1940 in television
The year 1940 in television involved some significant events. Below is a list of television-related events during 1940.
  | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Events
    
- January – The FCC has public hearings concerning television.
 - February 25 – The first ice hockey game is televised in the United States, the New York Rangers vs Montreal Canadiens, from Madison Square Garden on W2XBS-TV.
 - February 28 – The first basketball game is televised, from Madison Square Garden: Fordham University vs the University of Pittsburgh.
 - March 10 – The Metropolitan Opera broadcast for the first time from NBC studios at Rockefeller Center an abridged performance of the first act of Pagliacci, along with excerpts from four other operas.
 - March 15 – RCA reduces the price of television sets.
 - May 21 – Bell Telephone Laboratories transmits a 441-line video signal, with a bandwidth of 2.7 MHz, by coaxial cable from New York to Philadelphia and back.
 - June – W2XBS in New York (NBC) covers the Republican National Convention from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for 33 hours, during a five-day period. The signal is transmitted via coaxial cable.
 - August 1 - W2XBS goes out of commission from 1 August 1940 until the 28th of October 1940 while the transmitter is adjusted from 441-line picture to 507-line picture. [1][2]
 - August 29 – Peter Carl Goldmark of CBS announces his invention of a color television system.
 - September 3 – CBS resumes its television transmissions with the first demonstration of high definition color TV, by W2XAB, transmitting from the Chrysler Building.
 
Debuts
    
- February 21 - NBC News with Lowell Thomas, a simulcast of Lowell Thomas’ daily radio newscast, debuts on W2XBS (NBC) (1940).
 - March 27- The Esso Television Reporter debuts on W2XBS (NBC) (1940).
 - July 8 - Boxing from Jamaica Arena debuts on W2XBS (NBC) (1940-42).[3]
 
Television shows
    
| Series | Debut | Ended | 
|---|---|---|
| NBC News with Lowell Thomas | February 21, 1940 | July 30, 1940 | 
| The Esso Television Reporter | March 27, 1940 | May 31, 1940 | 
| Boxing from Jamaica Arena | July 8, 1940 | May 18, 1942 | 
Programs ending during 1940
    
| Date | Series | Debut | 
|---|---|---|
| May 31 | The Esso Television Reporter | March 27, 1940 | 
| July 30 | NBC News with Lowell Thomas | February 21, 1940 | 
Births
    
- January 5 – Michael O'Donoghue, writer (died 1994)
 - January 19 – Mike Reid, English actor and comedian (died 2007)
 - January 22 – John Hurt, English actor (died 2017)
 - January 27 – James Cromwell, actor
 - January 31 - Stuart Margolin, actor, The Rockford Files
 - February 2 – David Jason, English actor
 - February 3 – Jim Hartz, television personality
 - February 6 - Tom Brokaw, journalist
 - February 8 - Ted Koppel, journalist
 - February 12 – Ralph Bates, English actor (died 1991)
 - February 20 - Smokey Robinson, singer
 - February 22 – Judy Cornwell, English actress
 - February 23 – Peter Fonda, actor (died 2019)
 - February 27 – Howard Hesseman, actor, WKRP in Cincinnati, Head of the Class
 - February 29 
- Monte Kiffin, coach
 - Sonja Barend, talk show host
 
 - March 7 – Daniel J. Travanti, actor, Hill Street Blues
 - March 10 – Chuck Norris, actor, Walker, Texas Ranger
 - March 15 – Phil Lesh, musician
 - March 26 - James Caan, actor, Las Vegas
 - March 28 - Tony Barber, host
 - April 2 – Penelope Keith, English actress, To The Manor Born
 - April 12 – Herbie Hancock, jazz pianist
 - April 15 – Thea White, American voice actress (died 2021)
 - April 17 – Chuck Menville, American television animator and writer (died 1992)
 - April 25 - Al Pacino, actor
 - May 5 – Lance Henriksen, actor
 - May 6 - Rick Husky, producer
 - May 8 - Ricky Nelson, actor (died 1985)
 - May 9 - James L. Brooks, producer
 - May 10 - Taurean Blacque, actor, Hill Street Blues
 - May 15 - Lainie Kazan, actress
 - May 17 - Peter Gerety, actor
 - May 22 - Bernard Shaw, journalist
 - June 1 – René Auberjonois, actor, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (died 2019)
 - June 2 – Maree Cheatham, actress (Search for Tomorrow, General Hospital, Days of Our Lives)
 - June 11 - Daniel J. Sullivan, film director
 - June 14 - Jack Bannon, actor, Lou Grant
 - June 20 – John Mahoney, English-born actor, Frasier (died 2018)
 - June 21 – Mariette Hartley, actress
 - July 3 - Michael Cole, actor, The Mod Squad
 - July 6 - Jeannie Seely, singer
 - July 7 - Ringo Starr, English singer-songwriter, The Beatles
 - July 13 – Patrick Stewart, English actor, Star Trek: The Next Generation
 - July 18 – James Brolin, actor, Marcus Welby, M.D.
 - July 22 – Alex Trebek, game show host, Jeopardy! (died 2020)
 - July 24 - Dan Hedaya, American actor
 - July 23 - Don Imus, American radio/television host, Imus in the Morning (died 2019)
 - July 31 - Roy Walker, television host
 - August 3 – Martin Sheen, actor, The West Wing
 - August 19 – Jill St. John, actress
 - August 23 - Richard Sanders, actor, WKRP in Cincinnati
 - August 26 - Don LaFontaine, voice actor
 - August 28
- Ken Jenkins, actor, Scrubs
 - Bonnie Turner, producer
 
 - September 5 – Raquel Welch, actress
 - September 11 – Brian De Palma, screenwriter
 - September 12 – Linda Gray, actress, Dallas
 - October 9 - John Lennon, English musician, The Beatles (died 1980)
 - October 16 – Barry Corbin, American actor
 - October 19 – Michael Gambon, Irish-born British actor
 - November 9 - Reynaldo Villalobos, director
 - November 13 - Daniel Pilon, Cuban-born actor, Dallas
 - November 15 - Sam Waterston, actor, Law & Order
 - November 20 - Tony Butala, singer
 - November 21 - Freddy Beras-Goico, TV host
 - November 22 - Terry Gilliam, actor
 - November 27 - Bruce Lee, actor (died 1973)
 - December 2 – Connie Booth, actress, Fawlty Towers
 - December 11 – Donna Mills, actress, Knots Landing
 - December 12 – Dionne Warwick, singer
 - December 21 
- Arvi Lind, Finnish newsreader
 - Don Phillips, casting director
 
 - December 30 – James Burrows, director
 
References
    
- Television Station to be shut-down; station to be remodelled. New York, NY: New York Times. Sunday, 21 July 1940. Page 10X, col. 8.
 - Television Station to Reopen. New York, NY: New York Times. Wednesday, 23 October 1940. Page L25, col 8.
 - Jay, Robert (2009-09-19). "W2XBS Schedule, Week of July 7th, 1940". Television Obscurities. Retrieved 2019-07-22.
 
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