Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,061 playable programmes from the BBC

Written and produced by Ronald Smedley.
Colin and Shirley try their hand at sailing a dinghy.
With George Gibbs
For Schools
Repeated on Friday at 2.5 p.m.
(to 11.25)

Contributors

Writer/Producer:
Ronald Smedley
Film cameraman:
John A.S. Turner
Film editor:
Peter Horrey
Mr Brent:
Ian Gardiner
Mrs Brent:
Brenda Cowling
Shirley Brent:
Judith Geeson
Colin Brent:
Alexander Riley
Himself:
George Gibbs

with Geoffrey Wheeler
You don't have to know how to ride before going pony trekking. Geoffrey Wheeler sees what happens to girls on their first days at a Pony Trekking Centre in the Black Mountains.
For Schools
Repeated on Tuesday at 11.5 a.m.
(to 14.25)

Contributors

Presenter:
Geoffrey Wheeler
Cameraman:
Michael Shepherd
Sound recordist:
Peter Birch
Film Editor:
Crea Tarrant
Script:
Ross Salmon
Producer:
Andrew Quicke

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
Director:
Edward Barnes
Producer:
Biddy Baxter

A team of professional bird-watchers studies the home-life of the black-headed gull.
Commentary by Hugh Falkus.
With Dr. Niko Tinbergen, F.R.S. Hans Kruuk, Ian Patterson, Robert Mash, Mike Norton-Griffiths
Produced by Manuscript Film
A BBC-tv Natural History Unit presentation
From the West
See facing page

Contributors

Narrator/director:
Hugh Falkus
Bird-watcher:
Niko Tinbergen
Bird-watcher:
Hans Kruuk
Bird-watcher:
Ian Patterson
Bird-watcher:
Robert Mash
Bird-watcher:
Mike Norton-Griffiths
Filmed and edited by:
John Martin

A film series of comedy-thrillers starring Glynis Johns as a writer of mystery stories with a flair for making her own perilous predicaments and Keith Andes as her long-suffering husband.

This One Will Kill You ...and that's no joke!

Contributors

Glynis Granville:
Glynis Johns
Keith Granville:
Keith Andes

The Window on the World
Introduced by Richard Dimbleby with reports on People - Places - Problems in the news from Panorama's regular team of commentators Robin Day and Michael Barratt, Michael Charlton, Roderick MacFarquhar, John Morgan.

Contributors

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

Rupert Davies as Maigret introduces:
Jasper Shrig played by Patrick Troughton in Jeffery Farnol's "The Loring Mystery"
Adapted by Max Marquis.

Bow Street Runner Jasper Shrig uncovers a dark mystery of high passion and hidden identity which brings death to a hell-fire Regency squire.
See page 24

Contributors

Author:
Jeffery Farnol
Adapted by:
Max Marquis
"Detective" theme music composed by:
John Addison
Incidental Music:
Max Harrie
Script Editor:
John Gould
Script Editor:
Anthony Read
Designer:
Neil Parkinson
Producer:
David Goddard
Director:
Peter Cregeen
Maigret (introduction):
Rupert Davies
Jasper Shrig:
Patrick Troughton
Thomas Yaxley:
David Daker
David Loring:
David Burke
Jonathan Vokes:
Ivor Salter
Sir Nevil Loring:
Gerald Cross
Anticlea:
Katy Wild
Belinda:
Hilary Mason
Mr Gillespie:
Reginald Barratt
Maulverer:
Derek Smee
Daniel:
Harry Landis

On the second leg of their journey round the world Eric and Susan Hiscock sail among the most beautiful islands in the Pacific. After spending a green Christmas on a do-it-yourself farm in New Zealand, they begin their final 15,000 miles in Wanderer III and find strange companions - dope smugglers in the Red Sea.
First shown on January 11, 1963

Contributors

Subject:
Susan Hiscock
Subject/Narrator/Photography:
Eric Hiscock
Film Editor:
Keith Miller
Presented by:
Harry Hastings
Series edited by:
Brian Branston

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