Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,803 playable programmes from the BBC

Make Yourself at Home
For viewers from Pakistan and India.
Including:
Look, Listen, and Speak (Revision course)
From the Midlands
A booklet entitled 'Look, Listen, and Speak' printed in Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, and English, with vocabularies and revision lessons, can be obtained from booksellers, or from [address removed]. price 4s. 6d. (by Post 5s. 2d.: crossed postal order)

(Crystal Palace, Sutton Coldfield, Peterborough, Tacolneston, Cambridge, All North Transmitters (Except Sandale and Douglas), Kirk O'Shotts, Divis, Londonderry, Wenvoe West, Rowridge)

Contributors

Teacher (Look, Listen, and Speak):
Robert Chapman

Classroom techniques with the handicapped and other children in need.

Art for the handicapped child can be partly creative activity, partly occupational therapy, and partly the language in which emotional distress is made articulate.
Introduced by Vincent Rosewell, University of London Institute of Education.

(Repeated on Monday at 4.05)

Contributors

Speaker:
Zaidee Lindsay
Speaker:
Hilary Carruthers
Presenter:
Vincent Rosewell
Producer:
Roger Owen

Written by Helena Valenti.
Let's Look at Spanish
Twenty lessons for beginners.

"Let's see what happens... when we shop with forged notes."

With Jacinta Castillejo, Mari Carmen Nevada, Julio Pena and Carlos Riera
(Repeated on Thursday at 11.7 p.m.)

Contributors

Writer:
Helena Valenti
Course devised by:
Brian Dutton
Course devised by:
Angel Garcia de Paredes
Adviser:
Joseph Cremona
Designer:
Don Horne
Director:
John Prescott Thomas
Producer:
Colin Nears
[Actress]:
Jacinta Castillejo
[Actress]:
Mari Carmen Nevado
[Actor]:
Julio Pena
[Actor]:
Carlos Riera

Ten programmes on solid state devices.

The silicon planar technique now makes possible devices and circuits which can be made in no other way. This programme shows recent developments which are leading to better and simpler circuits.
Introduced by Tim Johnson.
With Amit Dutta-Roy, Richard Josephy.

Contributors

Presenter:
Tim Johnson
Speaker:
Amit Dutta-Roy
Speaker:
Richard Josephy
Director:
David Cordingly
Producer:
Michael Garrod

Management problems in the smaller firm.

About 30,000 new businesses are started in Britain every year. What problems do they encounter in infancy and adolescence? What decides success or failure?
Introduced by Jeffrey Iverson.
(Repeated next Saturday at 11.0 a.m.)
(to 13.00)

Contributors

Presenter:
Jeffrey Iverson
Director:
Paul Ellis
Producer:
Tony Matthews

Fences rot, dogs from the town chase and kill the sheep, smoke blackens the fleeces, and the land is stony.
Frank Taylor asks Bryan Hough how, and why, he manages a marginal farm near Oldham.
BBC film
From the Midlands
followed by the Weather Situation for farmers and growers

Contributors

Interviewer:
Frank Taylor
Interviewee:
Bryan Hough
Director:
John Bird
Producer:
John Kenyon

Tony Soper remembers some of the many animals which have come his way over the years.
Hand-rearing seals, cormorants, and badgers are some of the problems he has had to deal with, not to mention the beaver under the bed, the guillemot in the bath. and the hawk in the kitchen.
From the West

Contributors

Narrator/Filmed by:
Tony Soper
Series Producer:
Jeffery Boswall

Introduced by David Vine.
Featuring The World Bobsleigh Championships and Ladies' Downhill Skiing
David Coleman reports on the first two runs in the four-man bob event held last night at Alpe d'Huez.
Max Robertson reports from Austria on this morning's ladies' downhill ski race held on the slopes above Bad Gastein.
Outside broadcasts presented by the Television Services of France and Austria

Contributors

Presenter:
David Vine
Commentator (The World Bobsleigh Championships):
David Coleman
Commentator (Ladies' Downhill Skiing):
Max Robertson
Presented for BBC Television by:
Ian Smith
Presented for BBC Television by:
Brian Venner

by Charles Dickens.
Dramatised in ten episodes by Hugh Leonard.

Pip goes to London and is told discomforting news about Estella.

Contributors

Author:
Charles Dickens
Dramatised by:
Hugh Leonard
Designer:
Stephen Bundy
Producer:
Campbell Logan
Director:
Alan Bridges
Pip:
Gary Bond
Trabb:
Redmond Phillips
Trabb's boy:
Kenneth Nash
Pumblechook:
Norman Scace
Sarah Pocket:
Elsie Wagstaff
Miss Havisham:
Maxine Audley
Biddy:
Hannah Gordon
Mrs. Gargery:
Shirley Cain
Joe Gargery:
Neil McCarthy
Wemmick:
Bernard Hepton
Mike:
John Caesar
Jaggers:
Peter Vaughan
Petitioner:
Phillip Ross
Petitioner:
Pamela Abbott
Herbert Pocket:
Richard O'Sullivan

from Chichester Cathedral
Probably no ancient Cathedral has commissioned more contemporary works of art in the past ten years than Chichester.
Leonard Bernstein talks to Humphrey Burton about his Chichester Psalms
John Piper talks about his tapestries
The Dean of Chichester talks to Martin Muncaster about the place of contemporary art in Church
BBC film

Contributors

Interviewee:
Leonard Bernstein
Interviewer:
Humphrey Burton
Speaker:
John Piper
Interviewee:
The Dean of Chichester [Walter Hussey]
Interviewer:
Martin Muncaster
Producer:
Kenneth Savidge

A token, a brooch, a pair of tongs-unusual objects of religious art and archaeology shown by Norman Cook, Director, The Guildhall Museum to be identified by Rosemary Cramp and Dr. Brian Morris.

Contributors

Presenter:
Norman Cook
Panellist:
Rosemary Cramp
Panellist:
Dr. Brian Morris
Producer:
John Elphinstone Fyffe

from Thornbury Parish Church.
Hymns introduced by Jeremy Carrad.

Hymns (from A. and M. Rev.)
O Jesus, I have promised (Tune, Thornbury)
Come, holy Ghost, our souls inspire (Tune, Veni Creator)
Praise to the Lord, the Almighty (Tune, Praxis Pietatis)
How sweet the name of Jesus sounds (Tune, St. Peter)
The God of Abraham praise (Tune, Leoni)
Christian, dost thou see them (Tune, St. Andrew of Crete)
My song is love unknown (Tune, Love Unknown)
Thy hand, O God, has guided (Tune, Thornbury)

Contributors

Conductor:
Mair Johnson
Soloist:
Wilfred Brown
Organist:
Wilfred Purnell
Presenter:
Jeremy Carrad
Producer:
John Dobson

Tonight's film starring Jack Webb, Janet Leigh, Edmond O'Brien, Peggy Lee
with Andy Devine, Lee Marvin, Ella Fitzgerald

Contributors

Director:
Jack Webb
Pete Kelly:
Jack Webb
Ivy Conrad:
Janet Leigh
Fran McCarg:
Edmond O'Brien
Rose Hopkins:
Peggy Lee
George Tenell:
Andy Devine
Al Gannaway:
Lee Marvin
Maggie Jackson:
Ella Fitzgerald
Joey:
Martin Milner
Rudy:
Than Wyenn
Bedido:
Herb Ellis

by Vincent Tilsley.
Created by A.J. Cronin.
Starring Andrew Cruickshank, Barbara Mullen, Bill Simpson
Guest star, John Laurie
(Andrew Cruickshank is appearing in "Alibi for a Judge" at the Savoy Theatre, London)

Contributors

Writer:
Vincent Tilsley
Created by:
A.J. Cronin
The series produced by arrangement with:
Graham Stewart
Designer:
Gwen Evans
Producer:
Douglas Allen
Director:
Terence Williams
P.C. Dickie:
David MacMillan
Fergus Lammerton:
John Laurie
John:
Alan Curtis
Dr. Cameron:
Andrew Cruickshank
Sgt. Gilbey:
Neil Wilson
Mr. Gordon:
Manning Wilson
Mr. Hastie:
Martin Gordon
Bobbie:
Alan Williams
Janet:
Barbara Mullen
Dr. Finlay:
Bill Simpson
Flora:
Katherine Parr
Dr. Collins:
Michael Sheard
Dr. Wallace:
Ian Frost
Dr. Jacob Hirsch:
Frederick Schiller
Hotel receptionist:
Jenny Lee
Mental Home Superintendent:
Edward Harvey
Assistant Superintendent:
Keith Anderson
Sheriff:
Charles Stewart

James Robertson Justice introduces Segovia, Mattiwilda Dobbs, Tamas Vasary, Galina Samtsova, Amore Prokovsky
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Leader, Rodney Friend
Conducted by Lawrence Leonard
(Galina Samtsova appears by permission of the Administrator of London's Festival Ballet)

Contributors

Presenter:
James Robertson Justice
Guitarist:
null Segovia
Soprano:
Mattiwilda Dobbs
Pianist:
Tamas Vasary
Dancer:
Galina Samtsova
Dancer:
Amore Prokovsky
Musicians:
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Orchestra leader:
Rodney Friend
Orchestra conducted by:
Lawrence Leonard
Script Adviser:
Arthur Jacobs
Designer:
Marilyn Taylor
Producer:
Patricia Foy

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