1967 in British television

Events

January

  • 3 January – Trumpton is the second programme on BBC1 to be shot in colour.
  • 7 January – Debut of The Forsyte Saga, a blockbuster BBC dramatisation in 26 50-minutes episodes, and the first British television program ever to be sold to the USSR.

February

  • 28 February – National and regional newspapers carry advertisements from the Independent Television Authority requesting applicants for various new ITV contracts, one of which is Programme Contractor for Yorkshire Area (Contract D) – All Week. Ten formal bids are received by the closing date.[1][2]

March

  • No events.

April

May

  • No events.

June

  • 12 June – The 1967 franchise round sees a number of changes being made to the ITV regional map, which will take effect from May to August 1968:
    • Any split weekday/weekend licences are removed in all regions, except London.
    • The London split is moved from Friday/Saturday to Friday at 7pm.
    • The North of England region is split into the North West and Yorkshire.
    • Granada, the existing weekday contractor for the North of England region, is given a seven-day licence for the new North West of England region.
    • Lord Thomson of Fleet is required to divest himself of most of his holding in Scottish Television.
    • A new company, Telefusion Yorkshire, later renamed Yorkshire Television, is given the licence to broadcast in the newly created Yorkshire region.
    • ATV wins the new seven-day Midlands licence, replacing ABC at the weekend.
    • ABC and Rediffusion, London are asked to form a joint company to take the London weekday franchise previously held by Rediffusion alone; the result, Thames Television, is 51% controlled by ABC.
    • The London Television Consortium, put together by David Frost wins the London weekend contract, which now includes Friday evenings from 7pm. They go on air as London Weekend Television.
    • Most controversially, TWW loses its franchise for Wales and the West of England to Harlech Television, which later becomes known as HTV on the arrival of UHF.
  • 25 June – The Our World program airs to over 30 countries featuring performers from the represented countries; the segment for the United Kingdom features The Beatles performing "All You Need Is Love", with guests Mick Jagger, Marianne Faithfull, Keith Richards, Keith Moon, Eric Clapton, Pattie Harrison, Jane Asher, Graham Nash, Hunter Davies and others.

July

  • 1 July – BBC2 becomes Europe's first colour TV broadcaster. The colour service is launched with live coverage from the Wimbledon Championships.
  • 2 July – The BBC's colour Test Card F, featuring Carole Hersee, is broadcast for the first time.
  • 3 July – News at Ten premieres on ITV. It airs nightly on weeknights until 1999 before being axed. It is then reintroduced in 2001, axed again in 2004 and brought back for a second time in 2008.

August

  • No events.

September

October

  • 13 October – Omnibus, an arts documentary series, begins.
  • 23 October – Service Information is broadcast by the BBC for the first time. The bulletins are broadcast three times each weekday on BBC2.

November

  • No events.

December

  • 2 December – Colour television is officially launched on BBC2.
  • 22 December – Dante's Inferno, Ken Russell's television film about Dante Gabriel Rossetti is shown in the Omnibus series.
  • 25 December - Final edition of The Sooty Show shown on BBC TV after being cancelled by Paul Fox, the controller of BBC One. Part of the reason for the cancellation is due to his decision to clear out long-running television programmes on the channel to make way for new shows.
  • 26 December

Debuts

BBC1

  • 2 January – Sword of Honour (1967)
  • 3 January – The Trumptonshire Trilogy: Trumpton (1967)
  • 6 January – The Whitehall Worrier (1967)
  • 7 January – The Forsyte Saga (1967)
  • 15 January – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1967)
  • 22 January – Great Expectations (1967)
  • 24 February – The World of Wodehouse (1967)
  • 4 April – Dee Time (1967–1969)
  • 9 April – St. Ives (1967)
  • 2 May – Further Adventures of Lucky Jim (1967)
  • 8 May – Mickey Dunne (1967)
  • 21 May – The Further Adventures of the Musketeers (1967)
  • 26 May – Not in Front of the Children (1967–1970)
  • 28 May – Champion House (1967–1968)
  • 12 June – Ask the Family (1967–1984)
  • 20 June – Misleading Cases (1967–1971)
  • 5 July – Rainbow City (1967)
  • 1 August – Sorry I'm Single (1967)
  • 4 August – Boy Meets Girl (1967–1969)
  • 28 August – The Queen's Traitor (1967)
  • 10 September – Pride and Prejudice (1967)
  • 30 September – The Talk of the Town (1967–1974)
  • 3 October – A Series of Bird's (1967)
  • 22 October – Les Misérables (1967)
  • 27 November – The Very Merry Widow (1967–1968)

BBC2

ITV

Television shows

Changes of network affiliation

Shows Moved from Moved to
BBC Wimbledon BBC1 BBC2
Sooty BBC ITV

Continuing television shows

1920s

  • BBC Wimbledon (1927–1939, 1946–2019, 2021–2024)

1930s

  • BBC Cricket (1939, 1946–1999, 2020–2024)

1940s

1950s

1960s

Ending this year

Births

Death

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gollark: Waaaait... it needs lowercasing.
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gollark: ```haskell#!/usr/bin/env runghcimport Data.Charimport Control.DeepSeqevaluate x = x `deepseq` xmain = putStr =<< concatMap toBig <$> evaluate <$> getContentsemoji :: String -> Stringemoji x = ':':x ++ ": "toBig :: Char -> StringtoBig ' ' = "\n"toBig '!' = emoji "exclamation"toBig '+' = emoji "heavy_plus_sign"toBig c | isLetter c = emoji $ "regional_indicator_" ++ [c] | otherwise = ""```
gollark: ```haskell#!/usr/bin/env runghcimport Data.Charimport Control.DeepSeqevaluate x = x `deepseq` xmain = putStr =<< concatMap toBig <$> evaluate <$> getContentstoBig :: Char -> StringtoBig ' ' = "\n"toBig '!' = ":exclamation: "toBig c | isLetter c = ":regional_indicator_"++[c]++": " | otherwise = ""```Bodginated version.

See also

References

  1. Baren, Maurice (2000). How It All Began in Yorkshire. 2. Clapham, Yorkshire: Dalesman Publishing. ISBN 1-85568-183-8.
  2. ITV: who wants what. The Times (London). 30 May 1967.
  3. Mark Duguid "Armchair Theatre (1956–74)", BFI screenonline
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