Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,414 playable programmes from the BBC

9.35 A Year's Journey: The Garden of England
An environmental studies series for Primary Schools.
Introduced by Eric Simms.
(Repeated on Friday)

10.0 Discovering Science: Burning and Rusting
Introduced by Michael Underwood.
(Repeated on Wednesday)

10.25-10.45 Twentieth Century Focus
(Shown on Monday)

11.5-11.25 Going to Work
(Shown on Monday)

11.35-11.55 The Orchestra: Percussion
Introduced by Kenneth Alwyn.
with illustrations played by Eric Allen and David Johnson.
(Repeated on Friday)

Contributors

Presenter/producer (A Year's Journey):
Eric Simms
Producer (A Year's Journey):
F. R. Elwell
Presenter (Discovering Science):
Michael Underwood
Producer (Discovering Science):
Geoffrey Hall
Presenter (The Orchestra):
Kenneth Alwyn
Percussionist (The Orchestra):
Eric Allen
Percussionist (The Orchestra):
David Johnson
Producer (The Orchestra):
John Hosier

2.5-2.35 The Queen and the Rebels: Part 3
by Ugo Betti.
Translated by Henry Reed.
Adapted and produced by Ronald Eyre.
(Repeated on Wednesday)

4.15-4.35 Middle School Physics
(Shown on Monday)

Contributors

Author (The Queen and the Rebels):
Ugo Betti
Translated by (The Queen and the Rebels):
Henry Reed
Adapter/producer (The Queen and the Rebels):
Ronald Eyre
Designer (The Queen and the Rebels):
Stuart Walker
Commissar Amos:
Alan MacNaughtan
Argia:
Judy Parfitt
General Biante:
Esmond Knight
Caretaker:
Kent Baked
Maupa:
Brian Coburn
Engineer:
Tony Steedman
Peasant:
Eddie Malin
Peasant woman:
Enid Lorimer
Young peasant:
Brian Lawson
Raim:
Robert Gillespie
Elisabetta:
Georgine Anderson

A documentary film covering the spectacular Gemini-Titan IV mission of astronauts James A. McDivitt and Edward H. White.
It includes sequences of their preflight training, and of the experiments conducted on the four-day mission.
Produced by N.A.S.A. Manned Spacecraft Center, 1965

Contributors

Subject:
James A. McDivitt
Subject:
Edward H. White

Written by Bill Latto.
Told by Patrick Barr.
Rounding the Cape of Good Hope in the wake of the tea clippers-that's where tonight's traveller, lone yachts-man Francis Chichester, hopes to be by today, if he and his yacht Gipsy Moth IV have had fair winds. And as Chichester sails on towards Australia, tonight's programme recalls an earlier voyage--the single-handed. Transatlantic Race of 1964 which Chichester, then aged 63, did not win-but when he still achieved a personal goal.

Adapted by BBC television from the film Atlantic Adventure, produced for Whitbread and Co. Ltd., by Town and Country Productions Ltd.

Contributors

Writer:
Bill Latto
Narrator:
Patrick Barr
Subject:
Francis Chichester
Filmed by:
Alan Masters
Series edited by:
Brian Branston

Vivienne and Arnold are faced with a temperamental musician. Janet and her father disagree about Graham and there is an unexpected arrival at the Cooper house...

Contributors

Devised by:
Colin Morris
Story:
John Wiles
Script:
Patrick Scanlan
Producer:
Ronald Travers
Director:
John Davies
Arthur Huntley:
Tony Steedman
Ellis Cooper:
Alan Browning
Archie Minter:
Reginald Jessup
Inspector:
Robert Cawdron
Janet Langley:
Sandra Payne
Jeff Langley:
Michael Collins
Arnold Tripp:
Gerald Cross
Sydney Huxley:
Anthony Verner
Mrs. Brassett:
Eileen Way
Vivienne Cooper:
Maggie Fitzgibbon
Delia Dipton:
Margot Boyd
Mrs. Heenan:
Vanda Godsell
Peter Connolly:
Patrick Connor
Peggy Simkins:
Sandra Williams

Written by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais.
Starring Rodney Bewes as Bob and James Bolam as Terry
(First shown on BBC-2)

Contributors

Writer/Producer:
Dick Clement
Writer:
Ian La Frenais
Music:
Ronnie Hazlehurst
Designer:
Alan Hunter-Craig
Bob:
Rodney Bewes
Terry:
James Bolam
Jack:
Donald McKillop
Cloughy:
Bartlett Mullins
Cafe proprietor:
Keith Roberts
Scoutmaster:
James Cossins
Postmistress:
Amy Dalby
Valerie:
Nerys Hughes
Susan:
Sandra Blaine

Tonight's film stars Ian Carmichael, Janette Scott, Cecil Parker
with Joyce Grenfell, Eric Barker
and guest star, Terry-Thomas

Janet and David plan a quiet wedding, but her parents have other ideas and are determined to have an elaborate affair.

Contributors

Screenplay/Director:
Roy Boulting
Screenplay:
Jeffrey Dell
Based on the play by:
Dodie Smith
Producer:
Paul Soskin
David Chaytor:
Ian Carmichael
Janet Royd:
Janette Scott
Arthur Royd:
Cecil Parker
Policeman:
null Terry-Thomas
Aunt Florence:
Joyce Grenfell
Vicar:
Eric Barker
Mildred Royd:
Edith Sharpe
Petula:
Elvi Hale
Denys Royd:
Richard Bennett
Chaytor:
John Le Mesurier
John Royd:
Nicholas Parsons
Marcia:
Virginia Maskell
Jim:
Thorley Walters
Madame Edna:
Irene Handl
Miranda Royd:
Sarah Drury
First Magistrate:
Miles Malleson
Aunty Harriet:
Athene Seyler
George:
Cardew Robinson
Builder's foreman:
Sam Kydd
Mrs. Bowles:
Joan Hickson

Round the clock and round the world with up-to-the-minute coverage of what matters today.
Introduced by Cliff Michelmore with Kenneth Allsop.
with Fyfe Robertson, Julian Pettifer, Michael Barratt, Michael Parkinson, Leonard Parkin and the Twenty-Four Hours correspondents.

Including a special report on the second day of The Labour Party Conference
Presented by Ian Trethowan, Robin Day with Kenneth Harris.

Contributors

Presenter:
Cliff Michelmore
Presenter:
Kenneth Allsop
Reporter:
Fyfe Robertson
Reporter:
Julian Pettifer
Reporter:
Michael Barratt
Reporter:
Michael Parkinson
Reporter:
Leonard Parkin
Presenter (The Labour Party Conference):
Ian Trethowan
Presenter (The Labour Party Conference):
Robin Day
Reporter (The Labour Party Conference):
Kenneth Harris
Assistant Editor:
Richard Francis
Deputy Editor:
Anthony Whitby
Editor:
Derrick Amoore

Programmes for parents about children under five.

Children under five grow faster and learn more than at any other age.
Dr. K. Lovell, Dr. C.B. Hindley, Dr. W.A. Marshall
Introduced by Meryl O'Keeffe.
From the West
(Repeated tomorrow at 7.30 p.m. BBC-2)

Contributors

Speaker:
Dr. K. Lovell
Speaker:
Dr. C.B. Hindley
Speaker:
Dr. W.A. Marshall
Presenter:
Meryl O'Keeffe
Director:
George Inger
Producer:
Eileen Molony

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