Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,675 playable programmes from the BBC

9.38 Mathematics in Action: 17: Programming Languages
Introduced by Philip Woodward.
(Repeated on Tuesday)

10.0 Merry-Go-Round: Land of the Midnight Sun (I)
Introduced by Sonja Nerdrum and Karen Newport.
(Repeated on Thursday)

10.25-10.45 Middle School Physics: Scientific Models
Introduced by Bryan Chapman.
(Repeated on Tues. and Wed., and on Tues., Thurs., and Fri. of next week)

11.5-11.25 Exploring Your World: Hearing Sounds
Introduced by Harry Armstrong.
(Repeated on Wednesday)

11.35 For Sixth Forms: Modern Music: 2: Order out of Chaos
Introduced by Peter Maxwell Davies.
(Repeated on Wednesday)

12.5-12.25 Engineering: Craft and Science: Joining Metal: 18: Electric Arc Welding
Introduced by D.R.C. Holmes, C.Eng., A.M.I., Prod.E.
(Repeated on Wed. and Fri. - not Scot.)

Contributors

Presenter (Mathematics in Action):
Philip Woodward
Producer (Mathematics in Action):
Edward Goldwyn
Presenter (Merry-Go-Round):
Sonja Nerdrum
Presenter (Merry-Go-Round):
Karen Newport
Film direction (Merry-Go-Round):
F.R. Elwell
Producer (Merry-Go-Round):
Claire Chovil
Presenter (Middle School Physics):
Bryan Chapman
Producer (Middle School Physics):
John Field
Presenter (Exploring Your World):
Harry Armstrong
Producer (Exploring Your World):
Eurfron Gwynne Jones
Presenter (For Sixth Forms):
Peter Maxwell Davies
Producer (For Sixth Forms):
John Hosier
Presenter (Engineering:
Craft and Science): D.R.C. Holmes
Programme adviser (Engineering:
Craft and Science): V. W. Clack, C.Eng., M.Inst.W
Producer (Engineering:
Craft and Science): Nat Taylor

2.5 Going to Work: Electricity: 1: Supply
Introduced by Peter West.
This first part of a two-programme unit looks at the organisation of the electricity supply industry.
(Repeated on Tuesday)

2.30 Look and Read: Len and the River Mob: 7: This Way Up
with George Layton, Christopher Chittell, Philip Brack, Kenneth Colley and Kenneth Gardnier.
(Repeated on Friday)

2.55 Discovering Science: Water as a Solid
Introduced by Michael Underwood.
(Repeated on Tuesday)

3.20-3.40 Twentieth-Century Focus: Laws and Liberty: 1: 'The good constable'
A force or a service? What is the right balance between police powers and citizens' rights?
with Rex Robinson, Alexander Riley
Introduced by Harvey Hall.
(Repeated on Tues. and Wed. - not Scot.)

Contributors

Presenter (Going to Work):
Peter West
Producer (Going to Work):
Len Brown
Narrator (Look and Read)/presenter (Twentieth-Century Focus):
Harvey Hall
Script (Look and Read):
Leonard Kingston
Story by (Look and Read):
Roy Brown
Producer (Look and Read):
Andree Molyneux
Len Tanner:
George Layton
Micky:
Christopher Chittell
Bill:
Philip Brack
Mr Moon:
Kenneth Colley
Roy:
Kenneth Gardnier
Presenter (Discovering Science):
Michael Underwood
Producer (Discovering Science):
John Field
Producer (Twentieth-Century Focus):
Tony Scull
[Actor]:
Rex Robinson
[Actor]:
Alexander Riley

with Ian Hendry

This week's stories have all been told in East Anglia and the Fens for a long, long time. Are they true? No one really knows, but some of the people were certainly real, although their adventures seem to have become more impossible over the years.

Contributors

Storyteller:
Ian Hendry

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

West Bromwich Albion
Alan Ashman, manager; John Osborne, player; Doug Fraser, player; Jeff Smith, guest supporter

Arsenal
Bertie Mee, manager; Ian Ure, player; Terry Neill, player; Jimmy Young, guest supporter

Refereed by David Vine.

Contributors

Panellist (West Bromwich Albion):
Alan Ashman
Panellist (West Bromwich Albion):
John Osborne
Panellist (West Bromwich Albion):
Doug Fraser
Panellist (West Bromwich Albion):
Jeff Smith
Panellist (Arsenal):
Bertie Mee
Panellist (Arsenal):
Ian Ure
Panellist (Arsenal):
Terry Neill
Panellist (Arsenal):
Jimmy Young
Announcer:
John Witty
Referee:
David Vine
Devised by:
George Woolley
Question Setter:
Boswell Taylor
Director:
Mary David
Producer:
Bill Wright

Told by John Stockbridge.

Nepal's giant mountains are the least known and explored on earth. In the autumn of 1964. John Tyson led an expedition to map and climb in a region no European had seen before the central massif of the Kanjiroba Himal.

Contributors

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

when she invites you to meet many different characters.
with Hugh Paddick, Joan Heal, Andre Maranne and introduces Jake Thackray
and special guest, Topo Gigio

See page 35

Contributors

Staged by:
William Chappell
Sketches written by:
Arthur MacRae
Sketches written by:
Alan Melville
Sketches written by:
Austin Steele
Music arranged and conducted by:
Burt Rhodes
Designer:
Brian Tregidden
Producer:
Robin Nash
Comedienne:
Beryl Reid
[Actor]:
Hugh Paddick
[Actor]:
Joan Heal
[Actor]:
Andre Maranne
Performer:
Jake Thackray

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 film series starring Raymond Burr as Robert Ironside
with Don Galloway as Det.-Sgt. Brown, Barbara Anderson as Officer Eve Whitfield, Don Mitchell as Mark Sanger
with guest stars, Pernell Roberts, Ruta Lee

In spite of evidence to the contrary Sgt. Brown is convinced that a loud-mouthed drunk is really a killer-and he is prepared to risk his own life in the attempt to prove it.

Contributors

Robert Ironside:
Raymond Burr
Det.-Sgt. Brown:
Don Galloway
Officer Eve Whitfield:
Barbara Anderson
Mark Sanger:
Don Mitchell
Frank Vincent:
Pernell Roberts
Marian Lord:
Ruta Lee

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, 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:
David Lomax
Reporter:
Philip Tibenham
Editor:
Anthony Whitby

Dan Leno, one of the greatest music-hall artists of all time, put his name to a semi-imaginary autobiography, which is introduced and re-created by Roy Hudd.
Narration by Frank Cowley (of the music-hall team, Morris and Cowley) and Totti Truman Taylor with Freddie Jones.

See page 19

Contributors

Programme Consultant:
Raymond Mander
Programme Consultant:
Joe Mitchenson
Designer:
Colin Pigott
Director:
Leslie Megahey
Edited and produced by:
John Duncan
Dan Leno:
Roy Hudd
Narration:
Frank Cowley
Narration:
Totti Truman Taylor
Narration:
Freddie Jones

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