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- Pebble_Mill_at_One abstract "Pebble Mill at One was a British lunchtime television magazine programme that was broadcast live from Monday to Friday at 13:00 (one o'clock, hence the title), mainly on BBC1. It was transmitted from the Pebble Mill studios of BBC Birmingham, and uniquely, was hosted from the centre's main foyer area, rather than a conventional television studio. In the beginning, visitors to the studios were seen arriving in the background as the programme was transmitted.Reasons for this were: a planned third studio was never constructed on the site, and existing facilities were fully booked for network drama production and local news. Gradually, as the show was successful, the foyer became a studio, and visitors had to use a new entrance. The show ran from 2 October 1972 to 23 May 1986, under various programme Editors including: Terry Dobson, Jim Dumighan, and Peter Hercombe.For most of that period there were few television programmes transmitted in Britain on any channels during the day, with the exception of the Trade test colour films transmitted for TV retailers and TV servicemen. For this reason the programme acquired a unique following from those who found themselves at home at lunchtime. Housewives, students, and those recovering from an illness remember it with fondness for its variety and the problems inherent with live television. Its best remembered theme tune was \"As You Please\" by the Raymond Lefevre orchestra, used from 1972 until 1979. Two weeks after the launch of the programme on Monday 16th October 1972, ITV the commercial channel in the UK launched a brand new daytime line-up starting at 9.30am with Schools Programmes leading up to an ITN News programme at lunchtime which placed Pebble Mill in direct competition with ITV's new daytime programmes.Presenters during the long run included Jan Leeming, Donny MacLeod, Fern Britton, Marian Foster, Debi Jones, Bob Langley, Tom Coyne, David Seymour, Magnus Magnusson, Alan Titchmarsh, Chris Baines, Josephine Buchan, Judi Spiers, and Paul Coia.There were several Pebble Mill spin-offs, particularly in the 1970s, such as the late night chat show Saturday Night at the Mill. Kenny Ball And His Jazzmen were the regular house band, and they performed the show's signature tune. In 1981 a kind of early evening version called Six Fifty-five Special surfaced during the Mill's summer break, presented by Sally James, Paul Coia, David Soul and Bob Langley. In 1986 The Clothes Show presented by Jeff Banks and Selina Scott was created from a strand produced by Roger Casstles first shown on Pebble Mill at One.Many of the master tapes of Pebble Mill at One were wiped by the BBC following transmission. However, one episode that does survive from the early years celebrated the tenth anniversary of Doctor Who in 1973, featuring interviews with Patrick Troughton and visual effects designer Bernard Wilkie, which is included on the special features of The Three Doctors DVD. Some other Doctor Who related interviews from the series have survived due to early domestic video recordings and have been released on DVDs.One of Pebble Mill At One's more frequently repeated scenes was in 1986 when Marian Foster introduced pop act Owen Paul who was to perform his hit \"My Favourite Waste of Time\". He was to mime to a backing track but didn't see his cue to begin, so was seen standing looking into camera while the music played and his recorded voice was heard.On 20 September 1979, the show was visited by a Sea Harrier aircraft from RNAS Yeovilton (aircraft FRS.1 XZ451 of 700A Squadron) flown by Lieutenant Commander Nigel \"Sharkey\" Ward, which landed (and later took off) vertically, on the adjacent BBC Social Club's football pitch.The programme returned the favour on 7 April 1986 by transmitting a live programme from the newly launched aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal in the English Channel. This programme, near the end of the show's life, was produced by Tom Ross and directed by Tony Rayner. It attracted the programme's highest ever audience of nearly six million viewers. When the decision was taken by BBC1 Controller Michael Grade to end the show to make way for the new One O'Clock News over 30,000 viewers wrote to the BBC to complain. Ironically it was a previous Assistant Editor of the programme Roger Laughton, later to become a senior executive with the BBC and Meridian TV, who was given responsibility for planning the BBC's new daytime schedule.The Pebble Mill format returned in 1987 as Daytime Live, renamed Scene Today and finally Pebble Mill though no longer at 1pm.".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageID "3620262".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageLength "5986".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageOutDegree "50".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageRevisionID "699786816".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink 700_Naval_Air_Squadron.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Alan_Titchmarsh.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink BBC_Birmingham.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink BBC_News_at_One.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink BBC_One.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Bob_Langley.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink British_Aerospace_Sea_Harrier.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Category:1970s_British_television_series.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Category:1972_British_television_programme_debuts.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Category:1980s_British_television_series.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Category:1986_British_television_programme_endings.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Category:BBC_Birmingham_productions.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Category:BBC_Television_programmes.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Chris_Baines.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink David_Soul.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Doctor_Who.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Donny_MacLeod.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Fern_Britton.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Football_pitch.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink HMS_Ark_Royal_(R07).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink ITN.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink ITV_(TV_network).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink ITV_Schools.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Jan_Leeming.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Jeff_Banks.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Judi_Spiers.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Kenny_Ball.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Lieutenant_commander.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Live_television.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Lobby_(room).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Magnus_Magnusson.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Marian_Foster.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Grade.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink My_Favourite_Waste_of_Time.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Owen_Paul.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Patrick_Troughton.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Coia.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Pebble_Mill_Studios.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink RNAS_Yeovilton_(HMS_Heron).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Raymond_Lefèvre.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Sally_James_(presenter).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Selina_Scott.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Sharkey_Ward.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Television.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Television_studio.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink The_Clothes_Show.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink The_Three_Doctors_(Doctor_Who).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Tom_Ross_(producer).
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink Trade_test_colour_films.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLink United_Kingdom_military_aircraft_serials.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Daytime Live".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Lunchtime Pebble Mill".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Morning on BBC1".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pebble Mill at One ".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pebble Mill at One".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pebble Mill".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Saturday Night at the Mill".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Scene Today".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "Six Fifty-Five".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageWikiLinkText "The 6:55 Special".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italictitle.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One subject Category:1970s_British_television_series.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One subject Category:1972_British_television_programme_debuts.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One subject Category:1980s_British_television_series.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One subject Category:1986_British_television_programme_endings.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One subject Category:BBC_Birmingham_productions.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One subject Category:BBC_Television_programmes.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One hypernym Programme.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One type TelevisionShow.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One type Establishment.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One type Programme.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One type Redirect.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One comment "Pebble Mill at One was a British lunchtime television magazine programme that was broadcast live from Monday to Friday at 13:00 (one o'clock, hence the title), mainly on BBC1. It was transmitted from the Pebble Mill studios of BBC Birmingham, and uniquely, was hosted from the centre's main foyer area, rather than a conventional television studio.".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One label "Pebble Mill at One".
- Pebble_Mill_at_One sameAs Q17017460.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One sameAs m.09qf36.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One sameAs Q17017460.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One wasDerivedFrom Pebble_Mill_at_One?oldid=699786816.
- Pebble_Mill_at_One isPrimaryTopicOf Pebble_Mill_at_One.