2003 in British television

List of years in British television (table)

This is a list of British television-related events from 2003.

Events

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Debuts

BBC

Date Debut
8 January Politics Show begins on BBC One and Two
Daily Politics begins on BBC Two.
12 January This Week begins on BBC One.
4 February Posh Nosh premieres on BBC Two
18 May State of Play, a six-part serial, directed by David Yates and written by Paul Abbott, begins its run on BBC One, concluding on 22 June.
9 June Comedy Connections premieres on BBC One.
11 September QI premieres on BBC Two.
16 September Little Britain premieres on BBC One.
11 November Rich Hall's Fishing Show premieres on BBC Four.

ITV (Including ITV1 and ITV2)

Date Debut
19 January Diggin' It replaces Diggit
The Royal, a spin-off Heartbeat
3 May MIT: Murder Investigation Team, a spin-off of The Bill

Channel 4

Date Debut
12 January The Salon
21 May How Clean Is Your House?
19 September Peep Show
Born to Be Different

Five

Date Debut
January 6 Beyblade premieres on Five.

Nickelodeon UK

Date Debut
November 29 All Grown Up! debuts as a sequel of Rugrats

Television shows

Returning this year after a break of one year or longer

22 February – After Dark returns to British television on BBC4 (last on Channel 4 in 1997)
16 October – Superstars returns to BBC One (1973–1985, 2003–2005)

Changes of network affiliation

Show Moved from Moved to
Robot Wars BBC Two Five
Don't Try This at Home ITV Challenge

Channels

New channels

Date Channel
15 January Ftn
UK Bright Ideas
9 February BBC Three
29 May Toon and Tunes
8 September Toonami
Pop Plus
16 December VH2

Defunct channels

Date Channel
9 February BBC Choice
31 March Carlton Cinema
8 September CNX

Rebranded channels

Date Old Name New Name
June 1 Toon and Tunes Pop

Ongoing

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Ending this year

Births

Deaths

Date Name Age Cinematic Credibility
9 January Peter Tinniswood[156] 66 radio and TV comedy scriptwriter, and author
11 March Kevin Laffan 80 writer and author (creator of Emmerdale)
13 March Elisabeth Croft[157] 95 actor (Edith Tatum in ATV soap Crossroads)
15 March Thora Hird[158] 91 actress (Edie Pegden in Last of the Summer Wine)
22 March Terry Lloyd 50 news reporter, killed during Iraq War skirmish
30 March Gaby Rado 48 news reporter, killed during Iraq War
16 April Danny O'Dea 92 actor (Eli Duckett in Last of the Summer Wine)
19 June Laura Sadler[71] 22 actress (Sandy Harper in Holby City)
24 August Kent Walton[159] 86 television sports commentator and presenter
11 September Stuart Golland 58 actor (George Ward in Heartbeat)
23 September Sarah Parkinson[160] 41 producer and writer of radio and television programmes
23 October Tony Capstick[161] 59 comedian and actor
8 November Bob Grant[162] 71 actor (Jack Harper in On the Buses)
22 December Rose Hill[163] 89 actress (Madame Fanny La Fan in 'Allo 'Allo!)
29 December Bob Monkhouse[164] 75 comedian and entertainer

References

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