For the very young
Audrey Atterbury and Molly Gibson pull the strings
Gladys Whitred sings the songs
Peter Hawkins speaks the voices
Maria Bird writes the songs and music
BBC film
(to 11.00)
For the very young
Vera McKechnie turns the pages, and shows you how to make a village with a sand-tray.
You need a sand-tray, newspaper, toy animals, and Christmas-cake trees.
BBC film
(to 13.45)
Gary Watson with Cleopatra the Clapperboard Cat introduces films about a little bear's journey, three boys on a tram, and a Canadian boy who wants to make music.
A daily presentation of news and views from London and the South-East.
Introduced by Michael Aspel.
followed by The Weather
A new look at Britain's best-sellers.
Discs-Stars-News from this week's Top Twenty.
Introduced tonight by Peter Murray.
Introduced by Cliff Michelmore.
with Alan Whicker, Fyfe Robertson, Trevor Philpott, Kenneth Allsop, Macdonald Hastings, Christopher Brasher, Julian Pettifer, Brian Redhead, Cathal O'Shannon,
Magnus Magnusson.
Call sign of International Air Security
A film series starring Nigel Patrick as Alan Garnett.
with Bill Smith as Jimmy Delaney
Produced by MGM-TV in association with the BBC
Delaney has reason to believe the saying 'diamonds sing louder than nightingales' when Garnett sends him to Teheran to investigate the disappearance of some valuable pack. ages of gems from the registered mail.
with Mark Eden as Johnny Rich and Anthony Booth as Finn Brodie
Guest stars, Peter Dyneley, Philip Madoc
Introduced by Frank Bough.
bringing you Action-News-Personalities
Among tonight's items:
Football
Three days before the first match of the 1964-65 season, Danny Blanchflower takes a close look at the club he thinks will be the 'Team of the Year'.
on behalf of the Conservative and Unionist Party.
Also on BBC-2
A film series starring George C. Scott as social worker Neil Brock, a man dedicated to helping people in trouble.
The Ceilidhe
This private get-together and sing-song was filmed in the village of Spiddal, Connemara, on the west coast of Ireland.
Lotte Lenya
Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill wrote songs and plays of social protest like The City of Mahagonny and The Threepenny Opera. Lotte Lenya, the German actress and singer, sings some of the songs which made her famous in the twenties and thirties, and which the Nazis hated so much.
Introduced by Huw Wheldon.
(First shown on Monitor)
by Fr. John Stapleton.