For the very young
(to 11.00)
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,916 playable programmes from the BBC
For the very young
(to 11.00)
Make Yourself at Home
For viewers from Pakistan and India
Including: Look, Listen, and Speak: Lesson 45
From the Midlands
(Shown on Sunday)
'Look, Listen, and Speak' Book 4 (orange 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] (by post 6s. 8d. crossed postal order, please, not stamps)
(to 12.50)
R. Dewi Williams as a writer: discussion
(First shown on BBC Wales)
(Crystal Palace, Holme Moss, Sutton Coldfield, Wenvoe West)
George Luce
(to 13.33)
Tom and Jerry playing cat and mouse in a selection from the world-famous award-winning cartoon films starring Tom the Cat and a far-from-underdog mouse called Jerry.
A Race Through Space
This week between Leslie Crowther and The Sagittarians v. Brian Rix and The Aquarians.
Referee, Brian Cant
Introduced by Peter Scott.
Do the Abominable Snowman and the Loch Ness Monster really exist? Bernard Heuvelmans is one person who thinks they might, because there have been other animals in which no one at first believed-like the Komodo Dragon, the Giant Panda, and the Mountain Gorilla.
From the South and West
The varied adventures of Hector the Dog and Zaza the Cat not forgetting next-door-neighbour Mrs. Kiki Frog.
with David Jacobs
A weekly series of live programmes in which David Jacobs introduces people to talk to and entertain.
Introducing Deena Webster
The Dancers: Sally Graham, Robert Arditti, Cathy Lawrence, Len Bickley, Molly Molloy, Scott Mackee
What's new today for those interested in tomorrow.
Introduced by Raymond Baxter.
Discoveries... Developments... Trends
A weekly look at the world's fast-changing scientific, medical, and technological scene.
See colour picture on centre pages
Caroline's guest arrives and makes Kerr a business proposition. Janet and Philip make plans for Steven's christening. Andrew Heenan faces the prospect of a court martial.
(For cast list see page 56)
Old-Time Music-Hall from the stage of the Famous City Varieties Theatre, Leeds.
(by arrangement with Stanley and Michael Joseph)
Presenting The Trio Vitalities, Marconick, Penuel Laws, Wong Mow Ting, Audrey Jeans, Julius Nehring, Jan Harding, Archie and Dianne Bennett
Seaside Frolics
featuring members of the Players' Theatre, London
Chairman, Leonard Sachs
(Julius Nehring is appearing at the North Pier, Blackpool; The Trio Vitalites are at the Pier Theatre, Clacton-on-Sea)
Tonight's bill is a truly cosmopolitan one with artists coming from all over the world - from Austria, Holland, China, Germany, Australia, as well as from England. Audrey Jeans, a firmly established stage and television artist, makes her Good Old Days debut.
by A.P. Herbert.
Adapted for television by Alan Melville.
Court scenes by Christopher Bond and Henry Cecil.
The first in a new series.
Starring Alastair Sim, Roy Dotrice, Avice Landon, Thorley Walters
with guest star, Peter Bayliss
and featuring Arthur Mullard
Albert Haddock is convinced that every man's home is his castle. In one sense he is right, but in another...
with Robert Dougall
followed by The Weather
by Alun Owen
With Barrie Ingham as Charlie, Julian Glover as James, Mary Chester as The Barmaid
(Barrie Ingham is a member of The Royal Shakespeare Company)
James, the more conventional of two brothers, comes searching for Charlie, his elder brother, who has deserted his home, his wife, and the family business. Charlie, now forty, has stood back and taken stock of his life, and decided it has all been futile. James has never had such doubts, and finding Charlie in a roadside hotel, tries to persuade him to return.
A quick look at the news of the day and a longer look at what matters 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.
appearing together for the first time in this country.
Schubert
Duo in A major, Op.162
Brahms
Sonata No.3 in D minor, Op. 108
Introduced by Richard Baker.
(Part of a recital recorded earlier this evening in the Royal Festival Hall, London.)