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ABC Weekend TV

ABC Weekend TV was the popular name of the British broadcaster ABC Television Limited, which provided the weekend service in the Midlands and Northern England regions of the Independent Television (ITV) network from 1956 to 1968. It was one of the "Big Four" companies that between them produced the majority of ITV networked programmes during this period.

ABC Weekend Television
ABC Television Limited
Logo 1964–1968
The two ABC regions when it lost its franchises in 1968
TypeRegion of television network
BrandingABC
Country
United Kingdom
First air date
  • 18 February 1956; 67 years ago (1956-02-18) in the Midlands
  • 5 May 1956 in the North
TV transmitters
Headquarters
Broadcast area
  North
OwnerAssociated British Picture Corporation
Dissolved28 July 1968; 54 years ago (1968-07-28)
Former names
Associated British Cinemas (Television) Limited
Picture format
405-line black and white
Affiliation(s)ITV
LanguageEnglish
Replaced by

Originally created as Associated British Cinemas (Television) Ltd, ABC was one of a number of commercial television companies established during the 1950s by cinema chain companies, in an attempt to safeguard their business by becoming involved with television, which was taking away their cinema audiences. In this case, the parent company was the Associated British Picture Corporation (ABPC) — owner of ABC Cinemas — which initially did not wish to become involved with the new broadcasting system, but was persuaded to do so by the Independent Television Authority (ITA) and the manager of its Pathé News subsidiary Howard Thomas, who became the new company's managing director.

ABC operated two franchises, one in the Midlands, which was the fourth ITA franchise to go on air, in 1956, and the other in the North of England, which was the sixth franchise to go on air, later the same year. It lost both its franchises in 1968, but merged with another franchisee to form Thames Television, which held the London weekday franchise for 24 years.

From 1967, ABC's sister company, ABC Television Films, used the name Associated British Corporation on its exports to the US, such as the last two series of The Avengers.

History

Formation

When Kemsley-Winnick, one of the consortia that had been awarded two franchises in the new Independent Television network in 1954, collapsed, the ITA approached ABPC to step into the breach. The Corporation agreed to assume the franchises to broadcast on Saturdays and Sundays to the Midlands and the North of England. The contract agreeing to do so was signed on 21 September 1955, the day before Independent Television (ITV) began in London.

This left the new ABC five months to begin broadcasting in the Midlands, the service beginning on 18 February 1956.[1] Soon afterwards, it was also up and running in the North; it began broadcasting in the North West on 5 May 1956,[2] and in Yorkshire on 3 November 1956.[3] It was aided in part by the failure of the original contractor; Kelmsley-Winnick had ordered over £1 million (equivalent to £27.9 million today)[4] of production equipment from manufacturer Pye, which it sold to ABC at a much-discounted price.[5]

Relations with ITA, ITN and ATV

ATV

The London weekend contractor had launched under the name "Associated Broadcasting Company" (ABC), but ABPC wanted to use the ABC brand for its own service, to match its existing ABC Cinemas brand, so it took legal action against the Associated Broadcasting Company who subsequently agreed to rename as Associated Television (ATV) after broadcasting for three weeks as "ABC".[6] This allowed ABPC to launch its own station as "ABC".

ITN

ABC's late entry into Independent Television meant that some of the details of how the new system would run were already agreed between the ITA regulator and the other three contractors. ABC felt that some of these details were unfair on itself as the smallest contractor, and the only contractor that broadcast only at weekends.[7]

In particular, ABC objected to paying one-quarter of the costs for ITN, provider of national news broadcasts for the network, as there would be fewer news programmes at the weekend than on weekdays. ABC's managing director Howard Thomas, former head of Pathé News, felt that ABC could provide its own news for a fraction of ITN's price, but the ITA would not allow this: regional companies were responsible only for regional news, and national news should be independent of the regional companies. ABC lobbied both ITN and the ITA for change, which eventually resulted in a cutback to the amount of programming to be provided by ITN to the network and a substantial reduction in ITN's costs.[7]

Presentation

Once the "Big Four" companies were in profit, the ITA reviewed the performance each of them. ABC escaped with little criticism, except for its presentation, which was considered to be dull and too closely aligned with its sister "ABC Cinemas" brand. ABC took this to heart and launched a new look in September 1959.[7][8]

ATV again

Of the original four ITV contractors, ABC had difficulty getting its programmes shown in the London region, which was hampering its reputation. Two of the other contractors had London franchises, and Granada seemed to have a good working relationship with Associated-Rediffusion to show its programmes. ABC found itself in a head-to-head battle with ATV, as, in the early years, these were the only two companies whose franchises operated at the weekend.[7]

ATV had close connections with the Moss Empires theatre chain (through ATV's Val Parnell) and the Grade Organisation theatrical talent agency (through ATV's Lew Grade and his brother Leslie) and felt they had the expertise to make expensive, high-status drama, variety and comedy shows, and leave the cheaper "provincial" off-peak weekend programming to ABC. This would have been to ABC's financial disadvantage, since ABC (with its two regions to ATV's one region at the weekends) would have to pay two-thirds of the expensive costs of ATV London's shows, while ATV would pay only one-third of the costs of ABC's cheaper shows.[9]

ABC fought back, first of all, by selling some of its pre-recorded shows, including the popular The Avengers, to Associated-Rediffusion (instead of ATV) to broadcast to London on weekdays. Secondly, it refused to buy some of ATV's top-rated shows such as Sunday Night at the London Palladium and broadcast its own alternatives such as Blackpool Night Out. Eventually ATV gave way and agreed to buy more of ABC's shows.[9]

Loss of franchise

Structural changes in the regional contract areas meant that ABC no longer had a contract to reapply for in 1967. The Northern area (split into North West and Yorkshire) was to become a seven-day operation, as would the Midlands. Existing weekday contractors (Granada and ATV respectively) were correctly considered the favourites. ABC consequently submitted two applications: one for the service for London at the weekend, the other for the Midlands seven-day operation, although it favoured the first contract.

It was expected that ABC would be awarded the weekend London licence, but the strength of another application (from the London Weekend Television consortium) ruled this out. This led to a situation where a successful company could be closed down through no fault of its own. To prevent this, the governing body of ITV, the Independent Television Authority, ordered a merger with the existing London weekday company Rediffusion, ABC having majority control of the new operation.

Despite protests from Rediffusion, the two companies eventually became Thames Television. ABC ceased weekend broadcasting in the North and Midlands regions on 28 July 1968 and resumed on 30 July in the London region as weekday company Thames.

Studios

 
ABC's former studios in Teddington, Greater London.
 
ABC's former studios in Didsbury, Manchester

ABC operated three production sites and had a further sales office. The main production facilities were the former Warner Studios in Teddington, Middlesex. Although this was outside its contract area, ABC wanted a London base, as many performers could not venture outside of the capital to record programmes because they were often committed to runs of theatre plays in the West End. Upon the merger with Rediffusion, this site became the main production base for the new company Thames Television.

In the Midlands, ABC formed a joint venture with Midlands weekday licensee ATV to oversee the running of a production and transmission facility to be used by both. Alpha Television purchased a former cinema in Aston, near Birmingham, and extended it by the construction of additional studios and office space; the site was known as the Alpha Studios.

ABC operated a northern studio centre in Manchester and a sales office based in Television House in the city centre. The production facility was converted from a former Capitol cinema in Didsbury. ABC vacated both premises during 1968. ABC also made some entertainment shows such as Blackpool Night Out and The Blackpool Show at the ABC Theatre in Blackpool (owned by ABC-TV's sister company ABC Cinemas). For its pre-filmed series, such as The Avengers (from 1965), ABC used its parent company's Associated British Elstree Studios.

Identity

When ABC first went on the air, it used the branding of its sister company ABC Cinemas. This featured a triangular shield with the letters ABC upon it, and a bar across it with the caption 'Television'.[10] This lasted from the station's launch in 1956 until September 1959.[8] The ITA had criticised ABC's original presentation style for being bland and too much attached to the existing ABC Cinemas chain.[7]

As a result, ABC created a new brand ident featuring three arrows pointing to the bottom of the screen to reveal the letters ABC in turn and leaving a triangle behind and on top of the letters. At the end of this, the three triangles would snap together into the new ABC logo. This ident lasted until 1964 when the lettering font was altered slightly from a serif font to the latest bold used by the company, this revision lasting until the company's demise.[10][11]

The logo uses the notion of threes, three triangles making another triangle, with the points of a triangle often being labelled 'A', 'B' and 'C' in geometry. The tune that was used for all of ABC's idents was a vibraphone playing the notes A-B-C (la-te-doh). Out of this look, ABC Television developed a strong corporate identity[original research?], effectively becoming the first British TV station to recognise the importance of corporate branding.[citation needed]

The company itself was originally called Associated British Cinemas (Television) Limited,[12] which by 1957 had been shortened to A.B.C. Television Limited. However, from about 1967, on exports made by its sister company A.B.C. Television Films Ltd. (such as the last two series of The Avengers), the name 'Associated British Corporation' was used, to avoid confusion with the US ABC network.[13] As for on-air, the name was for a few months 'Associated British', before becoming 'ABC Television', or just 'ABC'. The names 'ABC Television Network' and 'ABC Weekend Network' were also used, for example in TV Times listings.[14] The station received a joke nickname from Bob Monkhouse, namely "All Bloody Commercials".[citation needed]

The station's spoken slogan varied through time, starting off as "ABC – Associated British in the North/Midlands" before being replaced in 1958 to "ABC, your weekend TV" and again changed in 1964 to "ABC, your weekend television in the North/Midlands".[citation needed]

Programming

Networked programmes from ABC included the drama series Police Surgeon, The Human Jungle, Undermind, Redcap, The Avengers, the Armchair Theatre series of single plays, the Habatales cartoons, the popular shows Thank Your Lucky Stars, Opportunity Knocks, Big Night Out, Doddy's Music Box and Oh Boy!, Tommy Cooper's shows Cooperama and Life with Cooper, the children's science fiction serials Emerald Soup, Target Luna and its sequels Pathfinders in Space, Pathfinders to Mars and Pathfinders to Venus, and the gritty drama series Callan and Public Eye (both of which continued as Thames productions after 1968). ITV's first weekly series devoted to the arts, Tempo, was introduced by ABC, as was its first hidden camera show, Candid Camera, and its first attempt to challenge the BBC's dominance of television sport, with World of Sport. ABC also introduced British television's first late night chat show, The Eamonn Andrews Show[15] and, together with ATV, British television's first regular weekly series of adult education programmes.[16]

Service areas

Areas are described in terms of the county boundaries at the time. After ABC's closure there were significant county boundary changes in 1974, and ITV's regional boundaries have also changed over time.

Franchise Start date Transmitter Principal service area Significant overlap into adjacent regions Studios
  Midlands
18 February 1956[17] Lichfield
Channel 8
West Midlands and parts of East Midlands Parts of Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire (Anglia)
Cheshire (ABC North)
Alpha Studios, Birmingham
30 April 1965[17] Membury
Channel 12
Thames Valley Parts of Hampshire (Southern)
  North
5 May 1956[2] Winter Hill
Channel 9
Lancashire and Cheshire North Wales coast (Teledu Cymru)
Staffordshire (ABC Midlands)
Didsbury Studios, Manchester
3 November 1956[3] Emley Moor
Channel 10
West Riding of Yorkshire, parts of Lincolnshire and North and East Ridings Parts of Lincolnshire and East Riding (Anglia)
11 June 1965[3] Scarborough
Channel 6
Scarborough
1959[1] Teddington Studios, London

ABC's two franchise regions each had their own continuity announcers, advertisements and regional programmes (mainly news and weather, and the magazine shows ABC of the Midlands and ABC of the North). Apart from those exceptions, both regions usually showed the same programmes simultaneously.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Elen, Richard G. "ABC Television". BFI Screenonline. British Film Institute. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  2. ^ a b Brown, Mike. "ITV 405 line VHF TV TRANSMITTERS LANCASHIRE". mb21. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Brown, Mike. "ITV 405 line VHF TV TRANSMITTERS YORKSHIRE". mb21. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  4. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  5. ^ Black,P, The Mirror in the Corner, Macmillan, London, 1971
  6. ^ Elen, Richard G. "ATV". BFI Screenonline. British Film Institute. Retrieved 13 June 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e Graham, Russ J (2 September 2005). "Howard Thomas Part 6: The ITA". Transdiffusion. The Transdiffusion Organisation. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  8. ^ a b Bowden-Smith, Kif. "Indepth on ABC Weekend Television". Transdiffusion. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  9. ^ a b Graham, Russ J (2 October 2005). "Howard Thomas Part 7: Lew Grade". Transdiffusion. The Transdiffusion Organisation. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  10. ^ a b "Flash Files". 625: Andrew Wiseman's Television Room. from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 21 August 2011. Contains flash recreations of the original ABC idents, complete with authentic soundtracks.
  11. ^ Barnes, Steve. . TVARK. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 21 August 2011. Contains videos of the ABC idents.
  12. ^ Sendall, Bernard (29 September 1955). "Independent Television: Present and future policy on development". Kinematograph Weekly. Studio Review. Odhams. 462 (2518): xi. ISSN 0023-155X. OCLC 1127175701. Retrieved 17 May 2022.
  13. ^ Beaumont, Ian (11 January 2001). "The Avengers". ABC at large. Transdiffusion Broadcasting System. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  14. ^ Johnson, Piers. "Dragonsfield". The Avengers. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  15. ^ Rinaldi, Graham. "Andrews, Eamonn (1922-1987)". BFI Screenonline. British Film Institute. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  16. ^ "BFI Screenonline: Broadcasters and Industry Bodies > ABC Television". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  17. ^ a b Brown, Mike. "ITV 405 line VHF TV TRANSMITTERS MIDLANDS". mb21. Retrieved 26 March 2022.

External links

  • ABC at Large from Transdiffusion (unofficial history site)
  • , 1960s from 625.uk.com (Macromedia Flash Player 6 or later required)
  • , c.1964 from 625.uk.com.
  • Final closedown on ABC
ITV regional services
New service
Midlands service
Midlands (weekends)
18 February 1956 – 28 July 1968
Succeeded by
New service
North of England service
North West England (weekends)
5 May 1956 – 28 July 1968
Succeeded by
Yorkshire (weekends)
3 November 1956 – 28 July 1968
Succeeded by

weekend, american, anthology, children, weekend, special, television, limited, redirects, here, other, uses, television, popular, name, british, broadcaster, television, limited, which, provided, weekend, service, midlands, northern, england, regions, independ. For the American anthology for children see ABC Weekend Special ABC Television Limited redirects here For other uses see ABC Television ABC Weekend TV was the popular name of the British broadcaster ABC Television Limited which provided the weekend service in the Midlands and Northern England regions of the Independent Television ITV network from 1956 to 1968 It was one of the Big Four companies that between them produced the majority of ITV networked programmes during this period ABC Weekend TelevisionABC Television LimitedLogo 1964 1968The two ABC regions when it lost its franchises in 1968TypeRegion of television networkBrandingABCCountryUnited KingdomFirst air date18 February 1956 67 years ago 1956 02 18 in the Midlands 5 May 1956 in the NorthTV transmittersWinter Hill Emley Moor Lichfield Membury ScarboroughHeadquartersManchester Birmingham LondonBroadcast area Midlands NorthOwnerAssociated British Picture CorporationDissolved28 July 1968 54 years ago 1968 07 28 Former namesAssociated British Cinemas Television LimitedPicture format405 line black and whiteAffiliation s ITVLanguageEnglishReplaced byAs ITV franchisee Granada Television North West Yorkshire Television Yorkshire ATV Midlands As company Thames TelevisionOriginally created as Associated British Cinemas Television Ltd ABC was one of a number of commercial television companies established during the 1950s by cinema chain companies in an attempt to safeguard their business by becoming involved with television which was taking away their cinema audiences In this case the parent company was the Associated British Picture Corporation ABPC owner of ABC Cinemas which initially did not wish to become involved with the new broadcasting system but was persuaded to do so by the Independent Television Authority ITA and the manager of its Pathe News subsidiary Howard Thomas who became the new company s managing director ABC operated two franchises one in the Midlands which was the fourth ITA franchise to go on air in 1956 and the other in the North of England which was the sixth franchise to go on air later the same year It lost both its franchises in 1968 but merged with another franchisee to form Thames Television which held the London weekday franchise for 24 years From 1967 ABC s sister company ABC Television Films used the name Associated British Corporation on its exports to the US such as the last two series of The Avengers Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Relations with ITA ITN and ATV 1 2 1 ATV 1 2 2 ITN 1 2 3 Presentation 1 2 4 ATV again 1 3 Loss of franchise 2 Studios 3 Identity 4 Programming 5 Service areas 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit When Kemsley Winnick one of the consortia that had been awarded two franchises in the new Independent Television network in 1954 collapsed the ITA approached ABPC to step into the breach The Corporation agreed to assume the franchises to broadcast on Saturdays and Sundays to the Midlands and the North of England The contract agreeing to do so was signed on 21 September 1955 the day before Independent Television ITV began in London This left the new ABC five months to begin broadcasting in the Midlands the service beginning on 18 February 1956 1 Soon afterwards it was also up and running in the North it began broadcasting in the North West on 5 May 1956 2 and in Yorkshire on 3 November 1956 3 It was aided in part by the failure of the original contractor Kelmsley Winnick had ordered over 1 million equivalent to 27 9 million today 4 of production equipment from manufacturer Pye which it sold to ABC at a much discounted price 5 Relations with ITA ITN and ATV Edit ATV Edit The London weekend contractor had launched under the name Associated Broadcasting Company ABC but ABPC wanted to use the ABC brand for its own service to match its existing ABC Cinemas brand so it took legal action against the Associated Broadcasting Company who subsequently agreed to rename as Associated Television ATV after broadcasting for three weeks as ABC 6 This allowed ABPC to launch its own station as ABC ITN Edit ABC s late entry into Independent Television meant that some of the details of how the new system would run were already agreed between the ITA regulator and the other three contractors ABC felt that some of these details were unfair on itself as the smallest contractor and the only contractor that broadcast only at weekends 7 In particular ABC objected to paying one quarter of the costs for ITN provider of national news broadcasts for the network as there would be fewer news programmes at the weekend than on weekdays ABC s managing director Howard Thomas former head of Pathe News felt that ABC could provide its own news for a fraction of ITN s price but the ITA would not allow this regional companies were responsible only for regional news and national news should be independent of the regional companies ABC lobbied both ITN and the ITA for change which eventually resulted in a cutback to the amount of programming to be provided by ITN to the network and a substantial reduction in ITN s costs 7 Presentation Edit Once the Big Four companies were in profit the ITA reviewed the performance each of them ABC escaped with little criticism except for its presentation which was considered to be dull and too closely aligned with its sister ABC Cinemas brand ABC took this to heart and launched a new look in September 1959 7 8 ATV again Edit Of the original four ITV contractors ABC had difficulty getting its programmes shown in the London region which was hampering its reputation Two of the other contractors had London franchises and Granada seemed to have a good working relationship with Associated Rediffusion to show its programmes ABC found itself in a head to head battle with ATV as in the early years these were the only two companies whose franchises operated at the weekend 7 ATV had close connections with the Moss Empires theatre chain through ATV s Val Parnell and the Grade Organisation theatrical talent agency through ATV s Lew Grade and his brother Leslie and felt they had the expertise to make expensive high status drama variety and comedy shows and leave the cheaper provincial off peak weekend programming to ABC This would have been to ABC s financial disadvantage since ABC with its two regions to ATV s one region at the weekends would have to pay two thirds of the expensive costs of ATV London s shows while ATV would pay only one third of the costs of ABC s cheaper shows 9 ABC fought back first of all by selling some of its pre recorded shows including the popular The Avengers to Associated Rediffusion instead of ATV to broadcast to London on weekdays Secondly it refused to buy some of ATV s top rated shows such as Sunday Night at the London Palladium and broadcast its own alternatives such as Blackpool Night Out Eventually ATV gave way and agreed to buy more of ABC s shows 9 Loss of franchise Edit Structural changes in the regional contract areas meant that ABC no longer had a contract to reapply for in 1967 The Northern area split into North West and Yorkshire was to become a seven day operation as would the Midlands Existing weekday contractors Granada and ATV respectively were correctly considered the favourites ABC consequently submitted two applications one for the service for London at the weekend the other for the Midlands seven day operation although it favoured the first contract It was expected that ABC would be awarded the weekend London licence but the strength of another application from the London Weekend Television consortium ruled this out This led to a situation where a successful company could be closed down through no fault of its own To prevent this the governing body of ITV the Independent Television Authority ordered a merger with the existing London weekday company Rediffusion ABC having majority control of the new operation Despite protests from Rediffusion the two companies eventually became Thames Television ABC ceased weekend broadcasting in the North and Midlands regions on 28 July 1968 and resumed on 30 July in the London region as weekday company Thames Studios Edit ABC s former studios in Teddington Greater London ABC s former studios in Didsbury ManchesterABC operated three production sites and had a further sales office The main production facilities were the former Warner Studios in Teddington Middlesex Although this was outside its contract area ABC wanted a London base as many performers could not venture outside of the capital to record programmes because they were often committed to runs of theatre plays in the West End Upon the merger with Rediffusion this site became the main production base for the new company Thames Television In the Midlands ABC formed a joint venture with Midlands weekday licensee ATV to oversee the running of a production and transmission facility to be used by both Alpha Television purchased a former cinema in Aston near Birmingham and extended it by the construction of additional studios and office space the site was known as the Alpha Studios ABC operated a northern studio centre in Manchester and a sales office based in Television House in the city centre The production facility was converted from a former Capitol cinema in Didsbury ABC vacated both premises during 1968 ABC also made some entertainment shows such as Blackpool Night Out and The Blackpool Show at the ABC Theatre in Blackpool owned by ABC TV s sister company ABC Cinemas For its pre filmed series such as The Avengers from 1965 ABC used its parent company s Associated British Elstree Studios Identity EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message When ABC first went on the air it used the branding of its sister company ABC Cinemas This featured a triangular shield with the letters ABC upon it and a bar across it with the caption Television 10 This lasted from the station s launch in 1956 until September 1959 8 The ITA had criticised ABC s original presentation style for being bland and too much attached to the existing ABC Cinemas chain 7 As a result ABC created a new brand ident featuring three arrows pointing to the bottom of the screen to reveal the letters ABC in turn and leaving a triangle behind and on top of the letters At the end of this the three triangles would snap together into the new ABC logo This ident lasted until 1964 when the lettering font was altered slightly from a serif font to the latest bold used by the company this revision lasting until the company s demise 10 11 The logo uses the notion of threes three triangles making another triangle with the points of a triangle often being labelled A B and C in geometry The tune that was used for all of ABC s idents was a vibraphone playing the notes A B C la te doh Out of this look ABC Television developed a strong corporate identity original research effectively becoming the first British TV station to recognise the importance of corporate branding citation needed The company itself was originally called Associated British Cinemas Television Limited 12 which by 1957 had been shortened to A B C Television Limited However from about 1967 on exports made by its sister company A B C Television Films Ltd such as the last two series of The Avengers the name Associated British Corporation was used to avoid confusion with the US ABC network 13 As for on air the name was for a few months Associated British before becoming ABC Television or just ABC The names ABC Television Network and ABC Weekend Network were also used for example in TV Times listings 14 The station received a joke nickname from Bob Monkhouse namely All Bloody Commercials citation needed The station s spoken slogan varied through time starting off as ABC Associated British in the North Midlands before being replaced in 1958 to ABC your weekend TV and again changed in 1964 to ABC your weekend television in the North Midlands citation needed Programming EditNetworked programmes from ABC included the drama series Police Surgeon The Human Jungle Undermind Redcap The Avengers the Armchair Theatre series of single plays the Habatales cartoons the popular shows Thank Your Lucky Stars Opportunity Knocks Big Night Out Doddy s Music Box and Oh Boy Tommy Cooper s shows Cooperama and Life with Cooper the children s science fiction serials Emerald Soup Target Luna and its sequels Pathfinders in Space Pathfinders to Mars and Pathfinders to Venus and the gritty drama series Callan and Public Eye both of which continued as Thames productions after 1968 ITV s first weekly series devoted to the arts Tempo was introduced by ABC as was its first hidden camera show Candid Camera and its first attempt to challenge the BBC s dominance of television sport with World of Sport ABC also introduced British television s first late night chat show The Eamonn Andrews Show 15 and together with ATV British television s first regular weekly series of adult education programmes 16 Service areas EditAreas are described in terms of the county boundaries at the time After ABC s closure there were significant county boundary changes in 1974 and ITV s regional boundaries have also changed over time Franchise Start date Transmitter Principal service area Significant overlap into adjacent regions Studios Midlands 18 February 1956 17 LichfieldChannel 8 West Midlands and parts of East Midlands Parts of Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire Anglia Cheshire ABC North Alpha Studios Birmingham30 April 1965 17 MemburyChannel 12 Thames Valley Parts of Hampshire Southern North 5 May 1956 2 Winter HillChannel 9 Lancashire and Cheshire North Wales coast Teledu Cymru Staffordshire ABC Midlands Didsbury Studios Manchester3 November 1956 3 Emley MoorChannel 10 West Riding of Yorkshire parts of Lincolnshire and North and East Ridings Parts of Lincolnshire and East Riding Anglia 11 June 1965 3 ScarboroughChannel 6 Scarborough1959 1 Teddington Studios LondonABC s two franchise regions each had their own continuity announcers advertisements and regional programmes mainly news and weather and the magazine shows ABC of the Midlands and ABC of the North Apart from those exceptions both regions usually showed the same programmes simultaneously See also EditTimeline of ABC Weekend TV Associated Television ABC s successor in the Midlands Granada Television ABC s successor in the North West Yorkshire Television ABC s successor in Yorkshire ITV TV network History of ITVReferences Edit a b Elen Richard G ABC Television BFI Screenonline British Film Institute Retrieved 26 March 2022 a b Brown Mike ITV 405 line VHF TV TRANSMITTERS LANCASHIRE mb21 Retrieved 26 March 2022 a b c Brown Mike ITV 405 line VHF TV TRANSMITTERS YORKSHIRE mb21 Retrieved 26 March 2022 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Black P The Mirror in the Corner Macmillan London 1971 Elen Richard G ATV BFI Screenonline British Film Institute Retrieved 13 June 2022 a b c d e Graham Russ J 2 September 2005 Howard Thomas Part 6 The ITA Transdiffusion The Transdiffusion Organisation Retrieved 16 June 2022 a b Bowden Smith Kif Indepth on ABC Weekend Television Transdiffusion Retrieved 3 June 2022 a b Graham Russ J 2 October 2005 Howard Thomas Part 7 Lew Grade Transdiffusion The Transdiffusion Organisation Retrieved 16 June 2022 a b Flash Files 625 Andrew Wiseman s Television Room Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 21 August 2011 Contains flash recreations of the original ABC idents complete with authentic soundtracks Barnes Steve ABC TVARK Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 Retrieved 21 August 2011 Contains videos of the ABC idents Sendall Bernard 29 September 1955 Independent Television Present and future policy on development Kinematograph Weekly Studio Review Odhams 462 2518 xi ISSN 0023 155X OCLC 1127175701 Retrieved 17 May 2022 Beaumont Ian 11 January 2001 The Avengers ABC at large Transdiffusion Broadcasting System Retrieved 16 May 2022 Johnson Piers Dragonsfield The Avengers Retrieved 9 June 2022 Rinaldi Graham Andrews Eamonn 1922 1987 BFI Screenonline British Film Institute Retrieved 15 July 2022 BFI Screenonline Broadcasters and Industry Bodies gt ABC Television www screenonline org uk Retrieved 4 September 2019 a b Brown Mike ITV 405 line VHF TV TRANSMITTERS MIDLANDS mb21 Retrieved 26 March 2022 External links EditABC at Large from Transdiffusion unofficial history site Animated ABC logo 1960s from 625 uk com Macromedia Flash Player 6 or later required Animated ABC logo c 1964 from 625 uk com Final closedown on ABCITV regional servicesNew serviceMidlands service Midlands weekends 18 February 1956 28 July 1968 Succeeded byATV NetworkNew serviceNorth of England service North West England weekends 5 May 1956 28 July 1968 Succeeded byGranada TelevisionYorkshire weekends 3 November 1956 28 July 1968 Succeeded byYorkshire Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ABC Weekend TV amp oldid 1149250718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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