1970 in British television explained
This is a list of British television related events from 1970.
Events
January
February
March
April
- 6 April – HTV starts broadcasting in colour from the Wenvoe transmitting station and from this day, the station becomes known on air as HTV rather than Harlech Television.
- 18 April - The Home International football match between Northern Ireland and Scotland at Windsor Park is the first match featuring either nation to be televised in colour, covered by ITV cameras for all broadcasters. Wales also receive their first colour coverage, from BBC cameras, as they host England at Ninian Park.[6]
May
- 31 May–21 June – ITV introduces a studio panel, joining presenters Brian Moore and Jimmy Hill to analyse the latest action in the 1970 World Cup. This is the first time a studio panel of pundits had been used as part of UK sporting coverage.
June
- 18 June – General election results are shown on BBC1 and ITN in colour for the first time.
July
- 8 July – Jack Walker dies off-screen of a heart attack in Coronation Street as a result of the death of actor Arthur Leslie. Jack becomes the first major character to be written out due to the death of an actor.
- 16–25 July – The BBC covers the 1970 Commonwealth Games with the afternoon events broadcast live, resulting in approximately three hours a day of live coverage each day plus a highlights programme broadcast at 8pm during the week.
- 17 July – Tyne Tees Television starts broadcasting in colour from the Pontop Pike transmitting station.
August
- 3 August – The UK's final 405-lines television transmitter is switched on at Newhaven, East Sussex. All future transmitters are at the higher definition 625-lines.
- 6 August – A BBC2 broadcast of Christopher Marlowe's 16th century drama Edward II features the first same-sex kiss on British television, between Ian McKellen (as Edward) and James Laurenson (as Piers Gaveston, Edward's favourite).[7]
- 19 August – ITV airs what is billed as the 1000th episode of Coronation Street. A souvenir edition of TVTimes is also published for the episode, even though it is in fact, the 999th.
- August – Yorkshire and Tyne Tees Television announce plans to merge when the two are brought under the control of Trident Television Limited, a company formed to deal with the problem of effective ownership of the Bilsdale UHF transmitter and the allocation of airtime.
September
- 12 September – ITV broadcast the children's sitcom Here Come the Double Deckers.
- 14 September
- Ulster Television launches a colour service, but only from the Divis transmitting station. To mark the change, the logo is redesigned.
- The first colour edition of Blue Peter is aired on BBC1, but the last black and white edition will be transmitted on 24 June 1974. The programme alternates between colour and black and white depending on studio allocation.
- The Nine O'Clock News is first broadcast on BBC1. The programme airs until 13 October 2000 when the station's main evening bulletin is switched to 10pm.
- 16 September – Gerry Anderson's live action science fiction series UFO airs on ITV.
- 17 September – The hugely popular Hanna-Barbera cartoon show Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? makes its first UK television appearance on BBC1.
- 18 September – London Weekend Television launches its famous river ident.[8]
- 19 September – The American cartoon series The Pink Panther Show makes its debut on BBC1.
October
November
December
- 9 December – 10th anniversary of the first episode of Coronation Street.
- 10 December – BBC1 show the acclaimed folk horror drama Robin Redbreast, as part of the Play for Today series, however a power outage blacks out the ending of the broadcast in many areas, resulting in the BBC reshowing the drama on 25th February 1971.
- 17 December – British television premiere of the film Summer Holiday starring Cliff Richard shown on BBC1.
- 25 December – Pluto's Christmas Tree is broadcast on BBC1, the first complete Mickey Mouse cartoon to be shown on British television in colour.
- 28 December – ITV show a Charlie Brown cartoon for the first time in the UK, with A Charlie Brown Christmas.
Undated
Debuts
BBC1
BBC2
ITV
Television shows
Returning this year after a break of one year or longer
Continuing television shows
1920s
- BBC Wimbledon (1927–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–2024)
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
Ending this year
Births
- 8 February – Glenn Hugill, actor, presenter and producer
- 10 February – Robert Shearman, broadcast scriptwriter
- 14 February – Simon Pegg, comedian, writer and actor
- 7 March
- 29 March – Ruth England, presenter and actress
- 3 April – Lucy Alexander, presenter
- 5 April – Krishnan Guru-Murthy, journalist and presenter
- 9 April – Tricia Penrose, actress and singer
- 10 May – Sally Phillips, Hong Kong-born English comedy actress
- 15 May – Nicola Walker, actress
- 20 May – Louis Theroux, presenter and author
- 22 May – Naomi Campbell, model (The Face)
- 18 June – Katie Derham, newsreader and television presenter
- 25 June – Lucy Benjamin, actress
- 7 July – Zoë Tyler, singer and actress
- 10 July – John Simm, actor
- 13 July – Sharon Horgan, English-born Irish comedy writer-performer
- 29 July – Andi Peters, presenter and producer
- 4 August – Kate Silverton, journalist, newsreader and television presenter
- 7 August – Melanie Sykes, presenter
- 5 September – Johnny Vegas, actor and comedian
- 6 September – Emily Maitlis, journalist and newsreader
- 13 September – Louise Lombard, actress
- 28 September – Jo Wyatt, actress, voice actress and singer
- 29 September – Emily Lloyd, actress
- 31 October – Craig Kelly, actor
- 12 November – Harvey Spencer Stephens, child actor
- 22 November – Stel Pavlou, novelist and screenwriter
- 23 November – Zoe Ball, television and radio presenter
- 28 November
- 10 December – Susanna Reid, journalist and television presenter
- 13 December – Jesse Armstrong, screenwriter
- 17 December – Craig Doyle, broadcast presenter
- 21 December – Jamie Theakston, broadcast presenter and producer
- 29 December – Aled Jones, singer and presenter
- Unknown – Jenny Scott, journalist and economist
Deaths
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: A Question of Sport . History of the BBC . BBC . 2 May 2023.
- Roger. Hancock. Kirsten. Forrest. The Open University at Alexandra Palace. Hornsey Historical Society Bulletin. 63. 2022. 17–23.
- Web site: Omnibus: Dance of the Seven Veils – BBC One – 15 February 1970 . BBC . BBC Genome . 15 February 1970 . 1 March 2020.
- News: Banned Dance of the Seven Veils gets second airing . BBC News . BBC . 29 February 2020 . 1 March 2020.
- Web site: Search .
- 1969/70 - Wales v England (Home International - 18.4.70) . 2023-01-23 . Classic Football Matches + . 2024-06-07 . YouTube.
- Web site: LGBTQ+ Timeline. History of the BBC. BBC. 2020-02-24.
- Web site: Ident Central" LWT 1970–1986 . 2019-02-17 . 2019-02-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190218081851/https://identcentral.co.uk/idents/itv/itv-regions/london-weekend-television/lwt-1970-1986/ . dead .
- Mark Duguid "Armchair Theatre (1956–74)", BFI screenonline
- Web site: What the Papers Say in pictures . The Guardian . 2 April 2022 . 29 May 2008.
- Web site: Dad's Army . www.bbc.com . 11 February 2022 . en.