1972 in British television explained
This is a list of British television related events from 1972.
Events
January
- 19 January – The government of Edward Heath announces the lifting of all restrictions on broadcasting hours on television and radio.
- 30 January – Bob Monkhouse ends his first run as host of ATV's The Golden Shot after being dismissed for allegedly taking bribes for product placement. He is initially replaced by Norman Vaughan.
February
- 14 February – The children's show Fingerbobs is first shown on BBC1. Although only 13 episodes are produced, it would be regularly repeated on the BBC until 1984.
March
April
- 4 April
- BBC1 launches the children's news programme Newsround with the presenter John Craven who would host it until 1989.
- After a three-year courtship, Emily Nugent marries Ernest Bishop on Coronation Street.
- 14 April – Hosted by Chris Kelly, Clapperboard, the long-running cinema themed children's programme makes its debut on ITV.
- 18 April – ITV Anglia begins showing the first series (following two previous TV movies) of the American detective series Columbo, starring Peter Falk as the titular "Lieutenant Frank Columbo" in the episode "Murder by the Book". Other ITV regions commence broadcasting the series shortly after.
May
June
- 1 June
- 9 June – ITV Midlands show the 1958 Hammer Horror film Dracula ahead of other ITV regions.
- 14-18 June - ITV covers the finals of football's UEFA European Championship for the first time.[1]
July
August
- 25 August – ITV Midlands show the 1957 Hammer Horror film The Curse of Frankenstein ahead of other ITV regions; it stars Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee.
- 26 August–11 September – The BBC and ITV broadcast full coverage of the 1972 Summer Olympic Games with the BBC providing approximately eight hours a day of live coverage each day.
September
- 8 September – The department store-based comedy series Are You Being Served? makes its debut on BBC1. It becomes one of the longest-running BBC comedy shows and goes on to spawn a 1977 British feature film and the spin-off series Grace & Favour which begins in 1992.
- 11 September
- The long-running quiz show Mastermind airs for the first time on BBC1, hosted by Magnus Magnusson.
- Nationwide starts broadcasting five days a week. Previously, it has been broadcast only on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
- After eight years of episodes being shown different days at various ITV regions, Crossroads finally gets broadcast across the network with Granada Television showing it for the first time. The series is still being shown at different times across the regions.
- 17 September – The family adventure series The Adventures of Black Beauty is broadcast on ITV.
October
- 1 October – London Weekend Television launches the UK's first Sunday politics programme Weekend World. It runs until 1988.
- 2 October – Following the lifting of restrictions on broadcasting hours, BBC1 and ITV are allowed to begin broadcasting during the day. BBC1's afternoon schedule launches with the first edition of a new lunchtime magazine programme Pebble Mill at One.
- 16 October – ITV launches its afternoon service. As part of the new service, the first episode of rural soap opera Emmerdale Farm is broadcast, produced by Yorkshire Television and ITV's first lunchtime news programme, First Report, is shown. ITV Schools is now shown in a single morning block, between the hours of 9:30am and 12pm.
- 23 October – The BBC announces that development work has begun on the Ceefax teletext service.
November
- 5 November – BBC2 begins showing the horror anthology series Dead of Night with the episode "The Exorcism".
- 12 November – ITV airs the first episode of the influential children's programme Rainbow, featuring the characters "Zippy", "George" and "Bungle the Bear". It would run until 1992.
December
Unknown
- The application of NICAM to broadcasting is first described in a BBC Research Report.[2]
- The BBC Schools and Colleges service is converted to colour and starts using the Diamond ident which stays until 1977.
- The UK's Minister for Posts and Telecommunications authorises five experimental community cable television channels.[3]
- London Weekend Television opens its purpose-built studios called The London Studios although they are not fully operational until 1974.
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–present)
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
Ending this year
Births
- 4 January – Charlotte Hudson, English actress
- 9 January – Sarah Beeny, property developer and television presenter
- 12 January – Sid Owen, actor
- 15 January – Claudia Winkleman, television presenter
- 23 January
- 10 February – Helen Willetts, BBC weather presenter
- 19 February – Lisa Faulkner, actress
- 22 February – Jo Guest, glamour model and media personality
- 24 February – James Bachman, comedian, actor and writer
- 27 March – Ben Richards, actor (The Bill)
- 3 April – Catherine McCormack, English actress
- 22 April – Sarah Patterson, actress
- 28 April – Anita Anand, journalist and television presenter
- 3 May – Katya Adler, broadcast journalist
- 19 May – Amanda de Cadenet, television presenter, actress and photographer
- 20 May
- 26 May – Patsy Palmer, actress and television presenter
- 4 June — Debra Stephenson, actress
- 7 July – Liza Walker, actress
- 19 July – Amanda Lamb, model and television presenter
- 7 August – Sarah Cawood, television presenter
- 9 September – Natasha Kaplinsky, newsreader
- 12 September – Gideon Emery, actor
- 24 September
- 29 September – Robert Webb, comic actor
- 22 October – Saffron Burrows, actress and model
- 2 November – Samantha Womack, actress
- 6 November – Thandiwe Newton, actress
- 8 November – Ben Hull, actor
- 14 December – Miranda Hart, comic actress
- 18 December – Melissa Porter, television presenter
- 21 December – Gloria De Piero, broadcast political presenter and politician
- Unknown – Sarah Tansey, actress (Heartbeat)
Deaths
- 22 September – Val Parnell, 80, television executive and presenter, previously theatrical impresario
- 16 October – Leo G. Carroll, 85, actor (The Man from U.N.C.L.E.)
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: itv football 1968-1983 - League results by club . 2024-06-02 . carousel.royalwebhosting.net.
- Osborne, D. W. (1972) Digital sound signals: further investigation of instantaneous and other rapid companding systems. BBC Research Dept. Report 1972/31.
- Book: Panaceas and Promises of Democratic Participation: Reactions to new channels, from the wireless to the World Wide Web . Rod . Allen . Nod . Miller . Technology and In/equality: Questioning the Information Society . Flis . Henwood . Nod . Miller . Peter . Senker . Sally . Wyatt . Sally Wyatt . Routledge . 2002 . 9780203134504 . 52–53.
- Web site: Newsround - Celebrating 50 Years . BBC News . 2 April 2022.
- 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.