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  1. Tonight is a BBC television current affairs programme that was shown on weekday nights from 1 September 1975 until 5 July 1979 on BBC1. It was initially presented by Sue Lawley, Denis Tuohy and Donald MacCormick and reporters included John Pitman, Richard Kershaw, David Lomax, David Jessel and Michael Delahaye.

  2. Background. Content and style. Accolades. Tonight (1975 TV programme) References. External links. Tonight (1957 TV programme) Tonight was a British current affairs television programme, presented by Cliff Michelmore, that was broadcast on BBC live on weekday evenings from 18 February 1957 to 18 June 1965.

  3. Tonight is a BBC television current affairs programme that was shown on weekday nights from 1 September 1975 until 5 July 1979 on BBC1. It was initially presented by Sue Lawley, Denis Tuohy and Donald MacCormick and reporters included John Pitman, Richard Kershaw, David Lomax, David Jessel and Michael Delahaye.

  4. The final edition of Tonight was transmitted on 18 June 1965. After some 1,800 editions, Cliff Michelmore could no longer say: “The next Tonight will be tomorrow night”. Michelmore and many of the Tonight team moved on to 24 Hours. The title was re-used in 1975 for an unrelated late-night show.

  5. Tonight is a BBC television current affairs programme that was shown on weekday nights from 1 September 1975 until 5 July 1979 on BBC One. It was initially presented by Sue Lawley, Denis Tuohy and Donald MacCormick and reporters included John Pitman, Richard Kershaw, David Lomax, David Jessel and Mi

  6. Tonight: With Donald MacCormick, Valerie Singleton, David Holmes, Robin Day. Broadcast late every week night, talking to the decision makers, and those whose lives are affected by them.

  7. Cast & crew. IMDbPro. All topics. Episode list. Tonight. Top-rated. Mon, Sep 1, 1975. S1.E1. Episode #1.1. Add a plot. Rate. Top-rated. Tue, Jul 24, 1979. Tonight Special: Don't Be Silly. Valerie Singleton presents a look at the Play For Today episode "Don't Be Silly", discussing its themes of domestic violence with critics and psychologists.