The Appleyards

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The Appleyards was a British television soap opera for children, made and transmitted fortnightly (every two weeks) by BBC Television from October 1952 to April 1957, from the BBC's Lime Grove Studios. It was produced and directed by Naomi Capon.[1]

Transmitted live on a Thursday afternoon from 4:30 to 5 p.m. with a Sunday repeat (which was not usually a recorded repeat of the first show but the same cast repeating a live performance). The programme told the story of the Home Counties family Mr and Mrs Appleyard and their three children: John, Margaret, and Tommy. They were usually accompanied by their neighbor and best friend Ronnie Grant.

The last episode finished with Mrs. Appleyard and Tommy sitting on a porter's trolley at the end of a railway platform, when she announced that as most of the family were now grown up it was time to end the series. It was of its time but also a ground breaking family sitcom, popular with both adults and children alike but particularly the latter who saw it as embodiment of their own family. The catchy light music signature tune came from the Chappell Record Library and was called "Looking Around" by Colin Smith (real name is Rhys Donald Lloyd Thomas), recorded by conductor Robert Farnon.

A reunion programme, "Christmas with the Appleyards", went out at Christmas 1960.[2]

Archive status

In the show's first year (1952) the episodes were aired live and never recorded, thus no episodes from the 1952 season exist. From 1953, the episodes were telerecorded, but the BBC ended up wiping most of them. Only one episode (entitled "Family Treat" and originally aired on December 29, 1956) of the entire run of 68 exists in television archives as of 2017, and can be found on YouTube.

References

  1. ^ "Appleyards, The (1952-57, 1960)". Screenonline. Retrieved 14 January 2015.
  2. ^ Appleyards

External links

  • [1] The Appleyards at Television Heaven