Tomorrow's World was designed as a showcase for
scientific invention. And there are two main reasons why so many
viewers tuned in.
One is in the hope that one of the live
experiments would go wrong (they frequently did), and the other
was because for many years it was on immediately before Top
of the Pops. So youngsters would plough through Raymond
Baxter just to get to Gary
Glitter.
Baxter, a former WWII pilot, was the mainstay of the show for
12 years, but in 1977 he left, having fallen foul of new editor
Michael Blakstad, who had described Baxter as 'the last of the
dinosaurs'.
Other presenters included James Burke, Su Ingle, Michael Rodd,
Maggie Philbin, Judith Hann, Kieran Prendiville, Peter Macann,
Howard Stableford and Anna Ford. Anna joined in 1977 but no less
than 6 months later, after stating that she had "no wish to
be a public figure", she departed to ITN and fame as their
first female news reader.
One of the most awkward situations on Tomorrow's World
occurred when a lady was demonstrating a new portable bath. In the
best BBC tradition, she was suitably concealed with bubbles -
until the heat from the studio lights began to melt the foam . . .
By the late 1990s, the live studio demonstrations were dropped
in favour of purely pre-recorded items. The final series,
presented by Adam Hart-Davis, Kate Humble and Roger Black,
attempted to revert back to the original live format of the show,
even using a remix of one of the theme tunes used during its more
successful years.
But ratings continued to fall and - with only three million
viewers in the last series - the BBC decided to axe the show.
Video
Clips
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Opening Theme & Titles
(1978)
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Raymond Baxter
James Burke
Su Ingle
Michael Rodd
Maggie Philbin
Judith Hann
Kieran Prendiville
Peter Macann
Howard Stableford
Anna Ford
Adam Hart-Davis
Kate Humble
Roger Black