1931 in television
Appearance
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The year 1931 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events during 1931.
Events
[edit]- May 1 – The first wedding is broadcast by television, on New York City's W2XCR.
- June 3 – First television outside broadcast of a sporting event: Baird televises the Epsom Derby horse race in England.[1]
- July 21 – CBS's station W2XAB begins broadcasting 28 hours a week in New York City. [1]
- August – At the Berlin Radio Show, Manfred von Ardenne gives the world's first public demonstration of a television system using a cathode-ray tube for both transmission and reception. Ardenne never develops a camera tube, using the CRT instead as a flying-spot scanner to scan slides and film.[2]
- October 9 – Canada's first television station, VE9EC, begins broadcasting in Montreal, Quebec. VE9EC is owned jointly by radio station CKAC and the newspaper company La Presse.[3]
- October 30 – NBC installs a television transmitter on top of the Empire State Building.
- November 1 – Television images are transmitted from JOAK radio station in Tokyo, Japan by Professors Kenjiro Takayagani and Tomomasa Nakashima. The still images comprise 80 lines at 20 frames per second.
- December 22 – NBC begins broadcasting experimental test transmissions from the Empire State Building transmitter.
- December 23 – Don Lee Broadcasting begins broadcasting low-definition electromechanical television from the station W6XAO (later KTSL) in Los Angeles, broadcasting one hour of film footage, six days per week.
Debuts
[edit]- Exhibition Boxing Bouts premieres on the experimental W2XAB (1931–1932)
- Hints for Swimmers premieres on the experimental W2XAB (1931)
- Piano Lessons premieres on the experimental W2XAB (1931–1932).
- The Television Ghost premieres on the experimental W2XAB (1931–1933).
- Television Today premieres on the experimental W2XAB (1931).
- W2XAB debuts music segments with Connie Boswell, Doris Sharp, Elliot Jaffee, Grace Yeager, Harriet Lee, and Helen Haynes, among others.
- W2XCD debuts a semi-regular segment with singer Alice Remsen.
Television shows
[edit]Series | Debut | Ended |
---|---|---|
Alice Remsen | 1931 | 1931 |
Doris Sharp | 1931 | 1932 |
Exhibition Boxing Bouts | 1931 | 1932 |
Elliot Jaffee | 1931 | 1932 |
Grace Yeager | 1931 | 1932 |
Helen Haynes | 1931 | 1932 |
Hints for Swimmers | 1931 | 1931 |
Piano Lessons | 1931 | 1932 |
The Television Ghost | 1931 | 1933 |
Television Today | 1931 | 1931 |
Births
[edit]- January 4 – Rosemary Prinz, U.S. actress (As the World Turns)
- January 10 – Marlene Sanders, television news correspondent (died 2015)
- January 11 – Peter Baldwin, actor (died 2017)
- January 13
- Charles Nelson Reilly, actor, game show panelist (died 2007)
- Rip Taylor, comedian (died 2019)
- January 15 – Thomas Hoving, American museum executive (died 2009)
- January 17 – James Earl Jones, actor
- January 19 – Robert MacNeil, news reporter
- February 6 – Rip Torn, actor (died 2019)
- February 8 – James Dean, actor, East of Eden, Rebel Without a Cause, Giant (died 1955)
- February 13 – Geoff Edwards, game show host (died 2014)
- February 24 – Dominic Chianese, actor
- February 28 – Gavin MacLeod, actor, The Love Boat (died 2021)
- March 11 – Rupert Murdoch, media mogul
- March 20 – Hal Linden, actor, Barney Miller
- March 22 – William Shatner, actor, Star Trek
- March 26 – Leonard Nimoy, actor, Star Trek (died 2015)
- March 27 – David Janssen, actor, The Fugitive (died 1980)
- April 6 – Ivan Dixon, actor, Hogan's Heroes (died 2008)
- April 12 – Betty Clooney, singer (died 1976)
- April 14 – Kenneth Cope, English actor, Coronation Street, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (died 2024)
- April 26 – Bernie Brillstein, agent and producer (died 2008)
- May 15 – Ken Venturi, golfer (died 2013)
- May 16 – Jack Dodson, actor, The Andy Griffith Show (died 1994)
- May 18
- Robert Morse, actor (died 2022)
- George Shapiro, producer (died 2022)
- Don Martin, cartoonist (died 2000)
- May 23 – Barbara Barrie, actress, Barney Miller
- June 8 – Dana Wynter, actress (died 2011)
- June 14 – Marla Gibbs, actress, The Jeffersons, 227
- June 20 – Olympia Dukakis, actress, Tales of the City (died 2021)
- June 26 – Marvin Minoff, American film and television producer (died 2009)
- July 1 – Leslie Caron, actress
- July 6 – Della Reese, actress, singer, Touched by an Angel (died 2017)
- July 8 – Roone Arledge, producer (died 2002)
- July 10 – Nick Adams, actor (died 1968)
- July 26 – Robert Colbert, actor, The Time Tunnel
- July 27 – Jerry Van Dyke, actor, Coach (died 2018)
- July 28 – Darryl Hickman, actor (died 2024)
- August 15 – Janice Rule, actress (died 2003)
- August 23 – Barbara Eden, actress, I Dream of Jeannie
- August 25 – Regis Philbin, talk show host (died 2020)
- September 1 – Beano Cook, American television personality (died 2012)
- September 4 – Mitzi Gaynor, singer, actress
- September 9 – Barbara Lyon, singer, actress (died 1995)
- September 10 – Philip Baker Hall, actor (died 2022)
- September 11 – Bill Simpson, actor (died 1986)
- September 12
- Bill McKinney, actor (died 2011)
- Ian Holm, actor (died 2020)
- September 13 – Barbara Bain, actress, Mission: Impossible
- September 17 – Anne Bancroft, actress (died 2005)
- September 19 – Ray Danton, actor (died 1992)
- September 21 – Larry Hagman, actor, I Dream of Jeannie, Dallas (died 2012)
- September 24 – Howard West, TV producer (died 2015)
- September 30 – Angie Dickinson, actress, Police Woman
- October 23
- Jim Bunning, baseball player and politician (died 2017)[4]
- Diana Dors, actress (died 1984)
- October 31 – Dan Rather, news reporter
- November 5 – Reese Schonfeld, news reporter (died 2020)
- November 8 – Morley Safer, news reporter (died 2016)
- November 12 – Dick Clair, writer (died 1988)
- November 30 – Jack Ging, actor (died 2022)
- December 3 – Jaye P. Morgan, game show panelist
- December 9 – Paddi Edwards, actress (died 1999)
- December 11 – Rita Moreno, actress
- December 23 – Ronnie Schell, comedian
- December 28 – Martin Milner, actor, Adam-12 (died 2015)
References
[edit]- ^ "History of British television: Timeline, 1926–2017". Bradford: National Science and Media Museum. April 7, 2011. Retrieved September 28, 2023.
- ^ Albert Abramson, Zworykin: Pioneer of Television, University of Illinois Press, 1995, p. 111.
- ^ "CRTC Origins". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. September 5, 2008. Archived from the original on January 10, 2012. Retrieved November 15, 2009.
- ^ "Hall of Famer Bunning passes away". MLB.com. Retrieved July 22, 2024.