Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 281,625 playable programmes from the BBC

9.15 Middle School Physics: Molecules in Motion
Shown on Monday
Repeated on Friday of next week

9.38 Primary School Mathematics: 19: Changing Size
Introduced by Jim Boucher
Repeated on Thursday

10.0 Discovering Science: 19: Water-Atoms and Molecules
Shown on Monday

10.25-10.45 Twentieth-Century Focus: Violence and Society: 3: A Necessary Aggression?
Shown on Monday
Repeated on Wednesday (not Scottish)
For booklet see page 16

11.0 Watch!: A Castle (i)
Introduced by Rosanne Harvey
Repeated on Thursday

11.18 Going to Work: Junction
Shown on Monday

11.40 Making Music
Introduced by Julian Smith
with children from Lovelace Junior School, Chessington, Surrey
Repeated on Friday (not Wales)

12.5-12.25 Mathematics in Action: Information Machines
Introduced by Benedict Nixon

Contributors

Presenter (Primary School Mathematics):
Jim Boucher
Producer (Primary School Mathematics):
David Roseveare
Presenter (Watch!):
Rosanne Harvey
Producer (Watch!):
Helen Nicoll
Presenter (Making Music):
Julian Smith
Producer (Making Music):
John Hosier
Presenter (Mathematics in Action):
Benedict Nixon
Producer (Mathematics in Action):
Edward Goldwyn

by John Arden
The story of an army serjeant turned pacifist who tries to wage a new war on his own terms.
Repeated on Wednesday
(to 14.35)

Contributors

Writer:
John Arden
Designer:
Gordon Roland
Producer:
Michael Simpson
Bargee:
John Cater
Private Sparky:
Eric Thompson
Serjeant Musgrave:
Andrew Keir
Private Attercliffe:
Denis Carey
Pugnacious collier:
Martin Matthews
Annie:
Rosemary Leach
Private Hurst:
Derek Newark
Mrs. Hitchcock:
Jessie Evans
Constable:
James Mellor
Slow collier:
Ray Mort
Walsh:
George Selway

3.0 The Totalisator Champion Novices' Steeplechase
with £5,000 added to a sweepstakes over three miles, two furlongs, and about 170 yards

3.35 The National Hunt Handicap Steeplechase
A plate of £3.000 over three miles, one furlong, and a few yards

4.10 The National Hunt Two-Mile Champion Steeplechase
with £4,000 added to a sweepstakes over two miles and a few yards

from the Midlands
See page 45

Contributors

Commentator:
Peter O'Sullevan
Commentator:
Clive Graham
Interviewer:
Julian Wilson
Presented for television by:
Barrie Edgar

A series of adventures set under the Big Top
With Mickey Braddock as Corky, Noah Beery as Joey the Clown, Robert Lowery as Big Tim Champion, Ricky Vera as Gene, Paul Picerni as Julio Gaetano, Yvette Digay as Maria Gaetano

Corky's good turn in befriending a homeless boy seems at first not to have been such a good idea.

Contributors

Corky:
Mickey Braddock
Joey the Clown:
Noah Beery
Big Tim Champion:
Robert Lowery
Pete the Canvasman:
Cuinn Williams
Gene:
Ricky Vera
Julio Gaetano:
Paul Picerni
Maria Gaetano:
Yvette Dugay

Introduced by Norman Tozer
A topical magazine programme about people, places, events, ideas, and inventions with John Earle
So You Want to be an Air Stewardess
Jeremy Carrad follows the progress of a new B.E.A. stewardess on her first flight.
from the South and West

Contributors

Presenter:
Norman Tozer
Presenter:
John Earle
Reporter (So You Want to be an Air Stewardess):
Jeremy Carrad
Director:
Brian Hawkins
Producer:
Lawrence Wade

In which the people who watch the programmes confront the people who make them
Presented by Cliff Michelmore with the help of a statistically selected audience in the studio

Contributors

Presenter:
Cliff Michelmore
Producer:
Michael Townson

by Robert Barr
starring James Ellis, John Slater, John Woodvine, with Paul Angelis, Douglas Fielding, Bernard Holley and Leslie Sands.

Contributors

Writer:
Robert Barr
Script Editor:
Peter J. Hammond
Designer:
Don Taylor
Producer:
Richard Beynon
Director:
Tristan de Vere Cole
P.C. Quilley:
Douglas Fielding
Sgt. Lynch:
James Ellis
Det.-Insp. Witty:
John Woodvine
Det.-Sgt. Stone:
John Slater
P.C. Newcombe:
Bernard Holley
Frank Peters:
Jon Rollason
Prison Officer:
James Pope
P.C. Bannerman:
Paul Angelis
P.C. Roach:
Ron Davies
Det. Chief Supt. Miller:
Leslie Sands
Radio Girl:
Jennie Goossens
Jock McGowan:
Harry Walker
Mr. Floyd:
Walter Fitzgerald
Inspector Spence:
John Swindells

A season of Britain's great laughter-makers
starring Adam Faith, Sidney James, Carole Lesley
with Terence Longdon, Freddie Frinton, Clive Dunn, Spike Milligan, Marie France, Charles Hawtrey

An enterprising young author gives a boost to his latest book on the Loch Ness Monster by 'arranging' for the monster to make another appearance-but when he and his friends arrive in Scotland things do not go according to plan.

Contributors

Producer:
Teddy Joseph
Director:
Gilbert Gunn
Tony:
Adam Faith
Harry:
Sidney James
Charlie:
Carole Lesley
Vernon:
Terence Longdon
Mr. Slate:
Clive Dunn
Gilbert Pinner:
Freddie Frinton
Marie:
Marie France
Arnold:
Charles Hawtrey
Tramp:
Spike Milligan
Postie:
Wilfrid Brambell
Mrs. Pinner:
Fabia Drake
Sammy:
Harold Berens
Jimmy:
Ewan Roberts
MacDonald:
Archie Duncan
Sergeant:
Terry Scott
Grace:
Anna Gilcrist
Doone:
Gordon Rollings
Legree:
Bernard Hunter
Jojo:
Lloyd Reckord
Policeman at roundabout:
Lance Percival
Teacher:
Molly Weir
Commentator:
Fyfe Robertson

A film by Hugh Burnett
Big game hunting in Kenya is sport in luxurious style. A hunting safari is an impressive venture -highly organised, with big trucks to carry the stores and every possible comfort. The sport of hunting is often misunderstood by people who only read about it. The actual tracking, the long hours spent in a hide, getting up before dawn to look for animal tracks; all these are the necessary prelude to the hunt for a particular animal.
There are no close seasons for game hunting in Kenya. The country is divided into hunting blocks and hunting areas, and the number of animals being shot for trophies is controlled by bookings. Visitors may only hunt with a professional hunter who knows the boundaries of the hunting blocks and where the best game is to be found. As well, every hunter must have a licence to hunt. Different animals cost varying amounts of money-about 12 for a buffalo, £1 10s. for a zebra, and as little as 10s. for an impala. Special licences for animals such as the giant forest hog or the giraffe are more expensive. All types of firearms can be hired from firearm dealers, and all calibres of medium rifles are available, mostly with telescopic sights. Heavier rifles for buffalo or elephant are also obtainable.
This documentary, made on the slopes of Mount Kenya and the plains below, is the first real big game hunt to be filmed.
See page 45

Contributors

Producer:
Hugh Burnett

with Kenneth Allsop and Michael Barratt, Robert McKenzie, Vincent Kane
with on-the-spot reports by Fyfe Robertson, David Lomax, Philip Tibenham, Denis Tuohy, Linda Blandford

Contributors

Presenter:
Kenneth Allsop
Reporter:
Michael Barratt
Reporter:
Robert McKenzie
Reporter:
Vincent Kane
Reporter:
Fyfe Robertson
Reporter:
David Lomax
Reporter:
Philip Tibenham
Reporter:
Denis Tuohy
Reporter:
Linda Blandford

Geza Anda plays Mozart Piano Concerto in D major (K.451) and directs from the keyboard the English Chamber Orchestra (Leader, Kenneth Sillito)
In an introduction Geza Anda talks about the concerto

The year 1784, when Mozart composed the D major Piano Concerto, was the year when the composer was at the zenith of his success in Vienna. He was in demand everywhere-as a teacher, as a performer, and as a composer. The concertos poured from his pen, and by 1786 he had written twelve piano concertos as well as a mass of other works. Nor were these concertos merely trivial works to suit the popular taste of the time; it was at this period that Mozart's genius matured and broadened. These concertos show great depth, complexity, and very elaborate structures.
Next Tuesday: a portrait of Russian pianist Emil Gilels

Contributors

Pianist/orchestra director/presenter:
Geza Anda
Musicians:
The English Chamber Orchestra
Orchestra leader:
Kenneth Sillito
Director:
Jamila Patten

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