Image: Patrick Ryecart and Rebecca Saire in Romeo and Juliet.
On 3 December 1978 the BBC began its ambitious plan to broadcast a television version of each of Shakespeare's 37 plays, starting with Romeo and Juliet. The project was devised by Cedric Messina and took seven years to complete.
The Bard's most obscure and rarely performed works got equal treatment to his best known plays, and the BBC built a comprehensive resource that was widely used in schools, boosted by the new popularity of video recorders.
Romeo and Juliet was a popular play and a safe choice with which to begin the series. It boasted an impressive cast, typical of the series, alongside leads Patrick Ryecart and Rebecca Saire. Established stars Celia Johnson, Michael Hordern and John Gielgud appeared with newcomers Anthony Andrews and Alan Rickman – making his television debut.
The BBC Television Shakespeare plays were sometimes criticised for being traditional productions in period costume - a condition imposed by co-producer Time-Life - but they often exploited the television medium by filming on location.
The final play - Titus Andronicus - aired in 1985. By that time Jonathan Miller and then Sean Sutton had served as producer. Some of the plays remain the only television adaptation. In 2016 the BBC will mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death by releasing the whole of the BBC's Shakespeare archive for educational use. The BBC Television Shakespeare will form the backbone of this new endeavour.
December anniversaries

Ireland: A Television History
2 December 1980
Start of The BBC Television Shakespeare
3 December 1978
The World About Us
3 December 1967
Edward VIII Abdication speech
11 December 1936
1984 Broadcast
12 December 1954
bbc.co.uk is launched
12 December 1997
Jackanory first broadcast
13 December 1965
Comedy Playhouse
15 December 1961
Culloden
15 December 1964
The Likely Lads
16 December 1964
BBC World Service launches
19 December 1932
Zoo Quest, first on-screen appearance by David Attenborough
21 December 1954
Just a Minute first transmitted
22 December 1967
A Close Shave
24 December 1995
First Empire Address by King George V
25 December 1932
Morecambe and Wise Christmas Shows
25 December
Only Fools and Horses 1996 Christmas Specials
25 December 1996
BBC Reith Lectures
26 December 1948
Alice in Wonderland
28 December 1966
Big Ben chimes broadcast at New Year for the first time
31 December 1923




















