The year 1973 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events in that year.
Events
- January 4 â Last of the Summer Wine, starts as a 30-minute pilot on BBC1's Comedy Playhouse show in the U.K. The first series starts on November 12; the 295th and last episode is broadcast on 29 August 2010.
- January 12 â Family Affair airs for the final time, in daytime reruns on CBS in the United States. Reruns will eventually move to syndication.
- January 13 â The Lawrence Welk Show airs its Salute to Mexico episode where Anacani makes her debut with the Champagne Music Makers. This episode also marks the final time Sandi Griffiths and Sally Flynn appear together as the act of Sandi & Sally
- January 14 â Elvis Presley's Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite television special is seen around the world by over 1 billion viewers, setting a record as the most-watched broadcast by an individual entertainer in television history. It is broadcast live to Asia and Oceania, with a delay to Europe, and in April to the United States and Brazil. In the UK, it is not shown until March 5, 1978 on BBC1. However, it is not shown in Eastern Bloc countries because of communist censorship, with the sole exception of Der schwarze Kanal on Deutscher Fernsehfunk in East Germany.
- January 15 â For a brief attempt to stop rerunning primetime shows from 1973 to 1975, Vin Scully's eponymous talk show debuts on the air on CBS.
- March 8 â The TV movie The Marcus-Nelson Murders airs on CBS. This serves as the pilot for the iconic crime drama series Kojak, which returns as a weekly series in October.
- March 13 â The TV movie Hawkins: Death and the Maiden airs on CBS. This serves as the pilot for the James Stewart legal drama and murder mystery series Hawkins, which returns as a weekly series in October.
- March 21 â Sitcom Are You Being Served? begins its first regular series on BBC1 in the U.K. (pilot aired September 8, 1972).
- March 23 â The longest running daytime game show to date â NBC's Concentration â airs its 3,796th and final show, after a run of fourteen years and seven months. The record will be eclipsed in 1987 by The Price Is Right; Concentration ranks fourth in continual longevity among all daytime/syndicated game shows. Also on the same day, CBS airs the final episodes of the soaps that started in the late 1960s, Where the Heart Is and Love is a Many Splendored Thing on the daytime lineup.
- March 25 â The pilot episode of Open All Hours airs as part of Ronnie Barker's series Seven of One on BBC1 in the U.K.
- March 26 â NBC debuts Baffle, one of the first projects Lin Bolen greenlit for the daytime schedule. Also on the same day, CBS debuts The $10,000 Pyramid and The Young and the Restless on the lineup, and The Price is Right moves to afternoons (it will eventually come back to the mornings permanently in August 1975). The Young and the Restless will kick out Jeopardy! in the ratings, moving it from the noon to the mornings by January 1974.
- April 1 â "Prisoner and Escort", the pilot episode of Porridge, airs as part of Seven of One.
- April 16 â James Paul McCartney airs on ABC (and on ITV in the U.K. on May 10).
- May 10 â ABC concludes its first run at broadcasting the National Basketball Association with the New York Knicks' Finals clinching victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 5. With CBS taking over as the NBA's network television partner, this marks the last time that ABC will broadcast an NBA Finals for 30 years.
- May 17 â U.S. daytime television is interrupted by the Watergate hearings, which will continue until August 7. Each network airs coverage in rotation every third day (ABC is first, then CBS and NBC).
- July 2 â U.S. game show Match Game debuts its 1970s version; it soon becomes the #1-rated daytime television program for 1973, 1974 and 1975, as well as #1 game show from 1973 to 1977.
- August 6 â James Beck, who stars as Private Walker in the popular U.K. sitcom Dad's Army, dies of a burst pancreas at the age of just 44. Although the series continues until 1977, the part of Walker is not recast and the show carries on without him.
- August 11 â Programme One airs the first part of the Soviet television miniseries Seventeen Moments of Spring, which will run until the 24th. With an audience of between fifty and eighty million viewers per episode, it becomes the most successful television show of its time in the Soviet Union.
- August 17 â CBS presents an adaptation of David Rabe's play Sticks and Bones...but only to about half of its affiliates.
- September 15 â Betty White makes her first appearance as Sue Ann Nivens in The Mary Tyler Moore Shows fourth season opener, "The Lars Affair".
- September 20 â The Battle of the Sexes: Billie Jean King defeats Bobby Riggs in a televised tennis match at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas. The global television audience in 36 countries is estimated at 90 million.
- October 8
- Pat Phoenix leaves the role of Elsie Tanner on Coronation Street after thirteen years, when she felt that specific length of time was enough to play one character continuously.
- Telefe Mar del Plata is taken over by the Peronist government of Argentina.
- October 20 â George Jefferson (Sherman Hemsley) makes his first appearance on All in the Family, at his brother Henry's goodbye party, though he has lived next door to Archie Bunker for the past two years.
- November 4 â Filipino television network Banahaw Broadcasting Corporation officially signs on the air using Channel 2 frequency (owned by ABS-CBN Corporation), which was shut down by President Ferdinand Marcos more than a year ago.
- November 12 â Last of the Summer Wine starts as a series on BBC1 (the pilot had aired on January 4). The 295th and last episode is broadcast on 29 August 2010.
- November 20 â A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving airs on CBS for the first time. It will go on to win an Emmy Award the following year.
- November 23 â Julie on Sesame Street, starring Julie Andrews, airs on ABC.
- November â Color television is launched in New Zealand. (It will go full-time in November 1975).
- December 12 â Kojak's trademark lollipop makes its debut in the episode "Hot Sunday".
- December 19 â After reading a news item that says the federal government has fallen behind in getting bids to supply toilet tissue, Johnny Carson inadvertently triggers an unprecedented three-week panic when he announces, on The Tonight Show, that there is an acute shortage of toilet paper in the U.S.
Programs/programmes
Debuts
Ending this year
Births
Deaths
Television debuts
See also
References