Donald Baverstock
Donald Baverstock (
January 18,
1924 â€"
March 17,
1995) was a British
television producer and executive. He initially worked for
BBC Television in the famous Talks Department, where he was the Editor of the topical magazine programme
Highlight and then co-devised and edited its more ambitious and better-remembered successor
Tonight, which began in
1957.
Baverstock worked on
Tonight until
1961, when he was promoted to be the BBC's Assistant Controller of Programmes across the whole television service. He did not occupy this post for very long, however, as in early
1963 he succeeded his superior
Stuart Hood to become the Controller of Programmes for
BBC One, in anticipation of the launch of the station's companion
BBC Two the following year. In the same year he requested
Sydney Newman to develop a new Saturday evening show for
BBC One which would later become
Doctor Who.
However, soon after the launch of BBC Two in
1964, Controller
Michael Peacock quickly began to run into difficulties, and BBC
Director-General Hugh Carleton-Greene decided in
1965 that the two men would be better suited to running each other's channels, and took the decision to swap them over.
However, Baverstock felt insulted that he was being asked to take what he saw as a demotion to the lesser channel, and refused to take up his new post, instead resigning from the BBC altogether. He subsequently became involved in the establishment of
ITV northern franchise holders
Yorkshire Television, becoming its first Director of Programmes and going on to oversee the creation of popular hits such as the soap opera
Emmerdale Farm (
1972), which still runs nationally to this day.
In
1957 Baverstock married
Gillian Mary Blyton, daughter of
British children's author Enid Blyton, at
St James's Church, Piccadilly.