Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 281,697 playable programmes from the BBC

told by David Bauer.
Two thousand years ago Roman soldiers advanced deep into North Africa and met tribes like the Garamantes, whose cave drawings suggest a way of life impossible in the desert we know today.
A Victor von Hagen story filmed by Harold Lord

Contributors

Narrator:
David Bauer
Author:
Victor von Hagen
Filmed by:
Harold Lord
Written and presented by:
Eric Davidson
Series edited by:
Brian Branston

by Donald Bull.
Starring Joseph Brady, James Ellis, John Slater
with David Daker, Stephen Yardley

Contributors

Writer:
Donald Bull
Designer:
Jean Peyre
Producer:
Ronald Travers
Director:
Gerald Blake
Mrs. Montagu:
Jean Bruce
Brogan:
Thomas Heathcote
Doris Brogan:
Pamela Miles
Evan Brogan:
James Burnham
P.C. Weir:
Joseph Brady
P.C. Culshaw:
David Daker
P.C. May:
Stephen Yardley
Sgt. Lynch:
James Ellis
Det.-Sgt. Stone:
John Slater
Cord:
Peter Purves
Betts:
Derek Ware
Doctor:
Michael Slater
Lorry driver:
Geoffrey Reed
Radio girl:
Margery Campi
Molly Roberts:
Nerys Hughes
Doreen:
Anne Hardcastle
Mari:
Patricia Mort
Tom:
Alan Downer
Villain:
Charles Wade
P.C. Newcombe:
Bernard Holley

by Edwin Apps and Pauline Devaney.
Starring Robertson Hare as the Archdeacon, William Mervyn as the Bishop, Derek Nimmo as the Rev. Mervyn Noote and John Barron as the Dean
featuring Patrick Newell as the Ghost and Ruth Kettlewell as Mrs. Pugh-Critchley

(William Mervyn is appearing in "Aren't We All?" at the Savoy Theatre; Derek Nimmo in "Charlie Girl" at the Adelphi Theatre, London)

Contributors

Writer:
Edwin Apps
Writer:
Pauline Devaney
Music composed and conducted by:
Stanley Myers
Designer:
Colin Shaw
Producer:
Stuart Allen
The Archdeacon:
Robertson Hare
The Bishop:
William Mervyn
The Rev. Mervyn Noote:
Derek Nimmo
The Dean:
John Barron
The Ghost:
Patrick Newell
Mrs. Pugh-Critchley:
Ruth Kettlewell

People, places, and problems that matter most to Britain and the world.
Introduced by Robin Day
with the Panorama reporters Michael Charlton, Richard Kershaw, James Mossman.

Contributors

Presenter:
Robin Day
Reporter:
Michael Charlton
Reporter:
Richard Kershaw
Reporter:
James Mossman
Deputy Editor:
Robert Rowland
Editor:
David J. Webster

by Robert Gould.
Starring Dinsdale Landen

When your girlfriend wants you to pose as the fiance of her girlfriend and another old friend wants you to bury her father and share her life and ...there's no good denying you're in dead schtook!

Contributors

Writer:
Robert Gould
Designer:
Martin Collins
Producer:
John Frankau
Director:
Raymond Menmuir
Mickey Dunne:
Dinsdale Landen
Marie:
Jean Trend
Eve:
Jenny Logan
Janine:
Denise Buckley
Walter Bott:
John Barrett
Cyril Bott:
Peter Thomas
Sugar:
Derek Sydney
Mrs. Macduff:
Virginia Clay
Eddie:
Frank Seton
Det.-Sgt. Rose:
David Beale

Round the clock and round the world with up-to-the-minute coverage of what matters today.
Introduced by Cliff Michelmore with Kenneth Allsop.
Round 24 hours with Ian Trethowan, Robert McKenzie
Round 24,000 miles with Fyfe Robertson, Julian Pettifer, Michael Barratt, Michael Parkinson, Leonard Parkin, David Lomax

Contributors

Presenter:
Cliff Michelmore
Presenter:
Kenneth Allsop
Reporter:
Ian Trethowan
Reporter:
Robert McKenzie
Reporter:
Fyfe Robertson
Reporter:
Julian Pettifer
Reporter:
Michael Barratt
Reporter:
Michael Parkinson
Reporter:
Leonard Parkin
Reporter:
David Lomax
Deputy Editor:
Anthony Whitby
Editor:
Derrick Amoore

The world's premier international horse show this year plays host to teams from as far apart as Japan and Ireland, with strong competition coming from the ever-popular Italian team, as well as the first fully representative team to visit this country from Poland.

Tonight: The Horse and Hound Cup
Direct from the White City, London where the final stages of this international jumping championship are in progress.
See page 19

Contributors

Commentator:
Dorian Williams
Television Presentation:
Alan Mouncer
Television Presentation:
Ian Smith

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