Breakfast Time
1 9 8 3 - 1 9 8 9 (UK)
Selina Scott joined nice
"uncle" Frank Bough on BBC1's Breakfast Time at
6.30am on January 17, 1983 . Along with ITV's Good Morning Britain
it was one of the first breakfast shows on British
television. Helped by a £25,000 government grant for computer
equipment, the BBC won the race to start first but never in the
history of breakfast was more egg left on more famous faces in fewer
weeks than with the start of breakfast television. To say there were
teething problems would be to underestimate the financial and personal
wars that ensued . . .
An avuncular Frank Bough in a jumper and
a tangled-tongued Selina Scott - a smooth-as-silk Princess Diana clone
in grey nanny dresses with severe white collars - were the anchor
persons on the Breakfast Time red leather sofa, introducing
items which included a horse race, cricket and pearl fishing.
During the five weekdays Nick Ross added
gravitas as a co-presenter, but the bigger stars were a skinny blonde
in a lurid green body-stocking, Diana Moran the Green Goddess of
exercise, bubbly Russell Grant who babbled about the stars (the
celestial type not the Hollywood type), and Francis Wilson the
whimsical weatherman who told us everything we did not need to know.
Two weeks later TV-AM began its
"mission to explain" - as Peter Jay had called it when a
team of fice celebrities (David Frost, Michael Parkinson, Robert Kee,
Angela Rippon and Anna Ford) won the franchise - with Good Morning
Britain.
Selina left Breakfast Time in
1987, and in 1988 moved to work in America, moaning that she had never
been taken seriously. Frank Bough left in November 1987 then retired
from television after a Sunday newspaper shattered his wholesome image
by revealing his one-time drug use.
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