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Associated-Rediffusion

Associated-Rediffusion, later Rediffusion London, was the British ITV franchise holder for London and parts of the surrounding counties, on weekdays between 22 September 1955 and 29 July 1968. It was the first ITA franchisee to go on air, and one of the "Big Four" companies that between them produced the majority of ITV networked programmes during this period.

Associated-Rediffusion
Rediffusion London
Logo from 1964
The Rediffusion region when it lost its franchise in 1968
TypeRegion of television network
Branding
  • Associated-Rediffusion (1955–1964)
  • Rediffusion London (1964–1968)
Country
UK
First air date
22 September 1955; 67 years ago (1955-09-22)
Founded1955
TV transmittersCroydon
HeadquartersTelevision House, London
Broadcast area
London, Greater London
OwnerBET plc
(Rediffusion)
Dissolved29 July 1968; 54 years ago (1968-07-29)
Picture format
405-line black and white
Affiliation(s)ITV
LanguageEnglish
Replaced byThames Television

Rediffusion lost its franchise in 1968, but merged with another franchisee to form Thames Television, which continued to hold the London weekday franchise for another 24 years.

History

Formation

Associated-Rediffusion Television was originally a partnership between British Electric Traction (BET), its subsidiary Broadcast Relay Services Ltd. (trading as Rediffusion), and Associated Newspapers, owner of the Daily Mail, which had been interested in commercial broadcasting as early as the 1920s. In the aftermath of the heavy financial losses made by the new ITV system in its initial years, Associated Newspapers sold the majority of its share to BET and Rediffusion, although the company did not drop the word "Associated" from its name until 1964. Associated Newspapers, later realising the potential of ITV, was a significant investor in the ITV franchise contractor for southern and south-east England, Southern Television and later on becoming a shareholder on Independent Television News.

Captain Thomas Brownrigg RN (Retired), the general manager of Associated-Rediffusion from 1955, had a very clear idea of what his new commercial television station was to be like – the BBC Television Service, with advertisements. To this end, the station had a heraldic-style on-air clock, referred to as "Mitch" by staff (after chief station announcer Leslie Mitchell, who had not only made the first announcement when A-R went on the air in 1955, but had done the same when the BBC TV service started in 1936).[citation needed]

Associated-Rediffusion took over the former Wembley Film Studio at Wembley Park in Middlesex. Associated-Rediffusion officially began broadcasting on 22 September 1955 at 19:15, with actress Marjie Lawrence uttering the first words. That night the BBC, which had held the monopoly on broadcasting in the UK, aired a melodramatic episode of their popular radio soap opera The Archers on the BBC Home Service in which core character Grace Archer was fatally injured in a fire. This was seen as a desperate, and rather underhand, ploy to lure as much of the potential audience as possible from tuning in to the new station's opening night of broadcast entertainment. Britain's first female newsreader Barbara Mandell appeared during the first full day of transmissions on 23 September 1955. The London weekend contractor ATV launched two days later.

This strategy was intended to allay fears that the new service would be aimed at the bottom of the market. Associated-Rediffusion sought to make ITV respectable. It did introduce popular game shows, but also provided quality programming across all genres gained large audiences both in its own London area and, as the ITV network grew, for its programmes shown across the country.

Boris Ford became Associated-Rediffusion's first head of schools broadcasting (1957–58), during which time he persuaded Benjamin Britten to compose his church opera Noye's Fludde for a series of programmes.[1] Ford was dismissed before the opera was produced, allegedly for administrative shortcomings and inexperience.[2] However, A-R continued its association with Britten, producing a highly successful telecast of his opera The Turn of the Screw in 1959.[3]

 
Ticket for the dress rehearsal for 'Around the Beatles', on 28 April 1964, at Wembley Park

Associated-Rediffusion added new television studios at Wembley Park in 1960. Their size and unique design attracted worldwide attention.[4] During the 1960s, the studios were home to some of the most popular programmes on the ITV network, including The Rat Catchers, Blackmail, At Last, The 1948 Show and The Frost Report. The Beatles appeared at the studios on more than one occasion.[5]

Rebranding and loss of franchise

In 1964, the company simplified its name to Rediffusion Television and rebranded the station on screen as "Rediffusion London", with a very hip 1960s style, the face of Swinging London in the shiny prosperous new Britain. However, the new Rediffusion did not survive for long – in October 1967 the Independent Television Authority announced to the company's shock that there was no place for Rediffusion in the redrawn franchise pattern.[6] Following changes to the ITV network structure, which resulted in the abandonment of the Midlands and North weekend franchises held by ABC Weekend TV, ABC lost all its franchises along with the rights to take over the Midlands, held by ATV, or the London Weekend franchise, awarded to the London Television Consortium. To preserve the sizeable ABC, the ITA proposed ABC and Rediffusion should form a new company: Thames Television. This was not a merger or "forced marriage" as is commonly stated and is an urban myth.[citation needed] ABPC, the parent company of ABC, and BET, the parent company of Rediffusion, created Thames as a separate entity. Thames would use the resources and staff of ABC's Teddington Studios and Rediffusion's Television House. Rediffusion's parent company, BET, took a 49% stake in Thames, and was under-represented in the management of the new company – a state of affairs to which Rediffusion strongly objected. The ITA replied that either Thames took the new contract, or ABC took over. Rediffusion chose the former, and went off the air on 29 July 1968 at 12:26 am.[7] Employees based at Wembley went to work for London Weekend Television whilst those at Television House were employed by Thames. Some managerial and presentation staff re-located to the new Yorkshire Television in Leeds.

Much of Rediffusion's programme library was either lost or destroyed following the creation of Thames. Surviving titles from the Rediffusion archive are held by the BFI National Archive at Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire. Most titles are the intellectual property of Archbuild Limited, with the exception of some of Rediffusion's musical output such as Ready Steady Go! which was for a long time owned by Dave Clark International, and latterly by BMG Rights Management. Some Rediffusion shows have been rediscovered in recent years. In the late 1980s, a series of five At Last the 1948 Show compilations was found in the archives of Swedish broadcaster, SVT. In 2020 The British Film Institute released the most complete box set possible of the restored series, including all ten surviving episodes, two almost completely reconstructed episodes, and the complete audio of a further episode with fragments of film.[2]

Revival

In the 1990s, the name "Associated-Rediffusion Television" and the adastral trademark were acquired by the late British journalist Victor Lewis-Smith, and were used by his own production company. Productions included:

Reditune and Rediffusion Music

Rediffusion Music, Reditune Rediffusion, Reditune Music and Rediffusion Thorsen (Germany) were sold to AEI Music Network of Seattle, WA in 1996. DMX Music, a smaller music provider, bought AEI Music in 2000. Mood Media bought DMX Music in 2005, The current owner remains Mood Media, however it trades under the MOOD: brand today. Mood Media Corporation own the previous trading names of Rediffusion Reditune, Rediffusion Music, AEI Rediffusion Music, AEI Music and DMX Music.

Studios

 
Television House, Rediffusion's headquarters.

The company's administrative headquarters and transmission facilities were at Television House in Kingsway, London. Most programmes were produced at Wembley Studios in Wembley Park, north-west London. However, a small basement studio at Television House, Studio 9, was occasionally used for current affairs programmes and was home to Ready Steady Go! during its first few years.

Television House had been known as Adastral House when it was the headquarters of the Air Ministry. This gave its name to A-R's logo, the 16-point Adastral Star, which appeared not only at the start and end of each commercial break but also between each advertisement. (The motto of the Royal Air Force is "per ardua, ad astra" - "through adversity to the stars".) The station's archives were also kept at these properties, with the original programme library situated on the roof of Television House with some storage in the film vaults at Wembley Studios.

Following Rediffusion's loss of franchise and the creation of Thames Television, the Wembley studios were leased to the newly formed London Weekend Television by order of the ITA, and the company officially took control of the premises on Monday 6 May 1968 for a contractual minimum term of three years. London Weekend Television subsequently vacated the studios in the late summer of 1972.

Somewhat confusingly, this Wembley studios site is the very same studio buildings site that would later be sold-off, renamed, re-purposed as film studios, then back to television studios, at various stages when used by later owners; London Weekend Television (Wembley), Lee International Studios (Wembley), Limehouse Television (Wembley), Fountain Television, before closing in 2018, and becoming a theatre space, prior to the site's planned redevelopment from 2019.

Television House was used as Thames' headquarters until their Euston Road studios were built in 1970, and was subsequently sold off.

Presentation

When Rediffusion originally launched, as Associated-Rediffusion, presentation consisted of a simple animated ident, featuring the station name, and a spinning star called the Adastral. This first ident was accompanied by a five note electronic fanfare, achieved by tapping out the morse code for 'A-R'. To accompany the ident, a timepiece was created based on a heraldic coat of arms and nicknamed 'Mitch' after Head of Presentation Leslie Mitchell.[9][10]

In 1964, Associated-Rediffusion rebranded itself on screen as Rediffusion London, using a black and grey ident featuring the same as previous, but with the new name now in a stripe and in a sans serif font. A new and simpler clock was designed featuring a 24-hour display at the bottom of the face and an adastral at the centre. The original timepiece 'Mitch' was given to the Science Museum, where it became the first ITV exhibit, and now resides in the National Media Museum, Bradford.[9]

Rediffusion used a number of continuity announcers throughout its 13 years on air, with Redvers Kyle and Muriel Young being the most recognised.

Programmes

Programmes produced by Associated-Rediffusion and Rediffusion included:

Most of the surviving archive is now held by Archbuild and it's never been officially confirmed exactly how large the surviving archive actually is.

References

  1. ^ Mitchell, Donald (27 May 1998). "Obituary: Professor Boris Ford". The Independent. London. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
  2. ^ a b Britten, Benjamin (2008). Philip Reed; Mervyn Cooke; Donald Mitchell (eds.). Letters from a Life: The Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten, Volume IV, 1952–1957. London: The Boydell Press. ISBN 9781843833826.: p. 565
  3. ^ Britten (2008): p. 567
  4. ^ "Inside Wembley Studios – Part 1 - Studios - Transdiffusion". www.transdiffusion.org. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  5. ^ Schreuders, Piet; Lewisohn, Mark; Smith, Adam (2008). The Beatles' London: The Ultimate Guide to Over 400 Beatles Sites in and Around London. Portico. pp. 167–8. ISBN 978-1906032265.
  6. ^ Spencer Wills, John (19 December 1967). (Speech). Associated-Rediffusion AGM. Archived from the original on 14 January 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2019 – via Transdiffusion's Rediffusion, London.
  7. ^ Last ever closedown of Rediffusion London, retrieved 13 November 2022
  8. ^ "The Undiscovered Tony Hancock". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  9. ^ a b . TVARK. Archived from the original on 3 January 2012. Retrieved 6 September 2011. Page Contains videos and images of the Rediffusion idents.
  10. ^ Jeffrey, Dave. "Flash Files Part 1". 625: Andrew Wiseman's Television Room. Retrieved 6 September 2011. Page contains flash recreations of Rediffusion's idents accompanied by authentic audio.

External links

  • , 1956, from 625.uk.com (requires Macromedia Flash Player 6 or later).
  • , 1964, from 625.uk.com.
  • , formerly known as Wembley Studios
  • The history of Rediffusion by Gerald K Clode 6 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Rediffusion Barbados (unofficial history site)
ITV regional service
New service London (weekdays)
22 September 1955 – 29 July 1968
Succeeded by

associated, rediffusion, this, article, about, television, company, other, uses, rediffusion, brand, rediffusion, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . This article is about an ITV television company For other uses of the Rediffusion brand see Rediffusion This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Associated Rediffusion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Associated Rediffusion later Rediffusion London was the British ITV franchise holder for London and parts of the surrounding counties on weekdays between 22 September 1955 and 29 July 1968 It was the first ITA franchisee to go on air and one of the Big Four companies that between them produced the majority of ITV networked programmes during this period Associated RediffusionRediffusion LondonLogo from 1964The Rediffusion region when it lost its franchise in 1968TypeRegion of television networkBrandingAssociated Rediffusion 1955 1964 Rediffusion London 1964 1968 CountryUKFirst air date22 September 1955 67 years ago 1955 09 22 Founded1955TV transmittersCroydonHeadquartersTelevision House LondonBroadcast areaLondon Greater LondonOwnerBET plc Rediffusion Dissolved29 July 1968 54 years ago 1968 07 29 Picture format405 line black and whiteAffiliation s ITVLanguageEnglishReplaced byThames TelevisionRediffusion lost its franchise in 1968 but merged with another franchisee to form Thames Television which continued to hold the London weekday franchise for another 24 years Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Rebranding and loss of franchise 1 3 Revival 1 4 Reditune and Rediffusion Music 2 Studios 3 Presentation 4 Programmes 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit Associated Rediffusion Television was originally a partnership between British Electric Traction BET its subsidiary Broadcast Relay Services Ltd trading as Rediffusion and Associated Newspapers owner of the Daily Mail which had been interested in commercial broadcasting as early as the 1920s In the aftermath of the heavy financial losses made by the new ITV system in its initial years Associated Newspapers sold the majority of its share to BET and Rediffusion although the company did not drop the word Associated from its name until 1964 Associated Newspapers later realising the potential of ITV was a significant investor in the ITV franchise contractor for southern and south east England Southern Television and later on becoming a shareholder on Independent Television News Captain Thomas Brownrigg RN Retired the general manager of Associated Rediffusion from 1955 had a very clear idea of what his new commercial television station was to be like the BBC Television Service with advertisements To this end the station had a heraldic style on air clock referred to as Mitch by staff after chief station announcer Leslie Mitchell who had not only made the first announcement when A R went on the air in 1955 but had done the same when the BBC TV service started in 1936 citation needed Associated Rediffusion took over the former Wembley Film Studio at Wembley Park in Middlesex Associated Rediffusion officially began broadcasting on 22 September 1955 at 19 15 with actress Marjie Lawrence uttering the first words That night the BBC which had held the monopoly on broadcasting in the UK aired a melodramatic episode of their popular radio soap opera The Archers on the BBC Home Service in which core character Grace Archer was fatally injured in a fire This was seen as a desperate and rather underhand ploy to lure as much of the potential audience as possible from tuning in to the new station s opening night of broadcast entertainment Britain s first female newsreader Barbara Mandell appeared during the first full day of transmissions on 23 September 1955 The London weekend contractor ATV launched two days later This strategy was intended to allay fears that the new service would be aimed at the bottom of the market Associated Rediffusion sought to make ITV respectable It did introduce popular game shows but also provided quality programming across all genres gained large audiences both in its own London area and as the ITV network grew for its programmes shown across the country Boris Ford became Associated Rediffusion s first head of schools broadcasting 1957 58 during which time he persuaded Benjamin Britten to compose his church opera Noye s Fludde for a series of programmes 1 Ford was dismissed before the opera was produced allegedly for administrative shortcomings and inexperience 2 However A R continued its association with Britten producing a highly successful telecast of his opera The Turn of the Screw in 1959 3 Ticket for the dress rehearsal for Around the Beatles on 28 April 1964 at Wembley Park Associated Rediffusion added new television studios at Wembley Park in 1960 Their size and unique design attracted worldwide attention 4 During the 1960s the studios were home to some of the most popular programmes on the ITV network including The Rat Catchers Blackmail At Last The 1948 Show and The Frost Report The Beatles appeared at the studios on more than one occasion 5 Rebranding and loss of franchise Edit In 1964 the company simplified its name to Rediffusion Television and rebranded the station on screen as Rediffusion London with a very hip 1960s style the face of Swinging London in the shiny prosperous new Britain However the new Rediffusion did not survive for long in October 1967 the Independent Television Authority announced to the company s shock that there was no place for Rediffusion in the redrawn franchise pattern 6 Following changes to the ITV network structure which resulted in the abandonment of the Midlands and North weekend franchises held by ABC Weekend TV ABC lost all its franchises along with the rights to take over the Midlands held by ATV or the London Weekend franchise awarded to the London Television Consortium To preserve the sizeable ABC the ITA proposed ABC and Rediffusion should form a new company Thames Television This was not a merger or forced marriage as is commonly stated and is an urban myth citation needed ABPC the parent company of ABC and BET the parent company of Rediffusion created Thames as a separate entity Thames would use the resources and staff of ABC s Teddington Studios and Rediffusion s Television House Rediffusion s parent company BET took a 49 stake in Thames and was under represented in the management of the new company a state of affairs to which Rediffusion strongly objected The ITA replied that either Thames took the new contract or ABC took over Rediffusion chose the former and went off the air on 29 July 1968 at 12 26 am 7 Employees based at Wembley went to work for London Weekend Television whilst those at Television House were employed by Thames Some managerial and presentation staff re located to the new Yorkshire Television in Leeds Much of Rediffusion s programme library was either lost or destroyed following the creation of Thames Surviving titles from the Rediffusion archive are held by the BFI National Archive at Berkhamsted Hertfordshire Most titles are the intellectual property of Archbuild Limited with the exception of some of Rediffusion s musical output such as Ready Steady Go which was for a long time owned by Dave Clark International and latterly by BMG Rights Management Some Rediffusion shows have been rediscovered in recent years In the late 1980s a series of five At Last the 1948 Show compilations was found in the archives of Swedish broadcaster SVT In 2020 The British Film Institute released the most complete box set possible of the restored series including all ten surviving episodes two almost completely reconstructed episodes and the complete audio of a further episode with fragments of film 2 Revival Edit In the 1990s the name Associated Rediffusion Television and the adastral trademark were acquired by the late British journalist Victor Lewis Smith and were used by his own production company Productions included TV Offal a satirical series of TV archive clips presented by Lewis Smith Ads Infinitum a retrospective of vintage television advertising presented by Lewis Smith over two series An Omnibus documentary covering Dudley Moore s love for music and his struggle with progressive supranuclear palsy titled Dudley Moore After The Laughter It turned out to be Moore s final interview for television and won a BAFTA Television Award in 2001 A one off revival of Dee Time A series of documentaries presented by actor Keith Allen 21st Century Bach a long running series of programmes no more than ten minutes in length each featuring short pieces of organ music by J S Bach and played by John Scott Whiteley Alchemists of Sound a documentary about the BBC Radiophonic Workshop The Undiscovered Tony Hancock a 2018 documentary for Sky Arts 8 Reditune and Rediffusion Music Edit Rediffusion Music Reditune Rediffusion Reditune Music and Rediffusion Thorsen Germany were sold to AEI Music Network of Seattle WA in 1996 DMX Music a smaller music provider bought AEI Music in 2000 Mood Media bought DMX Music in 2005 The current owner remains Mood Media however it trades under the MOOD brand today Mood Media Corporation own the previous trading names of Rediffusion Reditune Rediffusion Music AEI Rediffusion Music AEI Music and DMX Music Studios Edit Television House Rediffusion s headquarters Main articles Television House and Fountain Studios The company s administrative headquarters and transmission facilities were at Television House in Kingsway London Most programmes were produced at Wembley Studios in Wembley Park north west London However a small basement studio at Television House Studio 9 was occasionally used for current affairs programmes and was home to Ready Steady Go during its first few years Television House had been known as Adastral House when it was the headquarters of the Air Ministry This gave its name to A R s logo the 16 point Adastral Star which appeared not only at the start and end of each commercial break but also between each advertisement The motto of the Royal Air Force is per ardua ad astra through adversity to the stars The station s archives were also kept at these properties with the original programme library situated on the roof of Television House with some storage in the film vaults at Wembley Studios Following Rediffusion s loss of franchise and the creation of Thames Television the Wembley studios were leased to the newly formed London Weekend Television by order of the ITA and the company officially took control of the premises on Monday 6 May 1968 for a contractual minimum term of three years London Weekend Television subsequently vacated the studios in the late summer of 1972 Somewhat confusingly this Wembley studios site is the very same studio buildings site that would later be sold off renamed re purposed as film studios then back to television studios at various stages when used by later owners London Weekend Television Wembley Lee International Studios Wembley Limehouse Television Wembley Fountain Television before closing in 2018 and becoming a theatre space prior to the site s planned redevelopment from 2019 Television House was used as Thames headquarters until their Euston Road studios were built in 1970 and was subsequently sold off Presentation EditWhen Rediffusion originally launched as Associated Rediffusion presentation consisted of a simple animated ident featuring the station name and a spinning star called the Adastral This first ident was accompanied by a five note electronic fanfare achieved by tapping out the morse code for A R To accompany the ident a timepiece was created based on a heraldic coat of arms and nicknamed Mitch after Head of Presentation Leslie Mitchell 9 10 In 1964 Associated Rediffusion rebranded itself on screen as Rediffusion London using a black and grey ident featuring the same as previous but with the new name now in a stripe and in a sans serif font A new and simpler clock was designed featuring a 24 hour display at the bottom of the face and an adastral at the centre The original timepiece Mitch was given to the Science Museum where it became the first ITV exhibit and now resides in the National Media Museum Bradford 9 Rediffusion used a number of continuity announcers throughout its 13 years on air with Redvers Kyle and Muriel Young being the most recognised Programmes EditProgrammes produced by Associated Rediffusion and Rediffusion included At Last the 1948 Show Crane Do Not Adjust Your Set Double Your Money Five O Clock Club Love and Kisses No Hiding Place Ready Steady Go Sara and Hoppity Take Your Pick The Music Box The Rat Catchers This Week Together Again Top Secret Most of the surviving archive is now held by Archbuild and it s never been officially confirmed exactly how large the surviving archive actually is References Edit Mitchell Donald 27 May 1998 Obituary Professor Boris Ford The Independent London Retrieved 9 July 2014 a b Britten Benjamin 2008 Philip Reed Mervyn Cooke Donald Mitchell eds Letters from a Life The Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten Volume IV 1952 1957 London The Boydell Press ISBN 9781843833826 p 565 Britten 2008 p 567 Inside Wembley Studios Part 1 Studios Transdiffusion www transdiffusion org Retrieved 16 August 2016 Schreuders Piet Lewisohn Mark Smith Adam 2008 The Beatles London The Ultimate Guide to Over 400 Beatles Sites in and Around London Portico pp 167 8 ISBN 978 1906032265 Spencer Wills John 19 December 1967 Statement to shareholders Speech Associated Rediffusion AGM Archived from the original on 14 January 2019 Retrieved 13 January 2019 via Transdiffusion s Rediffusion London Last ever closedown of Rediffusion London retrieved 13 November 2022 The Undiscovered Tony Hancock British Comedy Guide Retrieved 13 December 2022 a b Associated Rediffusion Idents TVARK Archived from the original on 3 January 2012 Retrieved 6 September 2011 Page Contains videos and images of the Rediffusion idents Jeffrey Dave Flash Files Part 1 625 Andrew Wiseman s Television Room Retrieved 6 September 2011 Page contains flash recreations of Rediffusion s idents accompanied by authentic audio External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Associated Rediffusion Animated Associated Rediffusion Presents logo 1956 from 625 uk com requires Macromedia Flash Player 6 or later Animated Rediffusion Black logo 1964 from 625 uk com Associated Rediffusion at TV Ark Fountain Studios formerly known as Wembley Studios Rediffusion Singapore official site Television House from Telemusications unofficial history site The history of Rediffusion by Gerald K Clode Archived 6 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Rediffusion Barbados unofficial history site ITV regional serviceNew service London weekdays 22 September 1955 29 July 1968 Succeeded byThames Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Associated Rediffusion amp oldid 1127165526, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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