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Encyclopedia > Lime Grove Studios

Lime Grove Studios was a film studio complex built by the Gaumont Film Company in 1915 situated in a street named Lime Grove, near Hammersmith, west London and described by Gaumont as "the finest studio in Great Britain and the first building ever put up in this country solely for the production of films".


The studios prospered under Gaumont, and later, Gainsborough Pictures and not long after the start of World War II were bought by J. Arthur Rank and became a home on many occasions to the Ealing comedies. The famous British film The Wicked Lady (1945) was also made at Lime Grove.


In 1949, the BBC bought Lime Grove Studios as a "temporary measure" as they built their Television Centre at nearby White City and began converting them for television use.


Lime Grove would be home to many BBC TV shows over the next forty-two years, including: Nineteen Eighty-Four, Quatermass and the Pit, Steptoe and Son, Doctor Who, Nationwide and That's Life!. The 1950s soap opera The Grove Family took the name of its title family from the studios, where it was made.


In 1991, the BBC decided to consolidate its television production at Television Centre and close its other studios including Lime Grove and so it was that on July 22, 1991, a week before the studios were closed forever, the BBC transmitted a special day of programming called "The Lime Grove Story" featuring examples of the many programmes and films that had been made at Lime Grove in its 76 years as a place of film and television production.


The studios themselves were put on the market and eventually were bought by a development company who demolished the studios and redeveloped the area for residential housing.


External links

  • The demolition of Lime Grove Studios, with history and photos (http://www.bbctv-ap.co.uk/lgdem01b.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Lime Grove Studios - definition of Lime Grove Studios in Encyclopedia (262 words)
Lime Grove Studios was a film studio complex built by the Gaumont Film Company in 1915 situated in a street named Lime Grove, near Hammersmith, west London and described by Gaumont as "the finest studio in Great Britain and the first building ever put up in this country solely for the production of films".
In 1949, the BBC bought Lime Grove Studios as a "temporary measure" as they built their Television Centre at nearby White City and began converting them for television use.
The studios themselves were put on the market and eventually were bought by a development company who demolished the studios and redeveloped the area for residential housing.
The Grove Family - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (224 words)
The Grove Family was a British television soap opera, generally regarded as the first of its kind broadcast in the UK, made and transmitted by BBC Television from 1954 to 1957.
The series revolved around the life of the family of the title, who were named after the BBC's Lime Grove Studios, where the programme was made.
In 1991, during a special day of programming transmitted on the BBC Two network to commemorate the closing of Lime Grove, a new edition of the programme was shown, a modern production of one of the original scripts with popular television soap opera actors of the day such as Leslie Grantham filling the roles.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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