Inter-town quiz about Wales
(first shown on BBC Wales)
(all transmitters except Scotland, Northern Ireland, and BBC Wales)
1.25 Interval
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,892 playable programmes from the BBC
Inter-town quiz about Wales
(first shown on BBC Wales)
(all transmitters except Scotland, Northern Ireland, and BBC Wales)
1.25 Interval
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)
(Colour)
(Shown on Sunday at 6.15)
(Colour)
A programme for children under 5
(shown at 11.0 am on BBC2)
(Colour)
Joseph O'Conor tells The Night-Watchmen by Helen Cresswell with pictures by Gareth Floyd
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 BBC South and West)
(Colour)
A cartoon film series
Wacky Races: Dick Dastardly makes another villainous attempt to win.
Space Kidettes: Another space adventure with the Space Kidettes and Captain Skyhook.
(Colour)
The varied adventures of Hector the Dog and Zaza the Cat, not forgetting next-door-neighbour Mrs Kiki Frog.
(Colour)
(Colour)
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
by Allan Prior
Starring James Ellis, John Slater
with Paul Angelis, Douglas Fielding and Bernard Holley
Now in its sixth series
What's new today for those interested in tomorrow
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)
Harry Worth in a new series written by Ronnie Taylor
featuring Victor Maddern as Nutter
A job worth doing is worth doing well, but if Harry Worth happens to be doing the job - watch out for the occupational hazards.
(Colour)
Starring Cilla Black
Special guest Henry Mancini
with Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden, Graham Chapman
Guest star Sandie Shaw
Tonight Cilla is joined by another of Britain's best girl singers - Sandie Shaw. Sandie will be singing a track from her new LP Reviewing the Situation as well as a duet with Cilla. Another duet partner will be Henry Mancini who will be sharing one of his best-known songs, Moon River, with Cilla.
The comedy comes from Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden, and Graham Chapman whose Top of the Form sketch was one of the most popular items in the last Cilla series.
(Colour)
With Kenneth Kendall and the BBC's correspondents and reporters around the world and Weather
(Colour)
For years now, people have been reporting the death-throes of the English village - dying crafts, shrinking population, loss of amenities. But the personalities that make the English village such a unique community are alive and well... and living (among other places) in Peasenhall.
Peasenhall is a village of 550 people - a straggle of houses lost in the fields of East Suffolk. It's not a particularly pretty village, and the last time most people heard of it was in 1902 when a young housemaid was murdered there - still a daily topic of conversation in the village.
It sounds sleepy enough. But in fact, Peasenhall is alive with vivid personalities who talk about their involvement with the village and its changing way of life with nostalgia, humour, and occasional bitterness.
There are the miller, the blacksmith, the farming vicar, the poacher, the gamekeeper, and the undertaker.
Robert Dougall, the narrator, lives in Suffolk, only a few miles from Peasenhall.
(An everyday story of countryfolk: page 9)
(Colour)
'The Master' is 70 today!
This evening he is entertained by 300 of his friends in the theatrical profession at a dinner in his honour at the Savoy Hotel, London
Speakers
Earl Mountbatten of Burma; Sir Laurence Olivier; Noel Coward
In the chair, Lord Nugent
The programme is introduced by Richard Attenborough, Chairman of the Actors Charitable Trust
'The world has treated me very well -but then I haven't treated it so badly either.
'...every day now is a dividend, and there is still so much I want to do... but my life up to now has left me with no persistent regrets of any kind. I don't look back in anger, nor indeed, in anything approaching mild rage; I rather look back in pleasure and amusement'
(Colour)
Presented all this week by David Dimbleby with the latest news in pictures and with on-the-spot reports by Linda Blandford, Bernard Falk, David Lomax, Tom Mangold,
Fyfe Robertson, Denis Tuohy and special contributions from Keith Kyle and Robert McKenzie
(Colour)
(Colour)
by Fr Peter Hebblethwaite
(Colour)
A monthly series of programmes for doctors
Closedown