my-server
← Wiki

William Edward Taynton

William Edward Taynton (2 August 1904 – May 1973) was an English office worker who became the first human being in history to have his image transmitted by television. On 2 October 1925, while working as an office boy in London, he was recruited by inventor John Logie Baird to serve as the live subject for his mechanical television experiments, following the successful transmission of a ventriloquist's dummy.

The 1925 experiment

Taynton was an employee of a firm at 22 Frith Street in Soho, the same building where Baird maintained his laboratory. After Baird achieved a breakthrough in transmitting the "halftone" image of a puppet named Stooky Bill he sought a human subject to verify that the apparatus could capture living people. Baird "almost dragged" Taynton to come and act as a subject that would provide the necessary motion. Despite the intense heat from the apparatus, Taynton remained in place long enough for Baird to achieve the first true television picture. When Baird asked Taynton for his opinion of the picture he replied that it was "very crude". For his contribution, he received a payment of half a crown, which is cited as the first "television fee" ever paid to a performer.

Early life

He died in 1973.

References