Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,128 playable programmes from the BBC

9.15 Engineering: Craft and Science: Unit 2: Working from Drawings: 2: Different views
Introduced by D. R. C. Holmes
[Repeat]
(Colour)

9.38 Maths Today: Year 1: Getting Together
Introduced by David Sturgess
[Repeat]

10.0 History 1917-1967: The Cold War
Introduced by Brian Redhead
[Repeat]

10.25-10.45 Dysgu Cymraeg
A series for Welsh schools
(all transmitters except Scotland and Northern Ireland)

11.0 Drama: Macbeth: Part 3
by William Shakespeare
[Repeat]

11.35 A Year's Journey: Iron Age Village
Introduced by Eric Simms
[Repeat]

12.0 New Horizons: Men and Gods: Art for Worship
In the cathedrals of Durham and Wells can be seen together the barbaric patterns of the Celts, the balance and humanism of Graeco-Roman Christianity, and the grotesques of Gothic art.
Written and narrated by Dr John Broadbent
[Repeat]

Contributors

Presenter (Engineering:
Craft and Science): D. R. C. Holmes
Producer (Engineering:
Craft and Science): Nat Taylor
Presenter (Maths Today):
David Sturgess
Producer (Maths Today):
John Cain
Producer (Maths Today):
Peter Weiss
Presenter (History 1917-1967):
Brian Redhead
Producer (History 1917-1967):
John Radcliffe
Author (Drama:
Macbeth): William Shakespeare
Presenter (A Year's Journey):
Eric Simms
Producer (A Year's Journey):
F.R. Elwell
Writer/narrator (New Horizons):
Dr John Broadbent
Producer (New Horizons):
Michael Gill

2.5 Science Session: Children as Individuals
Although all children follow the same broad pattern of development, there are many individual differences. These differences are due to both heredity and environment.
Commentary by Tim Gudgin
[Repeat]

2.30 20th-century Focus: Marriage and Divorce: 1: Why Marry?
What are young people's attitudes to pre-marital sex? How do unmarried mothers cope with parenthood alone? Does marriage have the same appeal to the young today as in the past?
Introduced by Michael Aspel
with Professor O. R. McGregor
[Repeat]

Contributors

Narrator (Science Session):
Tim Gudgin
Producer (Science Session):
Morton Surguy
Presenter (20th-century Focus):
Michael Aspel
Guest (20th-century Focus):
Professor O. R. McGregor
Producer (20th-century Focus):
John Miller

Introduced by Norman Tozer with Jan Leeming
John Earle takes a train to Europe's highest railway station, 11,000 feet up inside the Jungfrau mountain
Patrick Moore looks at recent events in Space and looks forward to Space in the Seventies
plus a special competition to keep you busy in the Christmas holidays doing Instant Art
(From BBC South and West)

Contributors

Presenter:
Norman Tozer
Reporter:
Jan Leeming
Reporter:
John Earle
Reporter:
Patrick Moore
Producer:
Lawrence Wade

Written by Fay Weldon
Starring John Barrie, Richard Leech, Justine Lord, Paul Massie with Irene Hamilton

Bill Conrad, a young registrar at Princes Hospital, has clashed with Liz over her decision to send Nigel Beckett to him. After contracting German measles, Edna Gilmore has been asked by Liz to decide whether she wants to keep her unborn baby.
(Colour)

Contributors

Writer:
Fay Weldon
Storyline and serial created by:
Donald Bull
Script Editor:
Maggie Allen
Designer:
Keith Harris
Producer:
Colin Morris
Director:
Gerald Blake
Dr Liz McNeal:
Justine Lord
Nurse Norman:
Doreen Aris
Edna Gilmore:
Alison Fiske
Bob Gilmore:
David Savile
Dr John Somers:
John Barrie
Nella Somers:
Alexandra Dane
Dr Roger Hayman:
Richard Leech
Jo Hayman:
Elaine Mileham
Ray Hayman:
Stephen Follett
Louise Hayman:
Irene Hamilton
Mrs Cuthbert:
Dorothea Rundle
Tom Durham:
Paul Massie

Starring Peter Sellers
Tonight's film in this comedy season also stars Nadia Gray, Herbert Lom, Leo McKern

This story of a mild-mannered schoolteacher who enters the world of big business and develops a taste for wealth and power, provides Peter Sellers with an exciting role, previously made famous by John Barrymore, Louis Jouvet, and Fernandel.
Sellers seizes his opportunities in this version made in Britain in 1961, which was also his debut as a director.
(Colour)

Contributors

Screenplay/Producer:
Pierre Rouve
Based on the play by:
Marcel Pagnol
Director:
Peter Sellers
Topaze:
Peter Sellers
Suzy:
Nadia Gray
Castel Benac:
Herbert Lom
Muche:
Leo McKern
Baroness:
Martita Hunt
Tamise:
Michael Gough

by Leon Whiteson
With Frank Finlay as Albert, Nicola Pagett as Mary, T.P. McKenna as Joe Katz and Anthony Corlan as Alec

A liner from South Africa is the setting for this powerful three-cornered drama. Alec, a student architect from Cape Town, and his coloured girl-friend, Mary, are leaving for the bigger world of London.
Sharing a cabin with Alec is Albert, a strange and magnetic Austrian. While Alec is an innocent, Albert has experienced everything.
He is played by Frank Finlay, whose most recent BBCtv appearance was as Brutus in Julius Caesar, and who has recently filmed Cromwell and The Molly Maguires.
(Colour)

Contributors

Writer:
Leon Whiteson
Designer:
Natasha Kroll
Script Editor:
Shaun MacLoughlin
Producer:
Graeme McDonald
Director:
Alan Bridges
Albert:
Frank Finlay
Mary:
Nicola Pagett
Joe Katz:
T.P. McKenna
Alec:
Anthony Corlan
Purser:
Donald Morley
Steward:
Trevor Martin
Barman:
Raymond Mason

A daily look at what matters in the news and out of it
Presented all this week by Kenneth Allsop with the latest news in pictures and with on-the-spot reports by Linda Blandford, Bernard Falk, David Lomax, Fyfe Robertson and Denis Tuohy and special contributions from Keith Kyle and Robert McKenzie

(Colour)

Contributors

Presenter:
Kenneth Allsop
Reporter:
Linda Blandford
Reporter:
Bernard Falk
Reporter:
David Lomax
Reporter:
Fyfe Robertson
Reporter:
Denis Tuohy
Reporter:
Keith Kyle
Reporter:
Robert McKenzie
Producer of the Week:
John Dekker
Editor:
Anthony Smith

talks to Derek Hart
Rebecca West is distinguished as a novelist and as a journalist and in this conversation she talks about both disciplines and about her motives.
'People are so very odd and amusing and strange: they say such marvellous things, and they say such revealing things which are sometimes terrible in their evil and sometimes wonderful in their goodness. And if you are a writer you have to make sure that you haven't got caught inside your books... you have to go back to what people are saying.'

(Colour)

Contributors

Interviewee:
Rebecca West
Interviewer:
Derek Hart
Director:
Jane Graham

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