
Stars on Sunday
1 9 6 9 - 1 9 7 9 (UK)
You cannot begin to imagine how I loathed this show as a child
growing up in Yorkshire. To me, it signified that the weekend was
over and it was time to have a bath and start getting ready for a
new week at school the following morning. But as a religious light
entertainment show with top artists of the day performing songs
and hymns requested by viewers, it proved very popular for ten
years.
Harry Secombe was a frequent guest on the program, and the
whole tortuous series was produced and introduced by Jess Yates
(nicknamed "The Bishop" thanks to his holier-than-thou
form of presentation ). Yates was a former cinema organist who had
worked in television since the early 1950s, climbing his way up
from designer to writer, producer and director.
Shows like The Good Old Days, Top Town and Come
Dancing gave him a grounding in light entertainment that he
would exploit when, after some years away from the business, he
returned to TV with the fledgling Yorkshire Television in
1968.
Under his auspices as Head of Children's programs, series such
as Junior Showtime, The Flaxton Boys and Origami,
and the educational How We Used To Live reached the small
screen before Yates turned his attention to religious programming
with Choirs On Sunday and eventually Stars On Sunday.
The mixture of hymns, bible readings, showbiz and Jess's
sincerity was enormously popular, and the show attracted 15
million viewers with some 5,000 letters - fan mail and requests
for particular hymns - arriving each week. Guests included James
Mason, Raymond Burr, Dame Anna Neagle, Gracie Fields, The
Bachelors and even Edward Heath and Earl Mountbatten.
In 1972, ITV tried to get Stars On Sunday taken off
because it was 'too sweet', but the Central Religious Advisory
Council supported the series and the ITV companies had a moral
duty to abide by their statements.
Then in July 1974 came the scandal that rocked Stars On
Sunday. The News Of The World splashed a report of an
affair between 54-year-old Yates and 22-year-old showgirl Anita
Kay. The two insisted that they weren't living together at the
time. They did later but split up when he was out of work. It was
the ultimate 'bishop and actress' story.
Anthony Valentine replaced Yates as presenter the following
week and the new series due to start in October was delayed. Yates
was unceremoniously dumped as executive producer and there
followed a selection of hosts - among them Robert Dougall, Wilfred
Pickles, Gordon Jackson, Moira Anderson and Cliff Michelmore -
before the series finally ended in 1979.
Scandal continued to follow Yates even after his death in 1993
when it was discovered that Jess was not in fact the real father
of Paula Yates (The Tube presenter and one-time wife of
Bob Geldof), and that he had been cuckolded by none other than Hughie
Green of Opportunity Knocks (Paula's real dad).
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