For the very young
(to 11.00)
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,425 playable programmes from the BBC
For the very young
(to 11.00)
(A lighthearted Welsh discussion from Llandysul)
(First shown on BBC Wales)
(Crystal Palace, Sutton Coldfield, Holme Moss, Wenvoe West)
George Luce
BBC outside broadcast cameras bring you the best of the Centre Court and No. 1 Court matches direct from the All England Club.
Introduced from the Wimbledon studio by David Coleman.
A film series.
Range Rider and his young friend, Dick West, fight for justice against the lawlessness of the early West
Norman Tozer introduces a topical magazine programme about people, places, events, ideas, and inventions with Janet Kelly, Jeremy Carrad, John Earle.
From the South and West
Tom Tom
This programme returns at 5.20 with two new presenters - Norman Tozer and Janet Kelly. Norman, who was trained as an actor, has spent the last few years as a television and radio announcer. He is, he says, curious about anything and everything. Janet is not new to TV and has appeared in Z Cars. She was with the Bristol Old Vic for a spell and more recently taught drama to schoolchildren in London's East End. She is an outdoor girl and enjoys most summer sports - sailing, riding, surfing, swimming and tennis.
English version written and told by Eric Thompson.
George Luce
Introduced by John Edmunds
and featuring Peter Davalle
followed by the Weather in the South-East
The final transmission of the day direct from the All England Club, including highlights, news, and results of the eighth day's play in this first Open Tournament at Wimbledon.
(Match of the Day: BBC-2 at 9.55 p.m.)
A season of great laughter-makers in a new series of comedy films.
with John Carroll, Diana Lewis, Walter Woolf King, Robert Barrat
In 1851 Horace Greeley said "Go West, Young Man". This is a story of three men who made him sorry he said it.
with Richard Baker
followed by The Weather
Starring Lulu
with special guests, Frank Windsor, Lou Rawls
Vocal backing by The Ladybirds
Introduced by Frank Bough.
News... Action... Personalities at home and overseas.
Tonight's programme includes:
Lawn Tennis
A report from Wimbledon on the All England Championships.
Introduced by Cliff Michelmore
with Kenneth Allsop and Michael Barratt, Ian Trethowan, Robert McKenzie
with on-the-spot reports by Fyfe Robertson, Julian Pettifer, David Lomax, Philip Tibenham, Denis Tuohy, Linda Blandford.
Michael Caine introduces the second of four programmes devoted to the early films from television's prize-winning director.
The Dotty World of James Lloyd (1964)
Ken Russell took a film unit into the Yorkshire home of the self-taught painter whose pointilliste technique was developed with no knowledge of Seurat and under the most extraordinary domestic circumstances.
Always on Sunday (1965)
A dramatised reconstruction of the life of Henri 'Douanier' Rousseau. The style of filming was made to match the style of Rousseau's painting and the difficulty of casting the supremely innocent French 'primitive' painter was resolved by using the one man Russell knew who could bring real understanding to the part - James Lloyd.
"The result was a partially comic, affectionate, intense, and beautiful film. Some of the images were extraordinarily true." (The Sun)
"There were many images here which showed television as an art in itself." (The Guardian)
"It is a long time since a television programme has given me so much pure pleasure." (Daily Sketch)
(Next Tuesday: Bartok)
"One foot in Eden still, I stand
And look across the other land."
The son of an Orkney farmer, Edwin Muir eventually became a poet... but only after many journeys.
Taking part: Joan Dey, Bryden Murdoch, Stanley Cursiter, Willa Muir, Esmond Wright
from Scotland
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