1988 in British television




Overview of the events of 1988 in British television












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This is a list of British television related events from 1988.




Contents






  • 1 Events


    • 1.1 January


    • 1.2 February


    • 1.3 March


    • 1.4 April


    • 1.5 May


    • 1.6 June


    • 1.7 July


    • 1.8 August


    • 1.9 September


    • 1.10 October


    • 1.11 November


    • 1.12 December


    • 1.13 Autumn


    • 1.14 Unknown




  • 2 Debuts


    • 2.1 BBC1


    • 2.2 BBC2


    • 2.3 ITV


    • 2.4 Channel 4




  • 3 Television shows


    • 3.1 Changes of network affiliation


    • 3.2 1920s


    • 3.3 1930s


    • 3.4 1940s


    • 3.5 1950s


    • 3.6 1960s


    • 3.7 1970s


    • 3.8 1980s




  • 4 Ending this year


  • 5 Births


  • 6 Deaths


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References





Events



January



  • 1 January –

    • New Year's Day highlights on BBC1 include the first network television showing of Roger Donaldson's historical drama, The Bounty.[1]

    • BBC2 airs a five-hour Whistle Test special to welcome in 1988. The special, aired from 9.35pm on New Year's Eve to 2.55am on New Year's Day, takes a look back through the archives in what is the programme's final outing.[2] It will be three decades later in 2018 before a new edition of the programme is broadcast.[3]


    • Michael Grade takes on the role of Chief Executive of Channel 4.[4]



  • 2 January – ITV airs the British television premiere of the 1984 film Supergirl, starring Helen Slater.

  • 4 January – BBC1 moves the repeat episode of Neighbours to a 5:35pm evening slot,[5] the decision to do this having been made by controller Michael Grade on the advice of his daughter.

  • 5 January – Actor Rowan Atkinson launches the new Comic Relief charity appeal.

  • 6 January – All ITV regions network Emmerdale Farm in the Wednesday and Thursday 6.30pm slot.

  • 8 January – Launch of LWT News, a news service from London Weekend Television providing at least eight bulletins each weekend for the ITV London region, and created as a response to IBA concerns about the lack of a proper news service in London at weekends.

  • 11 January – The first episode of the game show Fifteen to One airs on Channel 4. The show's first winner is Gareth McMullan, a teacher from Northern Ireland.[6]

  • 25–29 January – TV-am airs a week of live broadcasts from Sydney to celebrate Australia's bicentenary.

  • 30 January – British television premiere of the James Bond film Octopussy on ITV.[7]



February



  • 5 February – The inaugural Red Nose Day sees Comic Relief air its first A Night of Comic Relief fundraiser on BBC1.[8]

  • 10 February – Debut on BBC1 of Moondial, a six part series adapted from the novel by Helen Cresswell.[9][10] The series is repeated by BBC1 in 1990.[11]

  • 13–28 February – The 1988 Winter Olympics are held in Calgary, Alberta and broadcast to television audiences around the world. In the UK, the BBC provides around five hours of live and recorded coverage each day.

  • 15 February –

    • An early morning 60-minute news programme – ITN Early Morning News – is launched but is only available in areas which have 24-hour broadcasting. The first 30 minutes of the programme included a full broadcast of ITN's international news bulletin ITN World News. In addition, brief news summaries are broadcast at various points through the night. The launch coincides with three of the major ITV companies – Scottish, Central and Granada – beginning 24-hour transmission.[12]


    • Red Dwarf makes its debut on BBC2.[13]



  • 20 February –

    • Debut of the stunt-based ITV game show You Bet! presented by Bruce Forsyth.[14]


    • London's Burning makes its debut as a regular series on ITV, having been developed from Jack Rosenthal's original 1986 film.



  • February – Channel 4 starts broadcasting into the early hours, closing down between 2 am and 3 am. Previously Channel 4 had closed down at just after midnight.



March



  • 7 March – ITV's lunchtime news programme returns to the 1 pm timeslot.

  • 18 March – The final US edition of Top of the Pops airs in the United States.

  • 19 March – Two off-duty British soldiers are killed after stumbling into an IRA funeral procession in Belfast. Footage of the incident is captured by journalists and widely broadcast.[15]

  • 22 March – Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher tells the House of Commons that journalists have a "bounden duty" to assist the police investigation into the corporals killings by handing over their footage. Many have refused to do so fearing it could place them in danger.[16]

  • 23 March – Film of the corporals killings is seized from the BBC and ITN under the Prevention of Terrorism and Emergency Provisions Acts.[16]

  • 25 March – BBC2 shows Two of Us, a gay-themed television film.[17] It was produced as part of the BBC Schools SCENE series, and intended for young adults. It confronted the Thatcherite government's attempt to ban gay sex education in schools via the controversial (and since repealed) section 28 legislation.[18] Given this backdrop, the BBC opted not to show it during the day and it was screened late at night on this day, even though it was originally created for a school audience. In 1990 the play was finally shown during the day, when it was broadcast in a lunchtime slot.[19][20]



April



  • 1 April – British television premiere of the Rankin/Bass animated film The Flight of Dragons on BBC1.[21]

  • 4 April – The original series of Crossroads airs for the last time on ITV. It returns in 2001 before being axed again in 2003.

  • 6 April – ITV's chart show The Roxy airs for the last time.

  • 15 April – The Pogues perform their controversial hit Streets of Sorrow/Birmingham Six – a song expressing support for those convicted over the Guildford and Birmingham pub bombings – on the Ben Elton Channel 4 show Friday Night Live. The song is cut short, however, by a commercial break.

  • 19 April – Liz Forgan becomes Channel 4’s first official Director of Programmes.[4]

  • 28 April –

    • BBC1 airs the concluding episode of Around the World with Willy Fog.[22]


    • ITV broadcasts "Death on the Rock", a hugely controversial episode of Thames Television's This Week current affairs strand, investigating Operation Flavius, which resulted in the SAS killing three members of the IRA in Gibraltar on 6 March.



  • 30 April – Canadian singer Celine Dion wins the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest for Switzerland with the French language song "Ne partez pas sans moi" ("Don't Leave Without Me").



May



  • 9 May – The youth strand DEF II is launched on BBC2.[23]

  • 19 May – Anita Dobson makes her last appearance in EastEnders, when her character, Angie Watts departs for a new life in Spain.

  • 23 May – Three gay rights activists invade the BBC studios during a Six O'Clock bulletin of the BBC News to protest about the introduction of Section 28, a law preventing schools from teaching their students about homosexuality. Protesters can be heard chanting as Sue Lawley continues to read the news, prompting the presenter to comment "we have been rather invaded by some people who we hope to be removing very shortly".[24]

  • 29–30 May – ITV stages the first Telethon, a 27-hour nationwide fundraising effort involving participation and input from all of the regional broadcasters around the country. Its aim is to raise money for disability charities across the United Kingdom.

  • 30 May – Yorkshire Television resumes 24-hour broadcasting.

  • 31 May –

    • Debut of People, a thirteen part series on BBC1 featuring human interest stories and presented by Derek Jameson. He is joined by Jeni Barnett, Lucy Pilkington and Chris Serle.[25]

    • Debut of Charles Wood's screenplay Tumbledown about the experiences of Scots Guard Robert Lawrence, who was left paralysed after being shot in the head by a sniper at the Battle of Mount Tumbledown during the Falklands War.[26] The film is shown again on 9 October.[27]





June



  • 1 June – Horse racing is shown for the final time on ITV when it simulcasts Channel 4's coverage of the Derby. The sport was not to return to ITV screens until 2017.

  • 5 June – Channel 4 airs the Thames Television documentary Waldheim: A Commission of Inquiry, a programme investigating the history of the alleged Nazi conspirator Kurt Waldheim.[4]

  • 8 June –

    • Television presenter Russell Harty dies aged 53.[28]

    • Media mogul Rupert Murdoch announces to the British Academy of Film and Television Arts his intention to launch a four-channel service on the soon to be launched Astra satellite.[29]



  • 11 June – The Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute concert is staged at Wembley Stadium, London,[30] and broadcast to 67 countries and an audience of 600 million. In the UK it was broadcast on BBC 2.[31]

  • 20 June – TVS and Channel commence 24-hour broadcasting.

  • 21 June – BBC 1 airs Crystal Clear, a film based on the award-winning play of the same name that deals with the subject of sight loss.[32]



July



  • 1 July – Australian series The Flying Doctors makes its British television debut on BBC 1.[33] Initially aired on Fridays at 8.10pm, from 20 August, it is moved to a Saturday early evening slot.[34]

  • 7 July – The Times reports that TVS have bought US production company MTM Enterprises for £190m.[35]

  • 15 July – London Weekend Television airs the final edition of its Friday evening programme The Six O'Clock Show. It is replaced by Friday Now!, a smaller scale current affairs programme from October.

  • 17 July – After 1,576 episodes, Farming is broadcast on BBC1 for the final time. It is replaced the following week by Countryfile whose brief was to look at issues reflecting all aspects of the countryside rather than just focussing on farming.[36]

  • 19 July – The Bill broadcasts the first episode of its fourth season and switches to a year-round serial format.

  • 26 July – Anna Wing makes her final appearance as EastEnders matriarch Lou Beale, dispensing words of wisdom and advice to her family before retiring to her bedroom to slip away. Her final words in the soap are: "That's you lot sorted. I can go now." The character has died by the following episode, and at her funeral, her on-screen son Pete (played by Peter Dean) proposes a toast to that "bloody old bag". Wing herself died, aged 98, in 2013.[37]



August



  • 3 August – Brookside is moved from Tuesdays to Wednesdays which means the soap can now be seen on Mondays and Wednesdays.

  • 5 August – The eight part New Zealand thriller Steel Riders debuts on BBC1.[38]

  • 10 August – Debut of Crimewatch File, a BBC1 documentary series in which detectives tell the inside stories of some of the UK's major criminal investigations during which police appealed to viewers of the BBC's Crimewatch for help.[39]

  • 22 August – HTV begins 24-hour broadcasting.

  • 31 August – ITV airs a version of The Hound of the Baskervilles starring Jeremy Brett and Edward Hardwicke.



September



  • 1 September – To celebrate BBC Radio 1's FM "switch on day", BBC1's Top of the Pops is simulcast with Radio 1 for the first time, allowing listeners to hear the programme in stereo. This edition is presented by Steve Wright and Mark Goodier.[40]Top of the Pops is then simulcast weekly with Radio 1 until August 1991.[41]

  • 2 September – TSW, Grampian and Border begin 24-hour broadcasting.

  • 5 September – BBC1 airs Bros Special, a 30-minute programme showing exclusive footage of pop band Bros in concert and on their UK tour.[42] The programme is repeated on 29 December.[43]

  • 6 September – ITV premieres a new animated series on Children's ITV Count Duckula (a sequel to the popular children's animated TV series Danger Mouse) featuring the voice of David Jason.

  • 7 September – Repeat showing of Paul Hamann's death row documentary Fourteen Days in May, telling the story of the final days of Edward Earl Johnson as he awaits execution on Mississippi's death row.[44] The film is followed on 14 September by The Journey, in which lawyer Clive Stafford Smith returns to Mississippi in an attempt to posthumously clear Johnson of the crimes to which he always professed his innocence.[45]

  • 8 September – Channel 4 drops plans to invite Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams to appear on an edition of its late night discussion programme After Dark following objections from other contributors.[46]

  • 9 September – Casualty returns to BBC1 for a third series,[47] moving from its previous Saturday evening slot to Friday evenings.

  • 12 September – Debut of Stoppit and Tidyup,[48] a 13-part series narrated by Terry Wogan, and partly funded by the Tidy Britain Group charity.

  • 13 September – A brand new children's cartoon series PC Pinkerton gets its debut on BBC1.[49] The series was produced by Trevor Bond who has also worked on the original Mr. Men series and Bananaman with veteran animation producer Terry Ward and featured the voice of Ian Lavender best known for the playing the role of Private Pike in the hit sitcom Dad's Army.

  • 14 September – Debut of the eight-part Australian series The True Story of Spit MacPhee on BBC1.[50] The series concludes on 2 November.[51]

  • 17 September–2 October – The 1988 Summer Olympics are held in Seoul, South Korea and broadcast to television audiences around the world. BBC Television provides live coverage, as does ITV, in conjunction with Channel 4. This was to be the final time that ITV broadcast the Olympic Games, and Channel 4's only broadcast of the Olympics. ITV shows daytime coverage while Channel 4 airs the overnight and breakfast coverage.

  • 18 September – Debut of the BBC political discussion programme On the Record, presented by Jonathan Dimbleby.[52]

  • 20 September – Death, at the age of 54, of actor Roy Kinnear, who the previous day had fallen from a horse during the making of The Return of the Musketeers in Toledo, Spain. He sustained a broken pelvis and internal bleeding, and was taken to hospital in Madrid, where he died from a heart attack, brought on by his injuries.[53]

  • 30 September – Television presenters Mike Smith and Sarah Greene are seriously injured in a helicopter crash in Gloucestershire.[54]



October



  • 3 October –

    • The magazine programme This Morning makes its debut. It is presented by Richard Madeley and Judy Finnigan until 2001.


    • Ulster Television in Northern Ireland is the last in the ITV network to begin 24-hour transmission.


    • The Oprah Winfrey Show makes its British television debut on Channel 4.[55]



  • 5 October – ITV begins airing the Australian soap Richmond Hill in a 2.00pm slot on Wednesdays and Thursdays, the first time the channel has networked an Australian soap. However, some regions (including Central and Granada) opt out of networking the series when it is cancelled by Australia's Channel Ten in 1989.

  • 7 October – Launch of LWT's current affairs programme Friday Now!.[56]

  • 19 October – Home Secretary Douglas Hurd issues a notice under clause 13(4) of the BBC Licence and Agreement to the BBC and under section 29(3) of the Broadcasting Act 1981 to the Independent Broadcasting Authority prohibiting the broadcast of direct statements by representatives or supporters of 11 Irish political and military organisations.[57][58]The ban lasts until 1994, and denies the UK news media the right to broadcast the voices, though not the words, of all Irish republican and Loyalist paramilitaries. The restrictions – targeted primarily at Sinn Féin – means that actors are used to speak the words of any representative interviewed for radio and television.[59]

  • 20 October – Debut of children's 13 episode stop motion animated series Charlie Chalk produced by Woodland Animations the company behind Postman Pat on BBC1 featuring the voices of Barbara Leigh-Hunt and the late Michael Williams and John Wells. The last three episodes will air the next year.

  • 23 October – Final broadcast of Channel 4's groundbreaking youth music and current affairs programme Network 7.

  • 25 October – As the 25th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy approaches ITV airs the two-part documentary The Men Who Killed Kennedy, a film which explores discrepancies and inconsistencies in the US Government's official version of events.

  • 30 October –

    • Following the signing of a new four-year deal to show exclusive live coverage of top flight English football, ITV begins showing a live game every Sunday afternoon.


    • First Born, a three-part adaptation of Maureen Duffy's novel Gor Saga, debuts on BBC1.[60]





November



  • 2 November –

    • In the House of Commons, an amendment introduced by the opposition Labour Party condemning the government's decision over the broadcasting ban as "incompatible with a free society" is rejected, despite some Conservative MPs voting with Labour.[61]


    • Evacuation, an episode of ITV's The Bill features one of the series early prominent events – an explosion at Sun Hill police station.



  • 8 November – BBC1 airs Episode 523 of Neighbours, featuring the wedding of Scott Robinson and Charlene Mitchell (played by Jason Donovan and Kylie Minogue), which is watched by 20 million viewers.[62][63]

  • 13 November–18 December – The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, one of C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, is aired as a six-part TV serial by the BBC, featuring actors including Ronald Pickup, Barbara Kellerman and Michael Aldridge.[64][65]

  • 15 November – Premiere of an educational documentary series called Secret Life of Machines on Channel 4. It is hosted by inventor and roboteer Rex Garrod and engineer, cartoonist, artist and writer Tim Hunkin who is also the creator of the series.

  • 21 November – The Welsh children's favourite Fireman Sam is played in Singapore for the first time with the series being shown on MediaCorp Channel 5.

  • 23 November – The BBC science fiction series Doctor Who celebrates its 25th anniversary and begins the three-part serial Silver Nemesis.[66]

  • 24 November – Frank Ruse, a left-wing Labour councillor for Liverpool City Council accompanies Liverpool's Pagoda Chinese Youth Orchestra to London for an appearance on Blue Peter.[67] He is given a Blue Peter badge, but later receives a BBC headed letter requesting its return. The letter (later discovered to be a forgery) claims the programme had been approached by the office of Labour leader Neil Kinnock expressing concern that a councillor with hard-left views had been given a Blue Peter badge. Upon receiving the returned badge, the BBC writes back to Ruse stating that it had not sent the letter. The incident prompts Ruse to start an enquiry to find out who sent the hoax letter.[68]



December



  • 1 December – ITV's ORACLE Teletext service launches Park Avenue, a teletext based soap opera. It is written by Robert Burns and runs until ORACLE loses its franchise at the end of 1992.

  • 3 December – Comedian Steve Tandy wins New Faces of '88.

  • 10 December –

    • First showing of An Audience with Victoria Wood on ITV.[69]

    • Channel 4 airs the marathon charity rock concert Human Rights Now!.[4]



  • 11 December – Launch date of the Astra Satellite. The satellite will provide television coverage to Western Europe and is revolutionary as one of the first medium-powered satellites, allowing reception with smaller dishes than has previously been possible.

  • 13 December – Central airs the final episode of Sons and Daughters making it the first ITV region to complete the series.

  • 22 December – Singer Neneh Cherry performs her single "Buffalo Stance" on Top of the Pops while seven months pregnant, something that goes on to cause a furore in the media.[70][71]

  • 24 December – Christmas Eve highlights on BBC1 include the British television premieres of Santa Claus: The Movie with Dudley Moore, and Jagged Edge with Jeff Bridges and Glenn Close.[72]

  • 25 December –

    • The final edition of It's a Knockout to air on BBC1 is another celebrity special, It's a Charity Knockout From Walt Disney World, featuring teams of celebrities from the United Kingdom, United States and Australia. The series returns to S4C in 1991.

    • "Ding Dong Merrily", the London's Burning Christmas special, and the only episode of the series to have a title, is broadcast by ITV as part of its Christmas Day line up.



  • 26 December – BBC1 airs CivvyStreet, a spin-off episode of EastEnders set during World War II.[73] Later the same evening BBC1 airs Bruce and Ronnie, a Christmas special presented by Bruce Forsyth and Ronnie Corbett, who first appeared together at the 1988 Royal Variety Performance.[74]

  • 26–30 December – As part of a Christmas special, Channel 4 soap Brookside airs five episodes over five consecutive days.[4]

  • 28 December – BBC1 airs the first part of the Australian film Bushfire Moon.[75] The second part is shown on 30 December.[76]

  • 29 December – British television debut of Gremlins on ITV.

  • 30 December – Channel 4 airs "The Cotton Collection", an evening of archive classics BBC programmes, including episodes of Frost Over England and Dad’s Army.[4]

  • 31 December – New Year's Eve highlights on BBC1 include a special edition of Top of the Pops celebrating the programme's 25th anniversary, and the network television premiere of Perry Mason in the Case of the Sinister Spirit.[77]



Autumn


  • The BBC takes its first tentative steps into later closedowns – previously weekday programmes ended no later than 12:15 am and weekend broadcasting ended at 1:30 am.


Unknown


  • A government white paper on broadcasting includes provisions for a fifth UK television channel after Booz Allen Consultants recommends it as an option. Booz Allen claims the extra channel would reduce the current ITV monopoly and also reduce advertising costs.[78]


Debuts



BBC1



  • 3 January – First of the Summer Wine (1988–1989)

  • 11 January – United States/Canada Star Wars: Droids (1985–1986)

  • 13 January – White Peak Farm (1988)

  • 16 January – United States Kissyfur (1986–1990)

  • 10 February – Moondial (1988)

  • 24 February – Gruey (1988–1989)

  • 3 May – 4 Square (1988–1991)

  • 17 May – The Lowdown (1988–1998)

  • 30 May – Tumbledown (1988)

  • 8 June – The Movie Game (1988–1995)

  • 1 July – Australia The Flying Doctors (1986–1993)

  • 24 July – Countryfile (1988–present)

  • 3 September –


    • Noel's Saturday Roadshow (1988–1990)


    • Eggs 'n' Baker (1988–1993)



  • 12 September – Stoppit and Tidyup (1988)

  • 13 September – PC Pinkerton (1988)

  • 14 September – Australia The True Story of Spit MacPhee (1988)

  • 15 September – United States/Belgium The Snorks (1984–1989)

  • 18 September – On the Record (1988–2002)

  • 17 October –


    • Wyatt's Watchdogs (1988)


    • Playdays (1988–1997)



  • 20 October –


    • Charlie Chalk (1988–1989)


    • The River (1988)



  • 29 October – Hearts of Gold (1988–1996)

  • 30 October – First Born (1988)

  • 5 December – Supersense (1988)

  • 7 December – The Watch House (1988)

  • 21 December – Barney (1988–1989)

  • 29 December – You Rang, M'Lord? (1988–1993)



BBC2



  • 4 January – Clarence (1988)

  • 12 January – Geordie Racer (1988)

  • 15 February – Red Dwarf (1988–1999, 2012–present)

  • 16 April – Sophia and Constance (1988)

  • 9 May – DEF II (1988–1994)

  • 23 September – A Gentleman's Club (1988)

  • 3 October – Rapido (1988–1992)

  • 12 October – Blind Justice (1988)

  • 13 October – Alexei Sayle's Stuff (1988–1991)

  • 18 October – Colin's Sandwich (1988–1990)

  • 16 November – Christabel (1988)



ITV



  • 4 January – After Henry (1988–1992)

  • 17 January – Wish Me Luck (1988–1990)

  • 15 February – ITV News at 5:30 (1988–2012)

  • 17 February – The Fear (1988)

  • 20 February –


    • You Bet! (1988–1997)


    • London's Burning (1988–2002)



  • 22 February –


    • Andy Capp (1988)


    • News at Twelve (1988)



  • 13 March – Mr Majeika (1988–1990)

  • 21 March – Lucky Ladders (1988–1993)

  • 29 March – Codename: Kyril (1988)

  • 11 April – City Tails (1988)

  • 17 April – All Clued Up (1988–1991)

  • 18 May – Chatterbox (1988)

  • 9 June – Tumbledown Farm (1988–1989)

  • 6 July – Kellyvision (1988–1989)

  • 19 July – Wheel of Fortune (1988–2001)

  • 26 July – I Can Do That (1988–1991)

  • 3 September –


    • The Hit Man and Her (1988–1992)


    • Motormouth (1988–1992)


    • Square Deal (1988–1989)



  • 5 September –


    • United States Jim Henson's Mother Goose Stories (1988)


    • Tube Mice (1988)



  • 6 September – Count Duckula (1988–1993)

  • 7 September – Toksvig (1988)

  • 2 October – Hale and Pace (1988–1998)

  • 3 October – This Morning (1988—present)

  • 5 October – Australia Richmond Hill (1988–1989)

  • 11 October – The Return of Shelley (1988–1992)

  • 9 November – The Ratties (1988)

  • 27 November – The Beiderbecke Connection (1988)

  • 1 December – Park Avenue on ORACLE (1988–1992)

  • 3 December – How to Be Cool (1988)[79]



Channel 4



  • 11 January – Fifteen to One (1988–2003, 2013–present)

  • 28 February – Helping Henry (1988)

  • 9 March – Chelmsford 123 (1988–1990)

  • 10 April – United Kingdom/Wales East of the Moon (1988)

  • 23 September – Whose Line Is It Anyway? (1988–1998)

  • 3 October – United States The Oprah Winfrey Show (1986–2011)

  • 31 October – This is David Lander (1988–1990)

  • 15 November – The Secret Life of Machines (1988–1993)



Television shows



Changes of network affiliation


















Shows
Moved from
Moved to

Spain/Japan Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds

BBC1

ITV

Thomas The Tank Engine & Friends

The Children's Channel

Towser


1920s



  • BBC Wimbledon (1927–present)


1930s



  • BBC Cricket (1939–1999, 2020–2024)


1940s



  • Come Dancing (1949–1998)


1950s




  • Panorama (1953–present)


  • Opportunity Knocks (1956–1978, 1987–1990)


  • This Week (1956–1978, 1986–1992)


  • What the Papers Say (1956–2008)


  • The Sky at Night (1957–present)


  • Blue Peter (1958–present)


  • Grandstand (1958–2007)



1960s




  • Coronation Street (1960–present)


  • Songs of Praise (1961–present)


  • Doctor Who (1963–1989, 2005–present)


  • World in Action (1963–1998)


  • Top of the Pops (1964–2006)


  • Match of the Day (1964–present)


  • Mr. and Mrs. (1964–1999, 2008–2010, 2012–present)


  • Jackanory (1965–1996, 2006–present)


  • Sportsnight (1965–1997)


  • Call My Bluff (1965–2005)


  • The Money Programme (1966–2010)


  • The Big Match (1968–2002)



1970s




  • Rainbow (1972–1992, 1994–1995)


  • Emmerdale (1972–present)


  • Newsround (1972–present)


  • Last of the Summer Wine (1973–2010)


  • That's Life! (1973–1994)


  • Wish You Were Here...? (1974–2003)


  • Arena (1975–present)


  • Jim'll Fix It (1975–1994)


  • One Man and His Dog (1976–present)


  • Grange Hill (1978–2008)


  • The Book Tower (1979–1989)


  • Blankety Blank (1979–1990, 1997–2002)


  • The Paul Daniels Magic Show (1979–1994)


  • Antiques Roadshow (1979–present)


  • Question Time (1979–present)



1980s




  • Children in Need (1980–present)


  • Bergerac (1981–1991)


  • 'Allo 'Allo! (1982–1992)


  • Wogan (1981–1992)


  • Brookside (1982–2003)


  • Countdown (1982–present)


  • Timewatch (1982–present)


  • Right to Reply (1982–2001)


  • Breakfast Time (1983–1989)


  • Dramarama (1983–1989)


  • Don't Wait Up (1983–1990)


  • Aspel & Company (1984–1993)


  • Good Morning Britain (1983–1992, 2014–present)


  • First Tuesday (1983–1993)


  • Highway (1983–1993)


  • Blockbusters (1983–93, 1994–95, 1997, 2000–01, 2012–present)


  • Ever Decreasing Circles (1984–1989)


  • Wide Awake Club (1984–1992)


  • Bob's Full House (1984–1990)


  • Spitting Image (1984–1996)


  • The Bill (1984–2010)


  • Channel 4 Racing (1984–2016)


  • Three Up, Two Down (1985–1989)


  • Home to Roost (1985–1990)


  • Howards' Way (1985–1990)


  • Busman's Holiday (1985–1993)


  • EastEnders (1985–present)


  • The Cook Report (1985–1998)


  • Crosswits (1985–1998)


  • Telly Addicts (1985–1998)


  • Comic Relief (1985–present)


  • Bread (1986–1991)


  • Brush Strokes (1986–1991)


  • Naked Video (1986–1991)


  • Boon (1986–1992, 1995)


  • Every Second Counts (1986–1993)


  • Lovejoy (1986–1994)


  • Beadle's About (1986–1996)


  • The Chart Show (1986–1998, 2008–2009)


  • Casualty (1986–present)


  • Allsorts (1987–1995)


  • The Bretts (1987–1989)


  • Going Live! (1987–1993)


  • Watching (1987–1993)


  • The Time, The Place (1987–1996)


  • Going for Gold (1987–1996, 2008–2009)


  • Chain Letters (1987–1997)


  • ChuckleVision (1987–2009)


  • Playbox (1987–1992)



Ending this year



  • 2 January –


    • No. 73 (1982–1988)


    • Weekend World (1972–1988)


    • Let's Pretend (1982–1988)


    • Bad Boyes (1987–1988)



  • 13 January – Your Mother Wouldn't Like It (1985–1988)

  • 28 January – Yes Minister (1980–1988)

  • 30 January – Hi-De-Hi (1980–1988)

  • 9 February – Running Loose (1986–1988)

  • 11 March – Play School (1964–1988)

  • 16 March – Moondial (1988)

  • 18 March – Rockliffe's Babies (1987–1988)

  • 4 April – Crossroads (1964–1988, 2001–2003)

  • 6 April – The Roxy (1987–1988)

  • 17 April – Hot Metal (1986–1988)

  • 13 May – Tales of the Unexpected (1979–1988)

  • 22 May – East of the Moon (1988)

  • 30 May – All in Good Faith (1985–1988)

  • 12 June – Weekend World (1972–1988)

  • 26 August – Child's Play (1984–1988)

  • 28 August – Get Fresh (1986–1988)

  • 10 October – Sorry! (1981–1982, 1985–1988)

  • 23 October – Network 7 (1987–1988)

  • 27 October – Beat the Teacher (1984–1988)

  • 29 November – Tickle on the Tum (1984–1988)

  • 1 December – Button Moon (1980–1988)

  • 3 December – New Faces (1973–1978, 1986–1988)

  • 5 December – Stoppit and Tidyup (1988)

  • 6 December – PC Pinkerton (1988)

  • 17 December – How to Be Cool (1988)

  • 24 December – 3-2-1 (1978–1988)

  • 27 December – Executive Stress (1986–1988)



Births



  • 14 January – Jack P. Shepherd, actor

  • 22 March – Gaz Beadle, TV personality

  • 28 March – Lacey Turner, actress

  • 2 December – Alfred Enoch, actor



Deaths

























































Date Name Age Cinematic Credibility
1 January

Margot Bryant
90
actress (Minnie Caldwell in Coronation Street)
7 January

Trevor Howard
74
actor
18 March

Percy Thrower
75
gardener and broadcaster
15 April

Kenneth Williams
62
comic actor
27 April

David Scarboro
20
actor (Mark Fowler in EastEnders)
8 June

Russell Harty
53
television presenter
9 July

Barbara Woodhouse
78
Dog trainer (Training Dogs the Woodhouse Way)
20 September

Roy Kinnear
53
narrator, actor, voice actor (Towser, Bertha the Machine)


See also



  • 1988 in British music

  • 1988 in British radio

  • 1988 in the United Kingdom

  • List of British films of 1988



References





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