The
General Electric laboratories in
Schenectady, New York, experimented with making still and motion picture records of television images in 1931. There is anecdotal evidence that the
BBC experimented with filming the output of the television monitor before its television service was suspended in 1939 due to the outbreak of
World War II. A BBC executive,
Cecil Madden, recalled filming a production of
The Scarlet Pimpernel in this way, only for film director
Alexander Korda to order the burning of the
negative as he owned the film rights to the book, which he felt had been infringed. While there is no written record of any BBC Television production of
The Scarlet Pimpernel during 1936–1939, the incident is dramatized in
Jack Rosenthal's 1986 television play
The Fools on the Hill. Some of the surviving live transmissions of the Nazi German television station
Fernsehsender Paul Nipkow, dating as far back as the 1930s, were recorded by pointing a
35 mm camera to a receiver's screen; although, most surviving Nazi live television programs, such as the
1936 Summer Olympics (not to be confused with the cinematic footage made during the same event by
Leni Riefenstahl for her film
Olympia), a number of
Nuremberg Rallies, or official state visits (such as
Benito Mussolini's), were shot directly on 35 mm instead and transmitted over the air as a television signal, with only two minutes' delay from the original event, by means of the so-called
Zwischenfilmverfahren (see
intermediate film system) from an early
outside broadcast van on the site. According to a 1949 film produced by
RCA, silent films had been made of early experimental telecasts during the 1930s. The films were produced by aiming a camera at television monitors, at a speed of eight frames per second, resulting in somewhat jerky reproductions of the images. By the mid-1940s, RCA and
NBC were refining the filming process and including sound; the images were less jerky but still somewhat fuzzy. By early 1946, television cameras were being attached to American guided missiles to aid in their remote steering. Films were made of the television images they transmitted for further evaluation of the target and the missile's performance. The first known surviving example of the telerecording process in
Britain is from October 1947, showing the singer
Adelaide Hall performing at the RadiOlympia event. Hall sings "
Chi-Baba, Chi-Baba (My Bambino Go to Sleep)" and "
I Can't Give You Anything But Love", as well as accompanying herself on ukulele and dancing. When the show was originally broadcast on
BBC TV it was 60 minutes in length and also included performances from
Winifred Atwell,
Evelyn Dove,
Cyril Blake and his Calypso Band,
Edric Connor and
Mable Lee, and was produced by Eric Fawcett. The six-minute footage of Miss Hall is all that survives of the show. From the following month, the
wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten also survives, as do various early 1950s productions such as
It is Midnight, Dr Schweitzer,
The Lady from the Sea and the opening two episodes of
The Quatermass Experiment, although in varying degrees of quality. A complete 7-hour set of telerecordings of Queen Elizabeth II's 1953
coronation also exists.
Worldwide program distribution In the era before satellite communications, kinescopes were used to distribute live events such as a royal wedding as quickly as possible to other countries of the Commonwealth that had started a television service. A
Royal Air Force aircraft would fly the telerecording from the UK to Canada, where it would be broadcast over the whole North American network. Prior to the introduction of
videotape in 1956, kinescopes were the only way to record television broadcasts, or to distribute
network television programs that were broadcast live from originating cities to stations not connected to the network, or to stations that wished to show a program at a time different than the network broadcast. Although the quality was less than desirable,
television programs of all types, from prestigious dramas to regular news shows, were handled in this manner. Even after the introduction of videotape, the BBC and the
ITV companies made
black and white kinescopes of selected programs for international sales and continued to do so until the early 1970s, by which time programs were being videotaped in color. Most, if not all, recordings from the 405-line era have long since been lost as have many from the introduction of 625-line video to the early days of color. Consequently, the majority of British shows that still exist before the introduction of color, and a number thereafter, do so in the form of these telerecordings. A handful of shows, including some episodes of
Doctor Who and most of the first series of
Adam Adamant Lives!, were deliberately telerecorded for ease of editing rather than being videotaped.
Eastman Television Recording Camera In September 1947,
Eastman Kodak introduced the Eastman Television Recording Camera, in cooperation with
DuMont Laboratories and
NBC, for recording images from a television screen under the trademark "Kinephoto". NBC,
CBS, and
DuMont set up their main kinescope recording facilities in New York City, while
ABC chose
Chicago. By 1951, NBC and CBS were each shipping out some 1,000
16 mm kinescope prints each week to their
affiliates across the United States, and by 1955 that number had increased to 2,500 per week for CBS. By 1954, the television industry's film consumption surpassed that of all of the
Hollywood studios combined.
Hot kinescope After the network of
coaxial cable and
microwave relays carrying programs to the
West Coast was completed in September 1951, CBS and NBC instituted a
hot kinescope process in 1952, where shows being performed in New York were transmitted west, filmed on two kinescope machines in
35 mm negative and 16 mm
reversal film (the latter for backup protection) in Los Angeles, rushed to film processing, and then transmitted from Los Angeles three hours later for broadcast in the
Pacific Time Zone. In September 1956, NBC began making color
hot kines of some of its color programs using a
lenticular film process which, unlike color negative film, could be processed rapidly using standard black-and-white methods. They were called
hot kines because the film reels being delivered from the lab were still warm from the developing process.
Double system editing Even after the introduction of
quadruplex videotape machines in 1956 removed the need for
hot kines, the television networks continued to use kinescopes in the
double system method of videotape editing. It was impossible to slow or
freeze frame a videotape at that time, so the unedited tape would be copied to a kinescope and edited conventionally. The edited kinescope print was then used to conform the videotape master. More than 300 videotaped network series and specials used this method over a 12-year period, including the fast-paced ''
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In''. == Alternatives to kinescoping ==