Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,419 playable programmes from the BBC

Make Yourself at Home
For viewers from Pakistan and India
Including:
Look, Listen, and Speak: Revision course: Lesson 38
From the Midlands
(Repeated on Wednesday at 12.25 p.m.)

'Look, Listen, and Speak', Book 3 (yellow cover), printed in Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, Punjabi, Gujarati 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)
(to 9.25)

Contributors

Scriptwriter (Look, Listen, and Speak):
Viola Huggins
Teacher (Look, Listen, and Speak):
Robert Chapman
Assisted by (Look, Listen, and Speak):
Sheila Dillon-Guy

A dance mime with poetry.
Performed by Goldington Secondary School, Bedford.
From Houghton House, Ampthill

Accompanying this special outdoor version of Judas the voices of some of those who took part in last year's School production will be heard commenting on its main theme- that Judas's story is everyman's.
(to 11.30)

Contributors

Devised and produced by:
Gordon Simms
Presented for television by:
R.T. Brooks

Introduced by John Cherrington.

Hugh Barrett reports on a new formulation that is claimed to increase the keeping qualities of fruit and flowers and James Thorburn looks at intensive mushroom growing.
From the Midlands
followed by the Weather Situation for farmers and growers
(to 14.15)

Contributors

Presenter:
John Cherrington
Reporter:
Hugh Barrett
Reporter:
James Thorburn
Producer:
John Kenyon

Well-known interviewers choose the people they wish to interview.
"When I first met Cyril Connolly, perhaps Britain's most respected living man-of-letters, he was a daunting figure to a rather un-literary young man. But his interests as an author, critic, journalist, and editor are as wide as his sardonic humour is pervasive: it was easy to see why his reputation for conversation has been as great through his life as for his vast erudition..."
...is why Richard Kershaw talks to Cyril Connolly.

Contributors

Interviewer:
Richard Kershaw
Interviewee:
Cyril Connolly
Director:
Peter Chafer
Producer:
Michael Hill

A Western film series.
A family of five youngsters face the challenge of the new frontiers in the raw and uncompromising Wyoming territory of the 1870s.

When Jim, the Monroes' Indian friend, is accused of murder it seems impossible to prove his innocence.

Contributors

Clayt:
Michael Anderson Jr.
Kathy:
Barbara Hershey
The twins:
Keith Schultz
The twins:
Kevin Schultz
Amy:
Tammy Locke

Starring Alan Ladd, William Bendix, Gail Russell
with June Duprez

Two flyers uncover a dangerous racket in smuggled diamonds.

Contributors

Producer/Screenplay:
Seton I. Miller
Director:
John Farrow
Neale Gordon:
Alan Ladd
Pedro Lake:
William Bendix
Bill Cunningham:
John Whitney
Eric Lasser:
Lowell Gilmore
Marina Tanov:
June Durrez
Virginia Moore:
Gail Russell

by Charles Dickens.
Dramatised in thirteen parts by Hugh Leonard.

Nicholas has found employment with the kindly Cheeryble brothers. Smike has been captured by Squeers.

Contributors

Author:
Charles Dickens
Dramatised by:
Hugh Leonard
Designer:
Stephen Bundy
Producer:
Campbell Logan
Director:
Joan Craft
Smike:
Hugh Walters
Wackford Squeers:
Ronald Radd
Wackford Junior:
Malcolm Epstein
Snawley:
Allen Sykes
Mrs. Nickleby:
Thea Holme
Kate Nickleby:
Susan Brodrick
Gentleman next door:
Roy Kinnear
Keeper:
Norman Mitchell
Nicholas Nickleby:
Martin Jarvis
John Browdie:
David Richardson
Tilda:
Mary Healey
Fanny Squeers:
Karin MacCarthy
Waiter:
Wilfred Grove
Newman Noggs:
Gordon Gostelow
Charles Cheeryble:
Edward Palmer
Tim Linkinwater:
Bartlett Mullins
Ned Cheeryble:
John Gill
Madeline Bray:
Sharon Gurney
Ralph Nickleby:
Derek Francis

Britain's own version of America's Billy Graham operates from an office over a dry-cleaner's shop in Eastbourne, Sussex. He has a public relations officer, a business organisation and a fully-equipped studio where 'gospel messages' are recorded for transmission by radio stations in the U.S.A., Europe, and the Far East.
Yet few people have heard of Dr. Eric Hutchings, although his crusade meetings are often packed and he has been an Evangelist for more than twenty years.
Tonight's programme takes a close look at this home-grown business of Evangelism and shows what people think of Dr. Hutchings as a man, and how they regard his crusades.
From the South and West
(Repeated tonight at 11.32)

Contributors

Subject:
Dr. Eric Hutchings
Producer:
Hugh Pitt

with Magnus Magnusson
Can you name it? Can you date it? What's it for?
Dr. R.L.S. Bruce-Mitford, Keeper of British and Medieval Antiquities in the British Museum again challenges two visiting experts to identify some of its treasures
Rosemary Cramp, Dr. Prys Morgan.

Contributors

Presenter:
Magnus Magnusson
Panellist:
Dr. R. L. S. Bruce-Mitford
Panellist:
Rosemary Cramp
Panellist:
Dr. Prys Morgan
Director:
Philip S. Gilbert
Producer:
John Elphinstone-Fyffe

from The British Sailors' Society Seamen's Mission, Musselburgh.
Introduced by Murdoch McPherson.

God is our refuge (Stroudwater)
I feel the winds of God today (Ellacombe)
O for a closer walk with God (Stracathro)
Fierce raged the tempest o'er the deep (St. Aelred)
Will your anchor hold (Will your anchor hold)
Pilot me (Leila N. Morris)
What a Friend we have in Jesus (Blaenwern)
Jesus, Lover of my soul (Hollingside)
The lower lights (Lower lights)
Eternal Father, strong to save (Melita)

Contributors

Presenter:
Murdoch McPherson
Producer:
The Rev. Dr. Ronald Falconer
Conductor:
Bryce Gould
Accompanist:
Phyllis Waterson
Organist:
Mima Brown
Soloist:
Annie Brown
Prayer and Blessing:
Hector Ronald

A special programme of affectionate - and musical - greetings from Andy Williams and his guests Errol Garner, Henry Mancini and Claudine Longet
With The Blossoms, The Spats, The Copacabana Trio, Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party, Tavia and the Followers, Peter Bravos and the Greek Village Group, Luana Anders.
Recorded in the U.S.A.

Contributors

Singer/Presenter:
Andy Williams
Pianist:
Erroll Garner
Musician:
Henry Mancini
Singer/Dancer:
Claudine Longet
Singers:
The Blossoms
Musicians:
The Spats
Musicians:
The Copacabana Trio
Singers:
Aunt Dinah's Quilting Party
Performers:
Tavia and the Followers
Performers:
Peter Bravos and the Greek Village Group
Performer:
Luana Anders
Producer:
Jack Good
Choreography:
Andre Taylr

by Alan Plater.
A new series starring Thora Hird, Robert Keegan, James Grout and Henry Knowles

Contributors

Writer/Series devised by/From an original idea by:
Alan Plater
From an original idea by:
Philip Levene
Designer:
Derek Dodd
Producer:
David E. Rose
Director:
Robin Midgley
Will Tarrant:
Robert Keegan
George Kingston:
James Grout
Sarah Danby:
Thora Hird
Tom Danby:
Henry Knowles
Jim Attercliffe:
Colin Semel
Barman:
Raymond Miller
Mrs. Parkinson:
Gwen Nelson
Jim Parkinson:
John F. Landry
Joan Parkinson:
Bobbie Oswald
Mr. Parkinson:
Morris Parsons
Mr. Harding:
John Malcolm
Mr. Chalmers:
Robert Hartley
Secretary:
Zoe Starr

Adapted by Vera Caspary from a novel by John Klempner.

"You see, girls, I've run off with one of your husbands". The letter arrives as the girls depart for a day on the river - a day in which they have plenty of time to reflect on whose husband it might be.

Contributors

Adapter:
Vera Caspary
Author:
John Klempner
Producer:
Sol C. Siegel
Screenplay/Director:
Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Deborah Bishop:
Jeanne Crain
Lora May Hollingsway:
Linda Darnell
Rita Phipps:
Ann Sothern
George Phipps:
Kirk Douglas
Porter Hollingsway:
Paul Douglas
Babe:
Barbara Lawrence
Brad Bishop:
Jeffrey Lynn
Mrs. Finney:
Connie Gilchrist
Mrs. Manleigh:
Florence Bates
Mr. Manleigh:
Hobart Cavanaugh

Television's own correspondence column with David Coleman.
A chance for those who watch television to put their views to those responsible - about the programmes, the questions raised, and issues at large, before a statistically selected audience.

Contributors

Presenter:
David Coleman
Editor:
Richard Francis

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