Carole Hersee was eight when her father took the photograph. Her sister Gillian had been considered first, but Gillian was missing two front teeth that year, so the committee at BBC engineering went with Carole. She sat for the picture in a red dress, hair pinned back with an Alice band, a clown doll called Bubbles propped beside her. In front of her was a miniature chalkboard showing a game of noughts and crosses already half-played. Her left hand held the chalk, so the transparency was flipped to make her look right-handed. The X in the centre square was placed there deliberately, because the centre square is where the geometric heart of the image lies, and an engineer designing a test pattern thinks about geometric hearts.
The picture went out for the first time on 2 July 1967, the day after colour television launched in Britain. It stayed on television, in one form or another, until the late 1990s. The last time it appeared during engineering work was 2011. Over those decades it racked up roughly seventy thousand hours of screen time, equivalent to nearly eight continuous years. No face in British television history has been broadcast longer.
The thing you remember, if you grew up with it, is not really the test pattern around her. Not the PLUGE bars, not the colour gradients used to align picture tubes. What stayed was the stillness. The sense that something was happening in a room you could not enter. Carole's expression is neutral in a way that children rarely manage — she is neither smiling nor serious, simply waiting for something that has not arrived. The clown is grinning at her from the other side of the board. She is, to judge from the position of the Xs and Os, about to win. She never does.
This is what hauntology feeds on. A gap in the schedule is not dead air; it is aired nothing. The engineers needed an image while the transmitters were calibrated, and what they produced was a child permanently mid-move, her doll permanently mid-grin, eight real years of real screen time accumulated inside a game that was never going to resolve. The longest-serving face in British television never had a line to deliver. She just sat there being looked at, and then being not looked at, and then being looked at again, at 3:45 in the morning, or during the downtime between Pages from Ceefax updates.
Carole herself has always been slightly bemused by the whole thing. In a 2007 interview with the Telegraph she pointed out that the Guinness record attributed to her could not actually be a record, since no one else was in a position to beat it. She still owns Bubbles, who lives in a box. She became a costume designer. She had two daughters. She got on with things.
What's hard to explain, to anyone who didn't live through it, is the weight of that picture as a cultural object. You watched until closedown and then there was Carole. You woke at some odd hour because the house was cold and there was Carole. You flicked over to BBC2 during a weekday lunchtime and the programme you expected hadn't started yet, and there was Carole. The state broadcaster had put a child at the centre of its idle screen, and the idle screen was on very often, and the child grew up while the picture did not.
The card was eventually phased out because 24-hour broadcasting made it redundant. Pages from Ceefax filled the overnight slot from 1999. Then Ceefax itself went dark in October 2012. The frame around the girl dissolved, and then the broader frame around the frame dissolved, and the whole apparatus of waiting — which is what the test card really served — dissolved with it. Now the silence at 3am is a private silence. No one is broadcasting it to you.
Somewhere in the New Forest, a costume designer in her late sixties has a box with a clown in it.
Sources:
-
Test Card F — Wikipedia
-
Carole Hersee — Wikipedia
-
The test card: when a girl and a clown ruled the airwaves — The Guardian
-
Test card special — BBC News