This is a list of British television related events from 1958.
Events
January
February
- 13 February â A by-election is covered on UK television for the first time when Granada broadcasts coverage of the 1958 Rochdale by-election; Broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy takes second place for the Liberals, considerably increasing their share of the vote.
- 17 February â Pope Pius XII designates St. Clare of Assisi as the patron saint of television. Thereafter, placing her icon on a television set is said to improve reception.
- 18 February â Footage of the annual Shrove Tuesday Atherstone Ball Game is shown on television for the first time.
March
- 31 March â Debut of the BBC's serial Starr and Company, set in an engineering firm. The programme is aired for nine months.
April
- 14 April â The newly magnetic videotape machine Vision Electronic Recording Apparatus or VERA for short, is given a live demonstration on air in Panorama where Richard Dimbleby seated by a clock, talks for a couple of minutes about the new method of vision recording with an instant playback. The tape is then wound back and replayed. The picture is slightly watery, but reasonably watchable, and instant playback is something completely new.
May
- 5 May â First experimental transmissions of a 625-line television service.
- 10 May â The BBC broadcasts rugby league's Challenge Cup final for the third time and this marks the start of annual coverage of the final.
July
- 13âÂÂ19 July â ITV shows coverage of the Commonwealth Games. This is the only time that ITV has covered the event.
August
September
- 13 September â ITV first screens Oh Boy!, the first teenage all-music show on British television, produced by Jack Good, made by ABC Weekend TV and broadcast live on early Saturday evenings from the Hackney Empire with Lord Rockingham's XI assembled as the house band. This follows late-night pilots screened in the midlands on 15 and 29 June.
October
- 11 October â The long running Saturday afternoon sports programme Grandstand debuts on the BBC Television Service. It airs until 2007.
- 16 October â Blue Peter, the world's longest-running children's TV programme, debuts on the BBC Television Service. It continues to air into the 2020s.
- 28 October â The State Opening of Parliament is broadcast on television for the first time.
November
December
Undated
- Oxo stock cubes are first promoted on television in a series of advertisements depicting "Life with Katie" and the "Oxo family" which run until 1999.
Debuts
BBC Television Service/BBC TV
ITV
Continuing television shows
1920s
- BBC Wimbledon (1927âÂÂ1939, 1946âÂÂ2019, 2021âÂÂpresent)
1930s
- Trooping the Colour (1937âÂÂ1939, 1946âÂÂ2019, 2023âÂÂpresent)
- The Boat Race (1938âÂÂ1939, 1946âÂÂ2019, 2021âÂÂpresent)
- BBC Cricket (1939, 1946âÂÂ1999, 2020âÂÂpresent)
1940s
1950s
Ending this year
Births
- 10 January â Caroline Langrishe, actress
- 24 January â Jools Holland, pianist and television presenter
- 29 January â Linda Smith, comedian (died 2006)
- 11 February â Michael Jackson, television executive
- 20 February â James Wilby, actor
- 3 March â Miranda Richardson, comedy actress
- 7 March â Rik Mayall, actor, comedian and writer (died 2014)
- 13 March â Linda Robson, actress
- 14 March â Francine Stock, radio and television presenter and author
- 21 March â Gary Oldman, actor
- 14 April â Peter Capaldi, Scottish actor and director
- 3 May â Sandi Toksvig, Danish-born comedy performer, media presenter and writer
- 17 May â Paul Whitehouse, Welsh comedy writer-performer
- 18 May â Toyah Willcox, actress and singer
- 22 May â Denise Welch, actress and television presenter
- 6 July â Jennifer Saunders, comedy writer-performer
- 24 July â Joe McGann, actor
- 29 July â Simon Nye, screenwriter
- 31 July â Sue Jenkins, actress
- 29 August â Lenny Henry, actor and comedian
- 30 August â Muriel Gray, Scottish author, broadcaster and journalist
- 13 September â Bobby Davro, actor and comedian
- 18 September â Linda Lusardi, model, actress and television presenter
- 21 September
- Simon Mayo, television and radio presenter
- Penny Smith, television presenter
- 25 October â Simon Gipps-Kent, actor (died 1987)
- 31 October â Debbie McGee, television, radio and stage performer
- 1 December â Keith Chapman, children's television programme creator
- 6 December â Nick Park, animated film maker
Deaths
See also
References
External links