Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

1937 in television

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The year 1937 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events during 1937.

Contents

Events

  • January 19 – BBC Television broadcasts The Underground Murder Mystery by J. Bissell Thomas from its London station, the first play written for television.
  • February 6 – The BBC Television service discontinues the Baird system in favour of the Marconi-EMI 405 lines system.
  • March 9 – Experimental broadcasting from Shabolovka Ulitsa television center, in Moscow (USSR).
  • May – Gilbert Seldes becomes the first television critic, with his Atlantic Monthly magazine article, the "Errors of Television".
  • May 12 – The BBC use their outside broadcast unit for the first time, to televise the coronation of George VI. A fragment of this broadcast is one of the earliest surviving examples of British television – filmed off-screen at home by an engineer with an 8 mm cine camera. A brief section of this footage was used in a programme during the week of the 1953 coronation of Elizabeth II, and this latter programme survives in the BBC's archives.
  • May 14 – The BBC broadcasts a thirty-minute excerpt of Twelfth Night, the first known instance of a Shakespeare play televised. Among the cast are Peggy Ashcroft and Greer Garson.
  • May 15 – RCA demonstrates projection television, with images enlarged to 8 by 10 feet, at the Institute of Radio Engineers convention.
  • June 21 – Wimbledon Championships (tennis) first televised by the BBC.
  • July 10 – High definition television with 455 lines is first shown in France at the International Exposition, Paris.
  • September – High definition television broadcasts are sent from a new 30 kW (peak power) transmitter below the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
  • November 9 – Bell Telephone Laboratories transmits television signal of 800 kHz bandwidth on a coaxial cable laid between New York and Philadelphia.
  • November 11 (Armistice Day) – BBC Television devotes the evening to a broadcast of Journey's End by R. C. Sherriff (1928, set on the Western Front (World War I) in 1918), the first full-length television adaptation of a stage play. Reginald Tate plays the lead, Stanhope, a rôle he has performed extensively in the theatre.
  • December 31 – By this time, 2,121 television sets have been sold in England.
  • CBS announces their efforts to develop television broadcasts.
  • Debuts

  • April 17 – The Disorderly Room (UK) premieres on the BBC Television Service (1937 & 1939).
  • April 24 – For The Children (UK), the BBC's first programme for children, debuts (1937–1939; 1946–1950).
  • April 30 – Sports Review (UK), the first regular sports programme, debuts on the BBC (1937–1939).
  • Births

  • February 1 – Garrett Morris, actor and comedian, Saturday Night Live
  • April 22 – Jack Nicholson, actor
  • June 1 – Morgan Freeman, actor
  • June 2 – Sally Kellerman, actress
  • June 3 – Edward Winter, American actor and director (d. 2001)
  • July 12 – Bill Cosby, actor and comedian
  • August 8 – Dustin Hoffman, actor
  • November 21 – Ingrid Pitt, actress (died 2010)
  • December 21 – Jane Fonda, actress
  • December 29 – Barbara Steele, actress
  • References

    1937 in television Wikipedia


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