Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 282,177 playable programmes from the BBC

9.38 Exploring Your World: Control of the Body
(Shown on Monday)

10.0 -10.20 Changing Britain: Open Spaces
(Shown on Tuesday)

10.25-10.45 Gwlad a Thref
A series for Welsh Schools
(Welsh Transmitters, Sutton Coldfield, Holme Moss, Wenvoe West)

11.5-11.20 La Chasse au Tresor: 8: Bravo Ulysse
(Shown on Tuesday)

12.0-12.25 For Sixth Forms: The Mind of the Scientist: 3: Darwin - The Evolutionary Principle
(Shown on Monday)

Make Yourself at Home
For viewers from India and Pakistan
Including
Health and Welfare
Look, Listen, and Speak: Lesson 29
Asian Music
(From the Midlands)

'Look, Listen, and Speak.' Book 3, in Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, Punjabi, and English (the vocabulary in Gujarati is available in leaflet form, and long-playing record with English dialogue and practice sentences to accompany Book 3 obtainable from booksellers/record dealers, Asian stores, or by post from BBC Publications, [address removed] Books 4s. 6d. (by post 5s. 3d.) (crossed postal order, please, not stamps). Recorda 41s. (by post 42s. 10d.).
(to 12.50)

Contributors

Teacher (Look, Listen, and Speak):
Robert Chapman

2.30 Jersey Stakes
over seven furlongs

3.5 Queen Mary Stakes
over five furlongs

3.45 Royal Hunt Cup
over one mile

4.20 Coronation Stakes
over the Old Mile

Fashions described by Judith Chalmers

Contributors

Commentator:
Peter O'Sullevan
Commentator:
Clive Graham
Interviewer:
Julian Wilson
Commentator (Fashions):
Judith Chalmers
Television Presentation:
Dennis Monger

A weekly series introduced by Johnny Morris
The World of Animals
In the wild, in the zoo, at home: a magazine of stories about animals constantly illustrating their own kind of magic.
from the South and West

Contributors

Presenter:
Johnny Morris
Director:
George Inger
Producer:
Douglas Thomas

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

Contributors

Presenter:
Raymond Baxter
Reporter:
James Burke
Reporter:
John Parry
Producer:
Peter Bruce
Producer:
Gordon Thomas
Producer:
Andrew Wiseman
Editor:
Michael Latham

Planning at Edens is influenced by the result of a darts match. Vera appoints herself Clerk of the Works to the Markers building site. Burroughs completes a business deal.
From the Midlands
(For cast list see page 49)

Contributors

Devised by:
Colin Morris
Story by:
John Cresswell
Script:
Bob Stuart
Producer:
Bill Sellars
Director:
Philip Dale

Old-Time Music-Hall from the stage of the Famous City Varieties Theatre, Leeds
By arrangement with Stanley Joseph and Michael Joseph
presenting David Nixon, Gino Donati, Anne Fields, Graham and Shack, Tom Ward,
Joe Andy, The Tongas
Chairman, Leonard Sachs

Contributors

Magician:
David Nixon
Performer:
Gino Donati
Singer:
Anne Fields
Dance act:
Graham and Shack
Comedian:
Tom Ward
Acrobat:
Joe Andy
Performers:
The Tongas
Chairman:
Leonard Sachs
Musical director:
Bernard Herrmann
Producer:
Barney Colehan

Written by Jennifer Phillips
Starring Beryl Reid and Hugh Paddick
with Avice Landon as Mrs. Draper

Contributors

Writer:
Jennifer Phillips
Make-up:
Margaret Mackinnon
Costumes:
Roger Reece
Sound:
John Delany
Lighting:
John Green
Music:
Max Harris
Designer:
Brian Tregidden
Producer:
Douglas Argent
Rene:
Beryl Reid
Sydney:
Hugh Paddick
First woman:
Gilly Flower
Second woman:
Christina Michaels
Woman at door:
Pamela Cundell
Mrs. Draper:
Avice Landon

by Tony Parker
with Mary Miller as Freda Wills, Ray Smith as Stanley Maxwell, Barry Jackson as John Black, Constance Chapman as Mrs Lawrence

You have to like kids a lot to take other people's on full-time. Mrs. Lawrence is a kind-hearted woman, but someone must be to blame for what is found in her house. The 'Welfare' and the local paper are on the job in a flash. It is a scandal, and it is tidied up. But the calls for help don't stop, and Mrs. Lawrence goes on answering because nobody else does.
Bang on target... an aggressive piece of TV pamphleteering. (Daily Express)
It worked splendidly a terrific sense of immediacy... (Daily Mail)
A scarifying study... (Daily Telegraph)

Contributors

Writer:
Tony Parker
Designer:
Keith Harris
Film Cameraman:
Brian Tufano
Sound Recordist:
Bill Chesneau
Film Editor:
Pam Bosworth
Producer:
Irene Shubik
Director:
John MacKenzie
Freda Wills:
Mary Miller
Stanley Maxwell:
Ray Smith
John Black:
Barry Jackson
Mrs. Lawrence:
Constance Chapman
Policeman:
James Appleby
Casualty Sister:
Barbara New
Casualty nurses:
Janie Booth
Casualty nurses:
Gilly Fraser
Casualty nurses:
Beverley Walding
Doctor:
Shivendra Sinha
P.C. Robertson:
Ben Howard
P.C. Dent:
Frank Jarvis
Mr. Darton:
Edwin Brown
Ted Truelove:
Harry Davis
Ward nurse:
Nina Baden-Semper
Ward Sister:
Jessie Barclay
Mrs. Watts:
Winifred Dennis
Ronald Cape:
Eric Mason
Miss Hamilton:
Edith MacArthur
Jane Evans:
Christine Hargreaves
Betty Lawrence:
Diana Bishop
Miss Hepworth:
Barbara Lott
Mrs. Mills:
Sheila Grant
Valerie Chapman:
Kate Williams
Michael Collins:
Griffith Davies
Katie Nolan:
Eileen Colgan
Joan Percival:
Pauline Collins
Councillor Percival:
John Phillips
Stephanie Ward:
Cleo Sylvestre
Mr. Low:
Femi Euba
Mrs. Low:
Jomoke Debayo
Terry Allen:
Ray Barron
Linda Allen:
Gay Shingleton
Mr. Bancroft:
Royston Tickner
Mrs. Bancroft:
Julie May
Barbara Bancroft:
Julie Booth
Peter Unwin:
Peter Attard
Girl Sandra:
June Williams

What matters in the news and out of it 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
Assistant Editor:
John Dekker
Editor:
Anthony Smith

The Hammersmith Palais de Danse celebrates the Golden Jubilee of Jazz in Britain and its own Fiftieth Anniversary with a Jazz Band Ball
to the music of Chris Barber and his Band, Alex Welsh and his Band, Carl Spencer's Washboard Kings and the celebrated jazz trombonist George Chisholm
The Original Dixieland Jazz Band brought the new sound across the Atlantic in 1919. In the same year the Palais opened for dancing with the ODJB on the stand.
Steve Race introduces the programme and some special guests including
Sid Phillips and Billy Jones, The ODJB's own pianist
Televised by arrangement with Mecca Dancing
See page 31

Contributors

Musicians:
Chris Barber and his Band
Musicians:
Alex Welsh and his Band
Musicians:
Carl Spencer's Washboard Kings
Trombonist:
George Chisholm
Presenter:
Steve Race
Clarinetist:
Sid Phillips
Pianist:
Billy Jones
Musical co-ordinator:
Phil Tate
Television production:
Derek Burrell-Davis

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