Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,128 playable programmes from the BBC

Cyfres o raglenni lle y gwahoddir nifer o wyr i drafod pynciau sy'n eu diddori'n arbennig.
Y gwr gwadd heddiw yw: Yr Athro Jac L. Williams, Deon Cyfadran Addysg, Coleg y Brifysgol, Aberystwyth, fydd yn trafod gydag eraill y cwestiwn Uno'r Genedl. Cyfarwyddwr: GARETH PRICE
Professor Jac L. Williams discusses 'Uniting the Nation'.
First shown on BBC Wales
(Crystal Palace, Sutton Coldfield, Holme Moss, Wenvoe West)
(to 13.25)

Contributors

Presenter:
Professor Jac L. Williams

Top Soccer teams compete in a light-hearted battle of wits with the help of their celebrity supporters.

Tonight's teams:

Hearts
Donald Ford, player; George Miller, player; Alan Anderson, player; Tom Fleming, guest supporter

Sheffield Wednesday
John Marshall, assistant manager; Gerry Young, player; David Ford, player; Stan Barstow, guest supporter

Refereed by David Vine.

Contributors

Panellist (Hearts):
Donald Ford
Panellist (Hearts):
George Miller
Panellist (Hearts):
Alan Anderson
Panellist (Hearts):
Tom Fleming
Panellist (Sheffield Wednesday):
John Marshall
Panellist (Sheffield Wednesday):
Gerry Young
Panellist (Sheffield Wednesday):
David Ford
Panellist (Sheffield Wednesday):
Stan Barstow
Announcer:
John Witty
Referee:
David Vine
Devised by:
George Woolley
Questions set by:
Boswell Taylor
Director:
Peter Massey
Producer:
Bill Wright

told by John Stockbridge.
In the southernmost corner of the Kingdom of Thailand, Highway 5 begins its 1,500-mile journey to the north where Laos and Burma meet. To right and left of the highway live many peoples and races, survivors of the distant past and immigrants of the present.

Contributors

Narrator:
John Stockbridge
Filmed by:
Bodo Ulrich
Presented by:
Bob Saunders
Series edited by:
Brian Branston

A new comedy series by Alan Melville.
Starring Moira Lister as Jacqueline Villiers
with Norman Bird as The Messrs. Jackson

Contributors

Writer:
Alan Melville
Signature music:
Burt Rhodes
Incidental music:
Dennis Wilson
Designer:
Gordon Toms
Producer:
Graeme Muir
Millicent Dickson:
Elizabeth Allan
Jacqueline Villiers:
Moira Lister
Henrietta Greaves:
Margaret Courtenay
Mavis Anstruther:
Diana King
Constance Cartwright:
Beryl Mason
Mrs. Frayle:
Molly Urquhart
Freddie Phillipson:
Donald Hewlett
Mr. Jackson 1:
Norman Bird
Mr. Jackson 2:
Norman Bird

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

Contributors

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

A Man Called Ironside - Criminal investigator extraordinary
A new film series starring Raymond Burr as Robert Ironside
with Don Galloway as Det.-Sgt. Brown, Barbara Anderson as Officer Eve Whitfield
and Don Mitchell as Mark Sanger
with guest stars, Warren Stevens, David Hartman

A man is murdered and a valuable art treasure stolen from an exhibition high in a skyscraper. The crime provides a tough puzzle - even for Ironside.

Contributors

Robert Ironside:
Raymond Burr
Det.-Sgt. Brown:
Don Galloway
Officer Eve Whitfield:
Barbara Anderson
Mark Sanger:
Don Mitchell
Howard Comus:
Warren Stevens
Lt Fitch:
David Hartman

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

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