Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 277,877 playable programmes from the BBC

Make Yourself at Home
For viewers from Pakistan and India
including

Health and Welfare

Look, Listen, and Speak: Lesson 38

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]. Book 4s. 6d. (by post 5s. 3d.) (crossed postal order. please, not stamps) Records 41s. (by post 42s. 10d.)
(to 12.50)

Contributors

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

Noise! Adventure! Glitter!

Skayn: Part 3: The Moon Has Its Own Dangers

With the voices of Sheelagh McGrath, Gordon Clyde, Anthony Jackson

Acrobatics by Johnny and Suma Lamonte

Contributors

Voices (Skayn):
Sheelagh McGrath
Voices (Skayn):
Gordon Clyde
Voices (Skayn):
Anthony Jackson
Pictures (Skayn):
Leslie Caswell
Acrobatics:
Johnny Lamonte
Acrobatics:
Suma Lamonte
Musician:
Brian Fahey
Animatior:
Ted Lewis
Animatior:
Malcolm Draper
Writer/Director:
Paul Ciani
Producer:
Molly Cox

Wildlife specialities in eastern Australia: parrots and pelicans in the city of Canberra, flying foxes and Grey's swiftlets on the offshore islands, golden bower birds and Queen Victoria's birds-of-paradise in the mainland forests. These are just a few of the exciting species that go to make up the rich spectrum of nature 'down under Capricorn.'
Commentary written by Alan Gibson
from the South and West

Contributors

Writer:
Alan Gibson
Narrator:
Vincent Ball
Directed and filmed by:
Roderick Dobson
Producer:
Jeffery Boswall

Now in its sixth series
What's new today for those interested in tomorrow
Introduced by Raymond Baxter
Discoveries... developments... trends
A weekly report on the critical and fast-changing world of science, medicine, and technology

Contributors

Presenter:
Raymond Baxter
Reporter:
James Burke
Reporter:
John Parry
Producer:
Peter Bruce
Producer:
Julian Cooper
Producer:
John Mansfield
Producer:
Andrew Wiseman
Editor:
Michael Latham

Peter and Janet spend an afternoon together. Amelia and Robert Malcolm discover they both have minds of their own. Arnold discovers a theme for Ms Anniversary Edition.
From the Midlands

Contributors

Devised by:
Colin Morris
Story by:
John Cresswell
Script:
Frank Moore
Producer:
Bill Sellars
Director:
Mike Bowen

a comedy by Roger MacDougall

Leo Franklyn is in 'Let Sleeping Wives Lie' at the Playhouse Theatre, Weston-super-Mare

Sixteen-year-old Jonathan turns the tables on his parents when he informs them about the facts of life.

Contributors

Writer:
Roger MacDougall
Setting:
Stanley Moore
Director:
Wallace Douglas
Jonathan Peters:
Michael Audreson
Marjorie Peters:
Elspet Gray
Allan Peters:
Brian Rix
Rachael:
Sheila Mercier
Eric Standford:
Geoffrey Sumner
Mrs. Peters:
Nan Munro
Jill Frobisher:
Carmel Cryan
Curlie:
Leo Franklyn

by Peter Nichols

The family set off for a picnic in the country with all the paraphernalia - the cine camera the frozen barbecued chicken - all of which is looked on with sixth-form cynicism and disgust, by the family's son. Nor does he think he's going to enjoy the trip round the Cheddar Gorge...

"A breakthrough in TV drama" (Robert Ottaway, Daily Sketch)
"Pure and hilarious farce" (Martin Jackson, Daily Express)
"The funniest ever Wednesday Play... every laugh a wound" (Maurice Wiggin, Sunday Times)
[Repeat]

Contributors

Writer:
Peter Nichols
Music:
Manfred Mann
Music:
Mike Hugg
Film Cameraman:
Dick Bush
Film Editor:
Dave King
Sound Recordist:
Basil Harris
Designer:
Robert Berk
Producer:
Tony Garnett
Director:
Christopher Morahan
Mike:
Billy Hamon
Lily:
Constance Chapman
Jack:
Reg Lye
Stanley:
Neil Wilson
Ivy:
Betty Alberge
Chris:
Elna Pearl
Norman:
John Woodnutt
Joyce:
Hilda Braid
Cyclist:
David Webb
Potholer:
Brian Gear

What matters in the news and out of it with Kenneth Allsop and Michael Barratt,
Robert McKenzie, Vincent Kane

Contributors

Presenter:
Kenneth Allsop
Reporter:
Michael Barratt
Reporter:
Robert McKenzie
Reporter:
Vincent Kane
Assistant Editor:
John Dekker
Editor:
Anthony Smith

Exactly one year ago tonight the armies of five Warsaw Pact countries invaded their neighbour and ally Czechoslovakia. By midnight more than half a million troops, mostly Soviet, were moving into position to 'defend Socialism.'
There followed eight days of confusion, hope, and despair for the people of Czechoslovakia, eight days that ended in indefinite occupation. One prominent Czech who witnessed those days told the story in this film, first shown last autumn.
Tonight Kamil Winter, former head of television news and current affairs in Prague, looks back on 'Eight days in August,' and tells the continuing story of Czechoslovakia since the invasion of 1968.

Contributors

Presenter:
Kamil Winter
Film Editor:
Ken Locke
Producer:
John Dekker

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