Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,039 playable programmes from the BBC

For viewers from Pakistan and India.
Including
Look, Listen, and Speak: Revision Course: Lesson 22

(From the Midlands)

"Look, Listen and Speak" Book 2 (blue cover), printed in Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, and English, with vocabularies and revision lessons, can be obtained from booksellers, Asian grocery shops, or from BBC Publications [address removed] price 4s. 6d. (by post 5s. 2d.; crossed postal order, please, not stamps).

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

(to 9.25)

Contributors

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

from Leeds Parish Church attended by members of the British Association whose Annual Meeting is being held in Leeds from August 30 to September 6.
Conducted by the Vicar, Canon Fenton Morley

Contributors

Service conducted by:
Canon Fenton Morley
Preacher:
The Archbishop of York [Donald Coggan]
Precentor:
The Rev. Frank Baker
Organist:
Donald Hunt
Television Presentation:
Raymond Short

How can arithmetic be understood, enjoyed, and discovered? Fundamental to an understanding of long multiplication, for example, are several ideas-place value, simple multiplication, and distribution. Today's programme shows children developing these concepts and inventing techniques of their own for long multiplication.
Presented by Jim Boucher.

Contributors

Presenter:
Jim Boucher
Producer:
Edward Goldwyn

An enquiry into its value for the English teacher.
John Hodgson, Principal Drama Lecturer at Bretton Hall College of Education continues an unrehearsed drama lesson with a class of third-year secondary school children.
Mrs. Dorothy Heathcote, Staff Tutor in Drama at the Institute of Education, University of Newcastle upon Tyne works with a class of fourteen-year-old boys.
Introduced by Joe Reid.
(to 13.00)

Contributors

Teacher:
John Hodgson
Teacher:
Dorothy Heathcote
Presenter:
Joe Reid
Producer:
Ronald Smedley

Keith Davies started farming on his own nine years ago. He had £600, and a promise of £1,000 after one year. How has he progressed, what were his sources of credit, and could he, with the same resources, get a start under conditions as they are today?
Frank Taylor reports from Cardiganshire.
BBC film from the Midlands

Followed by the Weather Situation for farmers and growers
(to 14.15)

Contributors

Subject:
Keith Davies
Reporter:
Frank Taylor
Producer:
John Kenyon

Written by P. J. Wolfson.
Starring Mickey Rooney, Coleen Gray, Hugh O'Brian

A young priest arrives in the frontier town of Lodestone determined to rebuild his father's church, destroyed twenty-five years earlier by Indian attack.

Contributors

Writer:
P.J. Wolfson
Director:
George Blair
William Macklin:
Mickey Rooney
Laura:
Coleen Gray
Marty:
Hugh O'Brian
Ted:
Joey Forman
Dawson:
Don Barry
Lou:
Touch Connors
Millie:
Jill Jarmyn
Johnny:
Kem Dibbs
Babe:
Tony Garcen

by Jack Gerson.
Starring John Cairney
and Leonard Maguire, Ellen McIntosh
Guest stars, Philip Latham, Simon Lack

The Director of Education wants Ian Craig to apply for a new job. Pressure, both subtle and blatant, is put upon Craig to influence his decision.

Contributors

Writer:
Jack Gerson
Designer:
Helen Rae
Producer:
Gerard Glaister
Director:
David Proudfoot
Robert Lockhart:
Philip Latham
Harry Gilchrist:
Simon Lack
Brown:
Ian Hoskins
Moira Gilchrist:
Sheila Latimer
Ian Craig:
John Cairney
George Mutrie:
Arthur Boland
Douglas Robertson:
Leonard Maguire
Willie Sinclair:
Alex McCrindle
First boy:
Daniel McKenzie
Second boy:
Michael Cook
Third boy:
Gordon Griffiths
Andrew Blaikie:
Gerard Slevin Jr.
Jarrow:
John Young
Councillor Barton:
Jameson Clark
Margaret Craig:
Ellen McIntosh
Rennie:
Desmond Reilly

by Alexandre Dumas.
Dramatised in sixteen parts by Alexander Baron from the second of the D'Artagnan romances "Twenty Years After."
With Joss Ackland as D'Artagnan, Brian Blessed as Porthos, Jeremy Young as Athos, John Woodvine as Aramis, William Dexter as Cardinal Mazarin and Carole Potter as Anne, Queen Regent

"Athos! Aramis! Guard the King. Porthos, hold the door. This man is mine."

Contributors

Author:
Alexandre Dumas
Dramatised by:
Alexander Baron
Designer:
Michael Young
Producer:
William Sterling
Director:
Christopher Barry
D'Artagnan:
Joss Ackland
Porthos:
Brian Blessed
Athos:
Jeremy Young
Aramis:
John Woodvine
Cardinal Mazarin:
William Dexter
Anne Queen Regent:
Carole Potter
Guard officer:
Derek Sydney
Swiss guard:
Anthony Sheppard
Bernouin:
Peter Bennett
Louis XIV:
Louis Selwyn
Prince de Beaufort:
John Quentin
Broussel:
Charles Carson
Rochefort:
Edward Brayshaw
Planchet:
Nigel Lambert
Grimaud:
Malcolm Hayes
Palace guard:
Robert Sideway

From the Central Methodist Church, Preston.
Introduced by Michael Meech.

Rejoice, the Lord is King (Gopsal)
And can it be (Sagina)
New every morning (M. A. Baughen, arr. W. Wooldridge)
Jesu, thou Joy of loving hearts (Wareham)
Be thou my vision (Slane)
Great God of wonders (Sovereignty)
Lo, he comes with clouds descending (Helmsley)
It's an open secret (J. Webb)
Through the love of God our Saviour (At hyd y nos)
Who is on the Lord's side? (Raichle)
Glory to thee, my God, this night (Tallis's Canon)

Contributors

Presenter:
Michael Meech
Organist:
John Brown
Conductor:
Horatio Waywell
Producer:
Raymond Short

by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson.
Starring Wilfrid Brambell as Albert, Harry H. Corbett as Harold
This week: Sixty-Five Today
featuring Frank Thornton and Richard Caldicot
with Michael Bird, Anthony Chinn, Myo Toon, Peter Ching, Aman Tokyo

Contributors

Writer:
Ray Galton
Writer:
Alan Simpson
Incidental Music:
Ron Grainer
Designer:
Roger Andrews
Producer:
Duncan Wood
Albert:
Wilfrid Brambell
Harold:
Harry H. Corbett
Barman:
Frank Thornton
Man in Restaurant:
Richard Caldicot
Man in Bar:
Michael Bird
Head Waiter:
Anthony Chinn
Third Waiter:
Myo Toon
Second Waiter:
Peter Ching
Wine Waiter:
Aman Tokyo

by Peter Ling and Anthony Skene.
Starring Edward Chapman, Nicole Maurey, Maurice Kaufmann, Virginia Stride, James Kerry

Contributors

Writer/Devised by:
Peter Ling
Writer:
Anthony Skene
Devised by:
Hazel Adair
Designer:
Stanley Morris
Producer:
Jordan Lawrence
Director:
Richard Doubleday
Edward Champion:
Maurice Kaufmann
Joe Champion:
Edward Chapman
Stephen Champion:
James Kerry
Liz Champion:
Virginia Stride
Sophie:
Penny Reid
Michele Champion:
Nicole MacRey
Brenda:
Maggie Don
Della Chevalier:
June Ritchie
Frank Knight:
James Beck
Alice Boothroyd:
Brenda Cowling
Miss Royston:
Vilma Hollingbery
Waiter:
Frank Tregear
Mrs. Addison:
Mary Hignett
Louise:
Cyd Hayman
Tania:
Veronica Lang
David de Grussa:
Laurence Herder
Reporter:
Maurice Quick
Reporter:
Ron Welling
Woman:
Hilary Pritchard
Woman:
Marguerite Young
Mary:
Ann Norman

from Glyndebourne Opera House.
In Italian with English sub-titles
Continuo played by Martin Isepp (harpsichord)
Glyndebourne Festival Chorus
Under the direction of Myer Fredman
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Leader, Rodney Friend
Conducted by John Pritchard

There will be a short interval at 10.15

(See page 9)

Contributors

Composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Libretto:
Lorenzo Da Ponte
Harpsichordist:
Martin Isepp
Singers:
Glyndebourne Festival Chorus
Chorus Director:
Myer Fredman
Musicians:
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Orchestra Leader:
Rodney Friend
Conductor:
John Pritchard
Head of Music Staff and Preparation:
Jani Strasser
Designer:
Emanuele Luzzati
Producer:
Franco Enriquez
Television Presentation:
John Vernon
Leporello, servant to Don Giovanni:
Paolo Montarsolo
Donna Anna daughter of the Commendatore and betrothed to Don Ottavio:
Althea Bridges
Don Giovanni, a young and licentious nobleman:
Kostas Paskalis
The Commendatore:
Marius Rintzler
Don Ottavio:
Richard Lewis
Donna Elvira, a lady from Burgos, abandoned by Don Giovanni:
Teresa Zylis-Gara
Zerlina, a peasant girl:
Sheila Armstrong
Masetto, a peasant, betrothed to Zerlina:
Leonardo Monreale

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