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Christmas Eve: 2015: Going Live! Scrooge - A Christmas Sarah: 1990: Hank Zipzer: Hank Zipzer's Christmas Catastrophe: 2016: Horrible Histories: Horrible Christmas: 2010: Little Howard's Big Question: Can Father Christmas Star in Our Nativity Play? 2010: Our School: Christmas is Coming: 2014: The Pinky and Perky Show: It's Christmaaaas! 2008 ...
The following is a list of most watched programmes, excluding sporting events and news coverage. The mid-1980s introduction of in-week repeat showings accounts for six of the top ten programmes. On this measure, the 1996 Christmas edition of Only Fools and Horses is, not including figures for repeats, the most-watched non-documentary programme ...
A single Christmas Lecture, by G. I. Taylor, was the first to be televised, in 1936, on the BBC's fledgling Television Service. [9] They were broadcast on BBC Two from 1966 to 1999 and Channel 4 from 2000 to 2004. In 2000 one of the lectures was broadcast live for the first time.
The King and Queen have attended a Christmas Day church service at Sandringham, with the Prince and Princess of Wales and other royals by their side. Excited crowds watched on as the monarch and ...
The King's Christmas message (or The Queen's Christmas message in a queen's reign), formally as His Majesty's Most Gracious Speech, [1] [2] and informally as the Royal Christmas message) is a broadcast made by the sovereign of the United Kingdom and the other Commonwealth realms to the Commonwealth of Nations each year at Christmas.
It attracts 12.3 million viewers (on overnight figures) – the largest Christmas Day audience in more than a decade, and the year's highest non-sport overnight figure. [296] By early 2025, viewing figures reach 19.3 million, the UK’s most-watched scripted show across all broadcasters and streamers since comparable records began in 2002. [ 297 ]
A Charlie Brown Christmas (CBS, 1965) Directed by Bill Melendez. Written by Charles Schulz. Young voice-over talent Peter Robbins made his indelible mark as Charlie Brown in this poignant holiday ...
King George V started the Royal Christmas Message as a radio broadcast in 1932, and it has remained an annual tradition ever since. In 1957, Queen Elizabeth II moved to the broadcast to television