1952 in television

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The year 1952 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events during 1952.

Events[]

  • January 14 - Today was first aired on NBC with Dave Garroway as host.
  • July 7 - Turkey's first television station was opened ITU TV.
  • July 20 – Arrow to the Heart, the first collaboration between director Rudolph Cartier and scriptwriter Nigel Kneale, is broadcast by BBC Television.
  • August 1 – First TV broadcast in the Dominican Republic by La Voz Dominicana, a TV station based on the radio station of the same name.
  • September 6 – Television debuts in Canada with the initiation of CBFT in Montreal, Quebec.
  • September 8 – CBLT in Toronto, Ontario begins broadcasting as Canada's second TV station.
  • September 20 – The first commercial Ultra High Frequency (UHF) television station in the world, KPTV (now a Fox company affiliate), begins broadcasting in Portland, Oregon on channel 27.
  • October 7 – WFIL-TV Philadelphia's afternoon series Bandstand, which will become American Bandstand, changes emphasis to teens dancing to popular records
  • November 16 – CBS Television City in Hollywood, California opens.
  • The first political advertisements appear on US television. Democrats buy a 30-minute time segment for their candidate, Adlai Stevenson. Stevenson receives unfavorable mail for interfering with a broadcast of I Love Lucy. Dwight Eisenhower buys 20 second commercial segments and wins the election.
  • The first telecast of an atomic bomb detonation (KTLA).
  • The U.S. Federal Communications Commission reserved channels for non-commercial, public broadcasting.
  • There were approximately 146,000 television sets in Canada and most antennas were pointed towards WBEN-TV (now WIVB) in Buffalo, New York.
  • The first telecast of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade is broadcast by CBS.
  • Sooty, a little yellow glove puppet teddy bear makes his debut on BBC's Talent Night.

Programs/programmes[]

Debuts[]

  • January 6 - Claudia on NBC (moved to CBS on March 31, 1952)[1]: 167 
  • January 14 – The Today Show on NBC (1952–present)[1]
  • March 1 – Death Valley Days in syndication (1952–1975)
  • June 19 – I've Got a Secret on CBS (1952–1967)
  • June 30 – the soap opera The Guiding Light (1952–2009) on CBS, which began on radio in 1937, becoming the longest-running regularly scheduled drama in television history
  • July 10 - The prime time version of A Date with Judy debuts on ABC.
  • September – the religious drama This Is the Life on DuMont, and ran until the late 1980s
  • September 19 – Adventures of Superman in syndication (1952–1958)
  • October 26 – Victory at Sea (1952–1953) on NBC, one of the first historic documentary series
  • October 3 – Our Miss Brooks (1952-1956) on CBS
  • November 1 – Hockey Night in Canada on CBC (1952–present)
  • November 6 – Biff Baker, U.S.A. on CBS (1952–1953)
  • November 8 – My Hero on NBC (1952–1953)
  • December 1 – The Abbott and Costello Show in syndication (1952–1954)
  • December 15 – Flower Pot Men on BBC Television (1952)
  • American Bandstand, originally called Bandstand, as a local program in Philadelphia (1952–1989)
  • Life Is Worth Living with Bishop Fulton J. Sheen on DuMont (1952–1955), then on ABC (1955–1957)
  • My Little Margie (1952–1955), starring Gale Storm
  • See It Now, hosted by Edward R. Murrow
  • The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet on ABC (1952–1966)
  • The Ernie Kovacs Show, where Kovacs explores the boundaries of television technology with his use of special effects (1952–1953)
  • Meet the Masters, a program about classical music, on NBC and WGN-TV
  • This Is Your Life in the U.S. (1952–1961)
  • Life with Elizabeth, a sitcom featuring Betty White (1952–1955)

Ending during 1952[]

Date Show Debut
February 23 A Date with Judy (daytime version) 1951
March 27 The Bill Goodwin Show
April 11 Faye Emerson's Wonderful Town
April 24 Stop the Music 1949
June 30 Claudia 1952
Unknown Picture Page (UK) 1946

Births[]

Date Name Notability
January 2 Wendy Phillips Actress (Falcon Crest)
January 3 Jim Ross Professional wrestling commentator
January 12 Walter Mosley Author
January 19 Beau Weaver Voice actor
January 20 Dave Fennoy Voice actor
January 28 Bruce Helford Writer
February 5 Mark Fuhrman Radio host
February 17 Garry Chalk Voice actor
February 19 Sara Moulton Chef and TV host
February 29 Sharon Dahlonega Bush Television newscaster
March 2 Laraine Newman Comic actress (Saturday Night Live)
March 4 Ronn Moss Actor, musician (The Bold and the Beautiful)
March 11 Susan Richardson Actress (Eight is Enough)
March 22 Bob Costas Sportscaster
April 1 Annette O'Toole Actress (Smallville)
April 5 Mitch Pileggi Actor (The X-Files)
April 6 Marilu Henner Actress (Taxi)
April 16 Billy West Voice actor (Doug, The Ren and Stimpy Show, Futurama)
April 29 Nora Dunn Actress, comedian (Saturday Night Live)
May 2 Christine Baranski Actress (Cybill, The Good Wife)
May 4 Michael Barrymore British comedian, presenter
May 6 Gregg Henry Actor, musician
Michael O'Hare Actor (Babylon 5) (d. 2012)
Fred Newman Actor (Doug, Between the Lions)
May 11 Frances Fisher Actress (The Edge of Night)
May 21 Mr. T Actor (B. A. Baracus on The A-Team)
June 7 Liam Neeson Actor
June 14 Eddie Mekka Actor (Laverne & Shirley)
June 18 Carol Kane Actress (Taxi)
June 20 John Goodman Actor (Roseanne)
July 1 Dan Aykroyd Comic actor (Saturday Night Live)
July 6 Grant Goodeve American actor (Eight is Enough)
July 15 Terry O'Quinn Actor (Lost)
July 17 David Hasselhoff Actor (Knight Rider, Baywatch)
July 20 Thom Beers Voice actor
July 27 Roxanne Hart Actress (Chicago Hope)
August 1 Brian Patrick Clarke Actor
August 4 Bobby Buntrock Actor (Hazel) (d. 1974)
August 5 Irish music manager
August 10 Daniel Hugh Kelly Actor (Hardcastle and McCormick)
August 16 Reginald VelJohnson Actor (Family Matters)
Caitlin O'Heaney Actress (Tales of the Gold Monkey)
August 18 Patrick Swayze Actor / dancer (d. 2009)
August 19 Jonathan Frakes Actor (Star Trek: The Next Generation), director
August 27 Paul Reubens Comic actor (Pee-wee Herman on Pee-wee's Playhouse)
August 29 Deborah Van Valkenburgh Actress (Too Close for Comfort)
September 5 Michael Horton Actor (Murder, She Wrote)
September 9 Angela Cartwright Actress (Make Room for Daddy, Lost in Space)
September 14 Michael Patrick King American director, writer, and producer of television and film
September 25 Christopher Reeve Actor (d. 2004)
Tommy Norden Actor (Flipper)
Toukie Smith Actress (227)
September 27 Gail Edwards Actress (It's a Living, Full House, Blossom)
September 30 John Finn Actor (Cold Case)
October 9 Sharon Osbourne TV personality (The Osbournes, The Talk)
October 14 Harry Anderson Actor (Night Court) (d. 2018)
October 18 Chuck Lorre Television director, writer, producer, composer, and actor
October 20 Melanie Mayron Actress, director (Thirtysomething)
October 22 Jeff Goldblum Actor (Law & Order: Criminal Intent)
October 27 Ted Wass Actor, director (Soap, Blossom)
Michael H. Shamberg Director
October 28 Annie Potts Actress (Designing Women)
October 30 Emily Kuroda Actress (Gilmore Girls)
November 3 Roseanne Barr Actress, comedian (Roseanne)
Jim Cummings Voice actor (The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, Darkwing Duck, CatDog)
November 8 Alfre Woodard Actress
November 28 S. Epatha Merkerson Actress (Law & Order)
November 29 Jeff Fahey Actor (The Marshal, Lost)
November 30 Mandy Patinkin Actor (Criminal Minds)
December 9 Michael Dorn Actor (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
December 10 Susan Dey Actress (The Partridge Family, L.A. Law)
Clive Anderson English presenter
December 12 Sarah Douglas Actress (Falcon Crest)
December 15 Lee Aronsohn American television writer, composer and producer
December 20 Ray Bumatai Actor (Tito Makani on Rocket Power) (d. 2005)
December 25 CCH Pounder Actress (ER, Rocket Power)
December 29 Robert Wightman Actor (The Waltons)

References[]

  1. ^ a b McNeil, Alex (1996). Total Television. Penguin Books USA, Inc. ISBN 0-14-02-4916-8.
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