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1974 in British television

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List of years in British television (table)
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This is a list of British television related events from 1974.

Events

  • 5 January – Tiswas starts as a local programme in the Midlands (on ATV), but the show wasn't fully automatically networked through ITV until 1979.
  • 12 February – BBC2 first aired the children's television series Bagpuss, made by Peter Firmin and Oliver Postgate's Smallfilms in stop motion animation.
  • 6 April – The 19th Eurovision Song Contest is held at the Dome in Brighton, produced and transmitted by the BBC. Katie Boyle hosts the event for the fourth time. Sweden wins the contest with the song "Waterloo", performed by ABBA, who become the first group to win the Contest. They go on to achieve huge international success.
  • 8 June – Jon Pertwee makes his final regular appearance as the Third Doctor in the concluding moments of Part Six of the Doctor Who serial Planet of the Spiders. Tom Baker briefly appears as the Fourth Doctor at the conclusion of this serial.
  • 5 August – For the first time on a pre-school children's programme, the show Inigo Pipkin covers the death of the main character, Inigo, as the actor who played him (George Woodbridge) had died. The show is renamed Pipkins.
  • 23 September – The BBC teletext service Ceefax goes live with 30 pages of information.
  • 16 October – The Welsh language soap Pobol y Cwm makes its debut on BBC Wales.[1]
  • 5 December – Party Political Broadcast, the final episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, is broadcast on BBC2.
  • 28 December – Tom Baker makes his first full appearance as the Fourth Doctor in the Doctor Who serial Robot.
  • Unknown – ITV begins developing the ORACLE teletext service. Dates for its launch are unclear, but it became popular around 1980.

Debuts

BBC 1

BBC 2

ITV

Television shows

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

Ending this year

Births

Deaths

References

  1. ^ McCrum, Kirstie (10 October 2014). "40 Pobol y Cwm facts to mark 40 years of the S4C and BBC soap". The Western Mail. Trinity Mirror. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  2. ^ Mark Duguid "Armchair Theatre (1956–74)", BFI screenonline