Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,697 playable programmes from the BBC

9.15 Mathematics in Action: Statistics and their distribution
Introduced by Stewart Gartside
[Repeat]

9.38 Maths Today: Year 2: Moving with Matrices
Introduced by Derick Last
[Repeat]

10.0 Out of the Past: The Roman Conquest
[Repeat]

10.25-10.45 20th Century Focus
(shown on Monday)

11.0 Watch!: St Nicholas
Introduced by Rosanne Harvey

11.18 Going to Work
(shown on Monday)

11.40 Making Music
Introduced by John Langstaff
with children from Minet Junior School, Hayes, Middlesex
[Repeat]

12.3 History 1917-1967: Crisis in Asia
Introduced by Brian Redhead
[Repeat]

Contributors

Presenter (Mathematics in Action):
Stewart Gartside
Producer (Mathematics in Action):
Edward Goldwyn
Presenter (Maths Today):
Derick Last
Producer (Maths Today):
Peter Baker
Script (Out of the Past):
Hugh Ross Williamson
Producer (Out of the Past):
Felicity Kinross
Presenter (Watch!):
Rosanne Harvey
Producer (Watch!):
Carol Wiseman
Presenter (Making Music):
John Langstaff
Producer (Making Music):
John Hosier
Presenter (History 1917-1967):
Brian Redhead
Producer (History 1917-1967):
John Radcliffe

This series of films for the very young tells how Mary lives with her parents at the top of a tall block of flats in a busy town. Her friends are Mungo, her wise old dog, and Midge, a very inquisitive mouse.
(Colour)

Contributors

Narration:
Richard Baker
Narration:
Isabel Ryan
Filmed by:
Bura and Hardwick
Music:
Johnny Pearson
Script:
Daphne Jones
Pictures, animation, and production:
John Ryan

by William Shakespeare

[Repeat]

Contributors

Author:
William Shakespeare
Fight arranged by:
Peter Diamond
Designer:
Charles Lawrence
Producer:
Michael Simpson
Macbeth:
Andrew Keir
Lady Macbeth:
Ruth Meyers
Macduff:
Anthony Bate
Malcolm:
Alan Tucker
Ross:
Martin Matthews
Doctor:
Donald Eccles
Gentlewoman:
Valerie Douglas
Lennox:
Patrick Godfrey
Menteith:
Michael Murray
Angus:
Malcolm Tierney
Macbeth's servant:
Kenneth Colley
Seyton:
William Marlowe
Siward:
Peter Hughes
Messenger:
Inigo Jackson
Young Siward:
Nigel Lambert

The facts, the people, the background of the nation's capital
The news, features, opinions of the country at large co-ordinated by Michael Barratt from BBC studios throughout the United Kingdom
(The grass skirts aren't always greener: page 11)

Contributors

Presenter:
Michael Barratt
Reporter:
Robert Langley
Reporter:
Lyn Lewis
Reporter:
Jack Pizzey
Reporter:
Philip Tibenham
Editor:
Derrick Amoore

by James Doran
Starring John Slater, Derek Waring
with Paul Angelis, Douglas Fielding and Bernard Holley

(Parts 3 and 4: next Monday and Tuesday)

Contributors

Writer:
James Doran
Script Editor:
P.J. Hammond
Designer:
Pat Jackson
Producer:
Richard Beynon
Director:
Tony Wickert
PC Bannerman:
Paul Angelis
PC Newcombe:
Bernard Holley
BD girl:
Jennie Goossens
Mrs Barrett:
Margery Withers
Det-Insp Goss:
Derek Waring
Det-Sgt Stone:
John Slater
Dr Carr:
George Roubicek
Mr Griffith:
Paul Farrell
Jim Lethwaite:
Victor Platt
PC Quilley:
Douglas Fielding
Gleeson:
Ken Jones
Roy Welman:
Neil Hallett
Mrs Braithwaite:
Felicity Gordon
Mr Castle:
Harry Mitchell
Mrs Castle:
Hazel Coppen

Introduced by Raymond Baxter with James Burke
Discoveries, developments, trends -a weekly report on the critical and fast-changing world of science, medicine, and technology

(Colour)

Contributors

Presenter:
Raymond Baxter
Reporter:
James Burke
Producer:
Peter Bruce
Producer:
Julian Cooper
Producer:
John M. Mansfield
Producer:
Gordon Thomas
Producer:
Andrew Wiseman
Editor:
Michael Latham

Harry Worth in a new series written by Ronnie Taylor
featuring Sam Kydd as Scully, Glyn Houston as Lorry driver, Harry Landis as Van driver

Contributors

Writer:
Ronnie Taylor
Music:
Ronnie Hazlehurst
Design:
Colin Green
Producer:
Douglas Argent
Himself:
Harry Worth
Scully:
Sam Kydd
Lorry driver:
Glyn Houston
Van driver:
Harry Landis
Man in lay-by:
Will Stampe
Patrolman:
George Lee
Mr Dewhurst:
Edward Rees

Starring Cilla Black
guest stars Roy Castle and Alan Melville
and special guest Harry Secombe
with Irving Davies
(Colour)

Contributors

Singer/presenter:
Cilla Black
Entertainer:
Roy Castle
Guest/'When Hearts are Trumps' by:
Alan Melville
Guest:
Harry Secombe
Dancer/Choreography:
Irving Davies
Vocal backing:
The Breakaways
Musical direction and special arrangements:
Ronnie Hazlehurst
Lighting:
Sam Barclay
Sound:
Adrian Bishop-Laggett
Costume:
Rupert Jarvis
Design:
Jeremy Davies
Script:
Ronnie Taylor
Production:
Michael Hurll

For one week every year the Canadian Mid-West town of Calgary erupts with the noise and excitement of the world's biggest rodeo. A million visitors pack the town to see leading cowboys of the professional rodeo circuit compete for prize money of well over $100,000.
This film records some of that struggle in the summer of 1969.
Commentary by Gerald Priestland

(Colour)

Contributors

Narrator:
Gerald Priestland
Producer:
Charles Denton

A comedy film series which recognises the difference.
Starring Paula Prentiss and Richard Benjamin as Paula and Dick Hollister
with Jack Cassidy as Oscar North and Kenneth Mars as Harry Zarakardos

When Dick is accused of copying the work of another cartoonist Paula's attempts to help only complicate matters.
(Colour)

Contributors

Paula Hollister:
Paula Prentiss
Dick Hollister:
Richard Benjamin
Oscar North:
Jack Cassidy
Harry Zarakardos:
Kenneth Mars

In the late 1970s a spacecraft may be sent on a 'tour' of four of the outer planets - Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune - using the gravity and orbital speed of each to boost it on to the next, and sending back photographs and scientific information.
Patrick Moore discusses the chances of success for this ambitious project with Iain Nicolson, a British astronomer, and with Dr W.H. Pickering, head of America's unmanned scientific space programme.

(Colour)

Contributors

Presenter:
Patrick Moore
Guest:
Iain Nicolson
Guest:
Dr W. H. Pickering
Designer:
Eric Walmsley
Director:
Michael Brooke
Producer:
Patricia Owtram

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