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First Night

By Andrew Bowden

5pm, Thursday 15 January 1959 and Tyne Tees burst on air. Take a trip back to that night, with a look at the opening night schedule.

5.00 Station Opening Programme
The opening ceremony by The Duke of Northumberland, introduced by Sir Richard A. Pease, Bart, Chairman of Tyne Tees Television Ltd.
5.15 The Adventures of Robin Hood.
5.45 Popeye.
5.55 News.
From ITN.
6.05 North-East News.
The first regional news bulletin.
6.15 The Prime Minister.
Harold Macmillam interviewed live by Adrian Cairns from Tyne Tees’s studios.
6:25 Strange Experiences.
Safe and Sound, as told by Peter Williams.
6:30 Highway Patrol.
Starring Broderick Crawford.
7:00 The Big Show.
Live opening night extravaganza, starring Dickie Henderson, Jill Day, Bill Maynard, Bill Travers, Linden Travers and a special guest appearance from Jack Payne. The Big Show was so big that it required the use of both Studios 1 and 2.
8:00 Double Your Money.
Presented by Hughie Green.
8:30 This Week.
Ludovic Kennedy presents ITV’s news magazine programme.
9:00 Wagon Train.
Western starring Ward Bond and Robert Horton.
10:00 News.
News at Ten may not have started yet, but ITN did bring the the news at ten on this particular evening.
10:15 Murder Bag.
Crime drama
10:45 Sports Desk.
Presented by George Taylor, with an excerpt from the FA Cup Finals from 1937 (Sunderland v Preston) and 1955 (Newcastle United v Manchester City.)
10:55 I Love Lucy.
11.25 Meet George and Alfred Black.
Tyne Tees’s Directors of Programmes preview forthcoming programmes. Followed by the Epilogue, from the Bishop of Durham.

The first thing that sticks out is the huge emphasis on entertainment - this was to be true of Tyne Tees’s first few years when more serious networked programming would often be dropped in favour of more lightweight shows, until the need for a more balanced schedule was emphasised by the ITA in 1962.

On the other side, the station did manage to get an interview with Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan who was also MP for Stockton-on-Tees.

Odd as it may seem now, interviewer Adrian Cairns was not actually allowed to ask anything political, and was sat at a lower chair, indicating the more subservient position of an interviewer in that era.

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The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of the Transdiffusion Broadcasting System in general.

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