Programme Index

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

Introduced by Tony Blackburn
Top of the Pops Orchestra, Pan's People

Contributors

Presenter:
Tony Blackburn
Musicians:
Top of the Pops Orchestra
Musical Director:
Johnny Pearson
Dancers:
Pan's People
Choreography:
Flick Colby
Sound:
Richard Chamberlain
Production:
Johnnie Stewart

Written by Eddie Braben
Starring Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise
Eric and Ernie's guests: Fenella Fielding, Ray Stevens, Sylvia McNeill
Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen
with Ann Hamilton, Janet Webb, Frank Tregear, Leslie Noyes

Contributors

Writer:
Eddie Braben
Orchestra directed by:
Peter Knight
Design:
David Chandler
Producer:
John Ammonds
Comedian:
Eric Morecambe
Comedian:
Ernie Wise
Guest:
Fenella Fielding
Singer:
Ray Stevens
Singer:
Sylvia McNeill
Musicians:
Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen
[Actress]:
Ann Hamilton
[Actress]:
Janet Webb
[Actor]:
Frank Tregear
[Actor]:
Leslie Noyes

by John Bowen
with Anna Cropper as Norah, Bernard Hepton as Fisher

Norah Palmer owns a cottage in the country. She is a modern woman, used to city life, and totally unprepared when the setting and the people begin to take on an ancient and terrifying meaning.

Contributors

Writer:
John Bowen
Title Music:
Joseph Horovitz
Script Editor:
Ann Scott
Designer:
Eileen Diss
Producer:
Graeme McDonald
Director:
James MacTaggart
Norah:
Anna Cropper
Fisher:
Bernard Hepton
Madge:
Amanda Walker
Jake:
Julian Holloway
Mrs Vigo:
Freda Bamford
Rob:
Andrew Bradford
Peter:
Cyril Cross
Wellbeloved:
Robin Wentworth

Presented all this week by Ludovic Kennedy with the latest news in pictures and with on-the-spot reports by Bernard Falk, James Hogg, David Lomax, Tom Mangold, Barrie Penrose, David Taylor, Denis Tuohy

Contributors

Presenter:
Ludovic Kennedy
Reporter:
Bernard Falk
Reporter:
James Hogg
Reporter:
David Lomax
Reporter:
Tom Mangold
Reporter:
Barrie Penrose
Reporter:
David Taylor
Reporter:
Denis Tuohy

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