Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 282,038 playable programmes from the BBC

9.38 People of Many Lands: Rice: Food of Half the World
(Shown on Monday)

10.0-10.20 Maths Today: There and Back
(Shown on Thursday)
(Repeated on Monday and Wednesday next week)

10.25-10.45 Gwlad a Thref
A series for Welsh schools.
(Welsh Transmitters, Sutton Coldfield, Holme Moss, Wenvoe West)

11.0 Spotlight
People - Politics - Problems in the news
(Shown on Thursday)

11.23 Watch!: A Street Market: Buying Vegetables
(Shown on Tuesday)

11.40-12.0 Engineering: Craft and Science: Engineering Materials: 4: Heat Treatment
(Shown on Wednesday)

Cyfle i'r ifanc i ofyn ac i herio
Y Cadeirydd, Gwynn Matthews
Y cyfarwyddo gan Selwyn Roderick
(Political discussion)
(First shown on BBC Wales)
(Crystal Palace, Sutton Coldfield, Holme Moss, Wenvoe West)
(to 13.25)

Contributors

Unknown:
Gwynn Matthews
Unknown:
Selwyn Roderick

Introduced by Leslie Crowther
with Peter Glaze, Christine Holmes, Jillian Comber
Guests, The Tremeloes, John Walker

(Leslie Crowther is appearing in "Let Sleeping Wives Lie" at the Garrick Theatre, London; Christine Holmes is in "Charlie Girl" at the Adelphi Theatre, London)

Contributors

Presenter/Comedian:
Leslie Crowther
Comedian:
Peter Glaze
Hostess:
Christine Holmes
Hostess:
Jillian Comber
Musicians:
The Tremeloes
Performer:
John Walker
Scripts:
Bob Block
Music:
Bert Hayes and his Band
Designer:
Jean Campbell
Director:
Richard Evans
Producer:
Peter Whitmore

An animal adventure series starring Marshall Thompson as Dr. Marsh Tracy, Cheryl Miller as Paula Tracy, Yale Summers as Jack Dane
with Hedley Mattingly and Hari Rhodes
aided and abetted by Clarence and Judy

Clarence is wounded when he follows a lioness back to the wild.

Contributors

Dr. Marsh Tracy:
Marshall Thompson
Paula Tracy:
Cheryl Miller
Jack Dane:
Yale Summers
District Officer Hedley:
Hedley Mattingly
Mike Makula:
Hari Rhodes

Adapted from the short story by P.G. Wodehouse by Richard Waring.
Starring Ian Carmichael as Bertie Wooster and Dennis Price as Jeeves
with Felix Aylmer and Anton Rodgers

Contributors

Author:
P.G. Wodehouse
Adapted by:
Richard Waring
Signature tune and themes by:
Sandy Wilson
Designer:
Raymond Berger
Producer:
Michael Mills
Bertie Wooster:
Ian Carmichael
Jeeves:
Dennis Price
Bicky Bickersteth:
Anton Rodgers
The Duke of Chiswick:
Felix Aylmer
Marvin Holder:
Max Bacon
Hector Y. Cornelius:
Danny Green

with Sir Fitzroy Maclean
For lust of knowing what should not be known
We take the golden road to Samarkand
A film about a 10,000-mile journey through the Soviet Union beginning and ending in Moscow, and showing some of the remoter and more exotic republics of this great country which is about to celebrate its fiftieth anniversary.

Contributors

Presenter:
Sir Fitzroy MacLean
Directed and produced by:
Malcolm Brown

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, David Lomax, Philip Tibenham

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:
David Lomax
Reporter:
Philip Tibenham
Editor:
Anthony Whitby

The regular weekly programme about the creative world of art and artists.

The first of three performances of Beethoven symphonies conducted by Colin Davis.
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Leader, Trevor Williams
Part of a public concert in the Royal Festival Hall, London.
Introduced by Henry Livings.

Contributors

Conductor:
Colin Davis
Musicians:
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Orchestra leader:
Trevor Williams
Presenter:
Henry Livings
Producer:
Walter Todds

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