Jump to content

1968 in British television

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of years in British television (table)
+...

This is a list of British television related events from 1968.


Events

[edit]

January

[edit]
  • 1 January – The colour television licence is introduced when a £5 "colour supplement" is added to the £5 monochrome licence fee, therefore making the cost of a colour licence £10.
  • 5 January – Gardeners' World is broadcast for the first time. The programme would still be running over fifty years later.
  • 13 January – Sooty, Harry Corbett's glove puppet bear, moves from the BBC to ITV following its cancellation the previous year by the controller of BBC1, Paul Fox. A new series would air later in the year and be produced by Thames.[1]

February

[edit]
  • 4 February – Cult series The Prisoner finishes its first run on British television.
  • 5 February – BBC2's Newsroom becomes the first news programme in the UK to be broadcast in colour.[2]
  • 12 February – Children's stop-motion animation The Herbs debuts on BBC1, the first programme under a different production to Gordon Murray Puppets to be filmed in colour.

March

[edit]
  • 4 March – TWW closes. The station has lost its franchise in the previous ITV licensing awards and decided to close 10 weeks early, selling its remaining airtime to HTV for £500,000, however Harlech is not ready to commence transmissions and to fill the gap an interim service, staffed by former TWW staff, is provided until Harlech's launch on 20 May.
  • 11 March – The popular Yugoslavian and West German produced children's series The White Horses is shown on BBC1.

April

[edit]
  • 1 April – Reporting Scotland launches on BBC1 Scotland, replacing A Quick Look Round.
  • 6 April – The 13th Eurovision Song Contest is held at the Royal Albert Hall in London. Spain wins the contest with the song "La, la, la", performed in Spanish by Massiel after Spanish authorities refuse to allow Joan Manuel Serrat to perform it in Catalan. This year marks the first time the event is broadcast in colour, with several European countries transmitting it in colour. Because BBC1 does not yet broadcast in colour, BBC2 airs an encore edition of the show in colour the following day.
  • 15 April – BBC1 airs the network television premiere of Alfred Hitchcock's iconic 1960 horror movie Psycho, starring Anthony Perkins and Janet Leigh.
  • 20 April – Conservative MP Enoch Powell makes his infamous Rivers of Blood speech about immigration and anti-discrimination legislation in the United Kingdom.[3] The speech is made at the Midland Hotel in Birmingham to a meeting of the Conservative Political Centre at 2:30pm. The Birmingham-based television company ATV has seen an advance copy of the speech this morning and its news editor has ordered a television crew to go to the venue where they film sections of the speech. The speech provokes great outcry among the British public, making Powell simultaneously one of the most popular and loathed politicians in the country and leading to his rapid dismissal from the Shadow Cabinet by Conservative party leader Edward Heath.

May

[edit]

June

[edit]
  • 14 June – BBC1 launch the children's show The Basil Brush Show, featuring mischievous puppet fox Basil.

July

[edit]
  • 9 July – American time-travel series The Time Tunnel debuts on BBC1.
  • 28 July – Final day on air for ABC which has broadcast to the North and Midlands regions during weekends. The 1968 contract round sees the end of weekend franchises in these regions. It is also the last day on air for ATV London which loses its weekend franchise to the newly formed London Weekend Television.
  • 29 July – Granada and ATV broadcast seven days a week to the North-West and Midlands respectively. The North is split into two regions with Granada broadcasting to the North-West and Yorkshire Television broadcasting to the Yorkshire region. It is also the last day on air for Rediffusion, London in the London area.
  • 29 and 30 July – ITV shows test cricket for the only time, and only part-networked, when the last two days of the Headingley Test against Australia coincide with the launch of Yorkshire Television. The morning session is the first thing shown on Thames Television, ahead its official opening later that day.[4]
  • 30 July
    • Thames Television goes on air, having taken over the London weekday franchise from Rediffusion, London. Thames is a new joint venture between the respective parent companies of ABC (ABPC, known for the ABC cinema chain) and Rediffusion (British Electric Traction), the ABPC having been awarded the controlling 51% stake in the new London weekday broadcaster but with profits shared equally. Thames's evening news program Today, presented by Eamonn Andrews, features Jamaican Barbara Blake Hannah as the first black news presenter on British television.[5]
    • Children's magazine programme Magpie premieres on ITV.
  • 31 July – Popular sitcom Dad's Army, set in the World War II Home Guard begins its nine-year run on BBC1 with the episode "The Man and the Hour".

August

[edit]
  • 2 August – London Weekend Television takes over the London weekend franchise from ATV. Going on air initially as London Weekend Television, it later adopts the name London Weekend before reverting to its original name (often abbreviated to LWT) in 1978.
  • 3 August – ITV technicians' strike immediately after the 1968 franchise changes.[6] causing a national stoppage.[7] The individual companies are off the air for several weeks and an emergency service is established. The ITV Emergency National Service is presented by management personnel with no regional variations, the first time that a uniform presentation practice has been adopted across all regions.[8] The strike ends on 18 August.
  • 21 August – The BBC's scheduled transmission of the fourth Dad's Army episode is postponed for coverage of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia.[9]

September

[edit]

October

[edit]
  • 12–27 October – The BBC and ITV provide coverage of the 1968 Olympic Games. The BBC's coverage is extensive, with live coverage into the night and a daily breakfast programme Good Morning Mexico. This is also the first time the Games are broadcast in colour, albeit only on BBC2 which simulcasts the majority of BBC1's coverage. This is also the first time that ITV shows the Olympic Games.

November

[edit]

December

[edit]

Debuts

[edit]

BBC1

[edit]

BBC2

[edit]

ITV

[edit]

Television shows

[edit]

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

[edit]
  • Scott On (1964–1965; 1968–1972; 1974)

Continuing television shows

[edit]

1920s

[edit]
  • BBC Wimbledon (1927–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–2024)

1930s

[edit]
  • Trooping the Colour (1937–1939, 1946–2019, 2023–present)
  • The Boat Race (1938–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–present)
  • BBC Cricket (1939, 1946–1999, 2020–2024)

1940s

[edit]

1950s

[edit]

1960s

[edit]

Ending this year

[edit]

Births

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Tucker, Anthony (13 January 2015). "BBC to let Sooty go: from the archive, 13 January 1968". The Guardian. London. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 11 April 2019.
  2. ^ "And now... the news in colour". BBC Genome Blog.
  3. ^ ""1968: Powell slates immigration policy", BBC On This Day". BBC News. 20 April 1968. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  4. ^ Daily Mirror TV listings, page 14, 29 July 1968, and page 14, 30 July 1968
  5. ^ Hannah, Barbara Blake (23 October 2008). "It wasn't Trevor or Moira – I was the first black British TV presenter". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  6. ^ Bowden-Smith, Kif Strike Service Vision On, 1 January 2002, accessed 7 May 2009. Archived 2009-05-09.
  7. ^ Carmody, Robin The Bradshaw of Broadcasting Off the Telly June 2000, accessed 7 May 2009. Archived 2009-05-09.
  8. ^ Alyett, Glenn Strike Out Archived 23 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Talk of Thames, 2005, accessed 7 May 2009
  9. ^ "A Love Affair in a Night of Crisis". Daily Mirror. 22 August 1968. p. 14.
  10. ^ "Weekend Broadcasting", The Times page 14, 7 September 1968
  11. ^ "Enraged cricket fans bombard ITV", Sunday Mirror page 1, 8 September 1968
  12. ^ "Dad's Army". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
  13. ^ Mark Duguid "Armchair Theatre (1956–74)", BFI screenonline
  14. ^ "What the Papers Say in pictures". The Guardian. 29 May 2008. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
[edit]