Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,852 playable programmes from the BBC

Written and produced by Bill Scott.
Colin, watching helplessly as Mr. Brent saves a boy from drowning, resolves to learn all he can about life-saving and artificial respiration.
Introduced by James Lloyd.
For Schools
(to 11.25)

Contributors

Writer/producer:
Bill Scott
Presenter:
James Lloyd
Film Cameraman:
Eddie Best
Film Editor:
Peter Horrey
Mr Brent:
Ian Gardiner
Mrs Brent:
Brenda Cowling
Colin Brent:
Alexander Riley
Shirley Brent:
Judith Geeson
Himself:
E.A. Gibb

Written and produced by Colin Nears.
A series of French language programmes on the younger generation of film-makers in France.
Introduced by Olivier Todd.

"I have tried to make films that could in a sense, be compared to a work of literature: films which would give the spectator imaginative freedom in the way that the reader of a novel is free to use his own imagination... the film would hold his attention, yet his imagination would be allowed its own freedom to act, to weave itself in and around the images on the screen."
For Schools
(to 11.55)

Contributors

Presenter:
Olivier Todd
Film Editor:
David Painter
Programme Consultant:
Richard Roud
Writer/producer:
Colin Nears

with Geoffrey Wheeler
Which would you prefer to sail-a rowing dinghy or a twenty-eight-ton ketch? Geoffrey Wheeler looks at both, and explains how to start sailing.
Written and produced by Andrew Quicke.

For Schools
(to 14.25)

Contributors

Presenter:
Geoffrey Wheeler
Cameraman:
Geoff Mulligan
Sound Recordist:
Bill Searle
Film Editor:
Sylvia Wheeler
Writer/Producer:
Andrew Quicke

Christopher Trace and Billy and Mary reach Geneva. While they wait for their parents, the children find out a number of interesting things about airports and travellers.

In the studio, Christopher Trace and Tony Hart
For Schools
(to 14.47)

Contributors

Presenter:
Christopher Trace
Presenter/artist:
Tony Hart
Film cameraman:
Roger Boyard
Film editor:
Robert Hill
Designer:
Don Horne
Presented by:
Peggie Broadhead
Mary Stevens:
Joy Measures
Billy Stevens:
Francis Attard

Christopher Trace and Valerie Singleton introduce a magazine programme for younger viewers.

Contributors

Presenter:
Christopher Trace
Presenter:
Valerie Singleton
Film Editor:
Valerie Best
Production Assistant:
Rosemary Gill
Producer:
Biddy Baxter

The Corrie Folk Trio and Paddie Bell, The Dubliners, Nadia Cattouse, Cyril Tawney, Jean Redpath, Martin Carthy

Contributors

Band:
The Corrie Folk Trio and Paddie Bell
Band:
The Dubliners
Singer:
Nadia Cattouse
Singer:
Cyril Tawney
Singer:
Jean Redpath
Guitarist:
Martin Carthy
Director:
Robert Stewart
Producer:
W. Gordon Smith
Producer:
Travers Thorneloe

Introduced by Cliff Michelmore.
with Derek Hart, Alan Whicker, Fyfe Robertson, Trevor Philpott, Kenneth Allsop, Macdonald Hastings, Christopher Brasher, Julian Pettifer, Brian Redhead.

Contributors

Presenter:
Cliff Michelmore
Reporter:
Derek Hart
Reporter:
Alan Whicker
Reporter:
Fyfe Robertson
Reporter:
Trevor Philpott
Reporter:
Kenneth Allsop
Reporter:
Macdonald Hastings
Reporter:
Christopher Brasher
Reporter:
Julian Pettifer
Reporter:
Brian Redhead
Associate Producer:
Derrick Amoore
Associate Producer:
Kevin Billington
Associate Producer:
John Lloyd
Associate Producer:
Kenneth Corden
Associate Producer:
Michael Tuchner
Assistant Editor:
Elizabeth Cowley
Editor:
Alasdair Milne

Peter Scott introduces the first of a new series.

The story of wildlife on a Malayan shore
In the brief interval between the ebb and flow of the tides, a thriving community of curious and comical creatures comes to life on the beach at Kanchong Laut: among them the Fiddler Crabs, whose signalling claws give them the appearance of playing a violin, and fish that live literally 'out of water, the Mudskippers.
BBC Natural History Unit
From the West

Contributors

Presenter:
Peter Scott
Music composed and conducted by:
Sidney Sager
Music played by:
The BBC West of England Players
Film Editor:
Jim Tobin
Story and photography:
Jane Burton
Producer:
Jeffery Boswall

A special edition of The Window on the World on the state of Britain's nearest neighbours in June 1964 - just twenty years after the Normandy landings.
Introduced by Richard Dimbleby direct from Paris with reports from Panorama's regular team of commentators Robin Day and Michael Barratt, Michael Charlton
Roderick MacFarquhar, John Morgan.See page 25

Contributors

Presenter:
Richard Dimbleby
Reporter:
Robin Day
Reporter:
Michael Barratt
Reporter:
Michael Charlton
Reporter:
Roderick MacFarquhar
Reporter:
John Morgan
Producer:
Richard Francis
Assistant Editor:
Christopher Ralling
Editor:
David Wheeler

Rupert Davies as Maigret introduces Detective-Constable Bradfield played by Mark Eden in Clifford Witting's Subject: Murder

Contributors

Writer:
Clifford Witting
Detective theme music composed by:
John Addison
Incidental Music:
Max Harris
Script Editor:
John Gould
Script Editor:
Anthony Read
Designer:
Margaret Peacock
Producer:
David Goddard
Director:
Max Varnel
Maigret (introduction):
Rupert Davies
Peter Bradfield:
Mark Eden
Gunner John Fieldhouse:
Wilfrid Downing
Gunner Postbechild:
Clive Colin Bowler
Battery Sergeant-Major Yule:
Michael Peake
Susan Carmichael:
Virginia Wetherell
Bombardier Paul Morton:
Brian McDermott
Fay Gilbert:
Veronica Strong
Landlady of the pub:
Totti Truman Taylor
Battery Quartermaster-Sergeant Ackroyd:
Alec Ross
Gunner Aubrey Lovelock:
James Hunter
Battery Captain Fitzgerald:
Richard Shaw
Cianelli:
Joe Greig
Major Mellis:
Anthony Woodruff
Sergeant Burroughs:
Stanley Price
Doggett:
Harry Brunning
Detective-Inspector Charlton:
Basil Dignam

BBC One London

About BBC One

BBC One is a TV channel that started broadcasting on the 20th April 1964. It replaced BBC Television.

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More