [[Annette Funicello]] famous; [[Jose Ferrer]] reprises his Tony and Oscar-winning role as ''[[Cyrano de Bergerac]]'' in a 90-minute live version of the play on NBC's ''Producers' Showcase'', with [[Claire Bloom]] as Roxane; [[Frank Sinatra]] stars in a musical version of [[Thornton Wilder]]'s ''[[Our Town]]'', presented on ''Producers' Showcase''. In a daring move for its time, CBS's anthology ''[[Camera Three]]'' telecasts a one-hour version of Shakespeare's ''[[Othello]]'' with African-American actor [[Earle Hyman]] in the title role. ''[[MGM Parade]]'' premieres on [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]; it is the first television series to show clips and behind-the-scenes stories of MGM's old films. Among their offerings is a condensed version of [[A Christmas Carol (1938 film)|the 1938 film version of "A Christmas Carol"]]. The series runs for only one season.
*'''[[1956 in television|1956]]''': First broadcast of ''[[The Edge of Night]]'', ''[[As the World Turns]]'', ''[[The Price is Right]]'', ''[[Playhouse 90]]'', the [[Eurovision Song Contest]], ''[[Hancock's Half Hour]]'' and the 1939 theatrical film ''[[The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)|The Wizard of Oz]]'', the first Hollywood film to be telecast uncut over an entire network (CBS) in prime time. The original, live-action version of ''[[The Stingiest Man in Town]]'' is telecast live during the Christmas season. Basil Rathbone stars in his only singing role, this time as Scrooge; [[Laurence Olivier]]'s two-and-a-half hour ''[[Hamlet (1948 film)|Hamlet]]'' (1948) makes its television debut on ABC, split into two segments telecast a week apart; a slightly edited version of Olivier's ''[[Richard III (1955 film)|Richard III]]'' (1955) makes its television debut in what was a novel experiment for the time: on the same day that it is telecast, the film makes its U.S. theatrical debut; the ''[[Huntley-Brinkley Report]]'', a newscast featuring two anchormen, [[Chet Huntley]] and [[David Brinkley]], premieres on NBC and becomes the most popular evening newscast for the next seven years; the [[DuMont Television Network]] goes off the air; ''[[The Dinah Shore Chevy Show]]'', a variety series, premieres on NBC and runs seven years; in another landslide win, Eisenhower is re-elected U.S. President, defeating [[Adlai Stevenson]], who first ran against him in 1952, a second time.
*'''[[1956 in television|1956]]''': First broadcast of ''[[The Edge of Night]]'', ''[[As the World Turns]]'', ''[[The Price is Right]]'', ''[[Playhouse 90]]'', the [[Eurovision Song Contest]], ''[[Hancock's Half Hour]]'' and MGM's 1939 theatrical film ''[[The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)|The Wizard of Oz]]'', the first Hollywood film to be telecast uncut over an entire network (CBS) in prime time. The original, live-action version of ''[[The Stingiest Man in Town]]'' is telecast live during the Christmas season. Basil Rathbone stars in his only singing role, this time as Scrooge; [[Laurence Olivier]]'s two-and-a-half hour ''[[Hamlet (1948 film)|Hamlet]]'' (1948) makes its television debut on ABC, split into two segments telecast a week apart; a slightly edited version of Olivier's ''[[Richard III (1955 film)|Richard III]]'' (1955) makes its television debut in what was a novel experiment for the time: on the same day that it is telecast, the film makes its U.S. theatrical debut; the ''[[Huntley-Brinkley Report]]'', a newscast featuring two anchormen, [[Chet Huntley]] and [[David Brinkley]], premieres on NBC and becomes the most popular evening newscast for the next seven years; the [[DuMont Television Network]] goes off the air; ''[[The Dinah Shore Chevy Show]]'', a variety series, premieres on NBC and runs seven years; in another landslide win, Eisenhower is re-elected U.S. President, defeating [[Adlai Stevenson]], who first ran against him in 1952, a second time.
*'''[[1957 in television|1957]]''': First broadcast of Rodgers and Hammerstein's ''[[Cinderella (musical)|Cinderella]]'', on CBS, the made-for-TV film musical ''[[The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957 film)|The Pied Piper of Hamelin]]'' on NBC, ''[[Leave It to Beaver]]'', ''[[Senda prohibida]]'' and ''[[Carosello]]''; [[Arturo Toscanini]] dies; [[Brazil]] is the first [[South America]]n country to receive TV; a one-hour production of Tchaikovsky's ''[[The Nutcracker]]'' on the CBS program ''[[The Seven Lively Arts]]'' is the first version of the ballet to be telecast; ''Producer's Showcase'' telecasts a two-hour version of Shakespeare's ''[[Romeo and Juliet]]'' with the [[Old Vic]] company; [[Claire Bloom]] plays Juliet and [[John Neville (actor)|John Neville]] is Romeo;''[[Twentieth Century (TV series)|The Twentieth Century]]'', a weekly, half-hour documentary series which concentrates on important world subjects and consists largely of old newsreel footage, premieres on CBS, hosted by [[Walter Cronkite]]. It runs for nine years; two years after opening on Broadway, [[Jean Anouilh]]'s Joan of Arc play ''[[The Lark]]'' comes to television on the ''Hallmark Hall of Fame'' with its original star, [[Julie Harris]].
*'''[[1957 in television|1957]]''': First broadcast of Rodgers and Hammerstein's ''[[Cinderella (musical)|Cinderella]]'', on CBS, the made-for-TV film musical ''[[The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957 film)|The Pied Piper of Hamelin]]'' on NBC, ''[[Leave It to Beaver]]'', ''[[Senda prohibida]]'' and ''[[Carosello]]''; [[Arturo Toscanini]] dies; [[Brazil]] is the first [[South America]]n country to receive TV; a one-hour production of Tchaikovsky's ''[[The Nutcracker]]'' on the CBS program ''[[The Seven Lively Arts]]'' is the first version of the ballet to be telecast; ''Producer's Showcase'' telecasts a two-hour version of Shakespeare's ''[[Romeo and Juliet]]'' with the [[Old Vic]] company; [[Claire Bloom]] plays Juliet and [[John Neville (actor)|John Neville]] is Romeo;''[[Twentieth Century (TV series)|The Twentieth Century]]'', a weekly, half-hour documentary series which concentrates on important world subjects and consists largely of old newsreel footage, premieres on CBS, hosted by [[Walter Cronkite]]. It runs for nine years; two years after opening on Broadway, [[Jean Anouilh]]'s Joan of Arc play ''[[The Lark]]'' comes to television on the ''Hallmark Hall of Fame'' with its original star, [[Julie Harris]].
*'''[[1958 in television|1958]]''': First broadcast of ''[[Blue Peter]]'', ''[[Quatermass and the Pit]]'', ''[[The Donna Reed Show]]'' and ''[[Moonlight Mask]]''; the [[quiz show scandals]] wipe out ''[[The $64,000 Question]]'' and ''[[Twenty One (game show)|Twenty One]]''; the [[New York Philharmonic]] ''[[Young People's Concerts]]'', with [[Leonard Bernstein]], begin to air on CBS Television. Three or four ''Young People's Concerts'' a year are given, all on CBS, for the next fourteen years, becoming television's first long-running educational series on classical music; [[Laurence Olivier]] makes his television debut starring in a production of [[Henrik Ibsen]]'s ''[[John Gabriel Borkman]]''; in a casting coup, [[Alfred Drake]] and [[Patricia Morison]] reprise their 1948 Broadway roles in a ''[[Hallmark Hall of Fame]]'' production of ''[[Kiss Me, Kate]]''; the most complete version of ''[[The Nutcracker]]'' telecast up to then is staged in color on ''[[Playhouse 90]]''; it is the [[George Balanchine]] version, with [[Bonnie Bedelia]] in an early role as Clara. At the same time, a British production with the [[Sadler's Wells Ballet]] is telecast in England, starring [[Margot Fonteyn]]; the syndicated series about a scuba driver, ''[[Sea Hunt]]'', premieres and is a smash hit; it turns [[Lloyd Bridges]] into a television star; the original ''[[Concentration (game show)|Concentration]]'' premieres on NBC and become the longest running game show on that network, running fifteen years. Other versions of the game appear in later years; ''[[Shirley Temple's Storybook]]'', an anthology series hosted by Temple, and sometimes starring her, premieres on NBC. The series presents one-hour versions of classic fantasies, adventure stories, and in one case, an operetta (''Babes in Toyland''), all featuring stars such as [[Charlton Heston]], [[John Raitt]], [[Eric Portman]], [[Agnes Moorehead]], [[Jonathan Winters]]. It stays on NBC one year, then moves to [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]].
*'''[[1958 in television|1958]]''': First broadcast of ''[[Blue Peter]]'', ''[[Quatermass and the Pit]]'', ''[[The Donna Reed Show]]'' and ''[[Moonlight Mask]]''; the [[quiz show scandals]] wipe out ''[[The $64,000 Question]]'' and ''[[Twenty One (game show)|Twenty One]]''; the [[New York Philharmonic]] ''[[Young People's Concerts]]'', with [[Leonard Bernstein]], begin to air on CBS Television. Three or four ''Young People's Concerts'' a year are given, all on CBS, for the next fourteen years, becoming television's first long-running educational series on classical music; [[Laurence Olivier]] makes his television debut starring in a production of [[Henrik Ibsen]]'s ''[[John Gabriel Borkman]]''; in a casting coup, [[Alfred Drake]] and [[Patricia Morison]] reprise their 1948 Broadway roles in a ''[[Hallmark Hall of Fame]]'' production of ''[[Kiss Me, Kate]]''; the most complete version of ''[[The Nutcracker]]'' telecast up to then is staged in color on ''[[Playhouse 90]]''; it is the [[George Balanchine]] version, with [[Bonnie Bedelia]] in an early role as Clara. At the same time, a British production with the [[Sadler's Wells Ballet]] is telecast in England, starring [[Margot Fonteyn]]; the syndicated series about a scuba driver, ''[[Sea Hunt]]'', premieres and is a smash hit; it turns [[Lloyd Bridges]] into a television star; the original ''[[Concentration (game show)|Concentration]]'' premieres on NBC and become the longest running game show on that network, running fifteen years. Other versions of the game appear in later years; ''[[Shirley Temple's Storybook]]'', an anthology series hosted by Temple, and sometimes starring her, premieres on NBC. The series presents one-hour versions of classic fantasies, adventure stories, and in one case, an operetta (''Babes in Toyland''), all featuring stars such as [[Charlton Heston]], [[John Raitt]], [[Eric Portman]], [[Agnes Moorehead]], [[Jonathan Winters]]. It stays on NBC one year, then moves to [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]].

Revision as of 00:14, 28 March 2014

This page indexes the individual year in television pages. Each year is annotated with a significant event as a reference point.

before 1930

1930s

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

See also

References