Yorkshire Post

How Roger helped make life less grey

A match at Wimbledon featuring a Yorkshire star marked Europe’s first colour broadcast 50 years ago

- DAVID BEHRENS

IT WAS in 1970 that the Sheffield player Roger Taylor pulled off one of the biggest upsets in Wimbledon history, beating Rod Laver to reach the quarterfin­als of the men’s singles. But today, it is his performanc­e of three years earlier that will be remembered.

Exactly 50 years ago, as he faced the South African Cliff Drysdale in the fourth round, Taylor stepped on to the centre court and into the history books.

The match was the first at Wimbledon to be televised in colour, and the first colour broadcast anywhere in Europe. It marked the start of regular colour transmissi­ons on BBC2, even though only a few families could see them as intended.

The golden anniversar­y of colour TV might have passed almost unnoticed, except in Bradford, where the National Science and Media Museum has dusted off one of the corporatio­n’s original colour cameras for a forthcomin­g exhibition.

The introducti­on of colour had been a long time coming. The BBC and the larger ITV companies like ATV and ABC had been experiment­ing for years, and there had been test transmissi­ons of colour films about the stained glass in Liverpool’s new Catholic cathedral.

But the start of programmes had been delayed by TV manufactur­ers, unable to turn out colour sets in sufficient numbers for the previous year’s World Cup final.

Even when colour finally arrived, there were few takers. BBC2 was a minority channel and Ministers had dragged their feet on allowing BBC1 and ITV to migrate. “No one is going to buy a colour TV just to watch BBC2,” said Lew Grade, the boss of ATV.

The first colour sets were for the affluent. A 19in Murphy cost 285 guineas – about £5,000 allowing for inflation – and the legs were extra. Even a rental set typically required a down payment equivalent to £1,200.

BBC2 had been on the air for just three years when colour officially arrived. “You had to buy a new TV to receive it, because it broadcast on a completely different standard to the other two channels,” said Elinor Groom, curator of broadcast and TV at the museum in Bradford. “Not many wanted to buy another new set for colour, and the vast majority saw Wimbledon in black and white.”

BBC2, whose controller was David Attenborou­gh, initially broadcast in colour for only four hours a week. Neverthele­ss, it was enough to persuade Morecambe and Wise to leave ATV for the BBC. But it was sport that was the big draw. “It was a piecemeal launch, but there was something about watching sport in colour that people loved,” said Ms Groom, whose new exhibition will explore the subject. “It was often a catalyst.” Not many video tapes of early colour broadcasts survive. Even the first BBC Morecambe and Wise series was wiped, although a copy of one show turned up years later – in black and white. The earliest surviving colour videotape from Britain is thought to be a test recording of ITV’s

London Palladium Show, hosted by Jimmy Tarbuck, inset, in 1966. Viewers saw it only in monochrome but ATV used it as a dry run for an American series. The two countries used incompatib­le colour systems, so two sets of cameras had to record the performanc­e simultaneo­usly.

American viewers had been watching big shows in colour since the late 1950s. The NBC network had a vested interest in the technology – its owner was the colour TV maker RCA.

“The European colour system came later but it was better,” said Ms Groom. “The US used a system called NTSC – critics said it stood for Never Twice the Same Colour.”

There was something about watching sport in colour. Elinor Groom, curator of broadcast and TV at the National Science and Media Museum.

 ?? PICTURES: SIMON HULME/ GETTY IMAGES. ?? LIVING COLOUR: Left and below, Elinor Groom, of the National Science and Media Museum, with one of the first colour TV cameras and an early Teletext TV; Above, Sheffield’s Roger Taylor on court at Wimbledon.
PICTURES: SIMON HULME/ GETTY IMAGES. LIVING COLOUR: Left and below, Elinor Groom, of the National Science and Media Museum, with one of the first colour TV cameras and an early Teletext TV; Above, Sheffield’s Roger Taylor on court at Wimbledon.
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