Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,380 playable programmes from the BBC

9.38 Maths Workshop: Stage 1: Number Patterns
Introduced by Michael Holt

10.0 History 1917-71: Hitler's Challenge
Commentary by Brian Redhead

10.25-10.45 Look and Read: The Boy from Space: 3: The Man in the Sand-pit
by Richard Carpenter

11.0 Watch!: Tower Blocks: 1
Introduced by Rosanne Harvey

11.18 Going to Work: Hairdressing
[Repeat]

11.40 Making Music
Introduced by Julian Smith
[Repeat]

12.5 New Horizons: A Matter of Degree?: 3: Three Undergraduates

Contributors

Presenter (Maths Workshop):
Michael Holt
Producer (Maths Workshop):
John Cain
Narrator (History 1917-71):
Brian Redhead
Series Producer (History 1917-71):
Jill Sheppard
Writer (Look and Read):
Richard Carpenter
Producer (Look and Read):
Maddalena Fagandini
Presenter (Watch!):
Rosanne Harvey
Series Producer (Watch!):
Helen Nicoll
Presenter (Making Music):
Julian Smith
Producer (Making Music):
John Hosier
Producer (Making Music):
Moyra Gambleton
Producer (New Horizons):
Gordon Croton

The first time a Japanese head of state has left his country in 2,000 years.
Outside broadcast cameras cover the arrival at Gatwick Airport and later at Victoria Station where the Emperor and Empress will be met by Her Majesty The Queen and will drive in state to Buckingham Palace.
The scene is described by Raymond Baxter

Contributors

Commentator:
Raymond Baxter
Production team:
William Cave
Production team:
Alan Chivers
Production team:
Philip S. Gilbert
Production team:
Ian Smith
Production team:
John Vernon
Executive producer:
Antony Craxton

2.0 Drama: A Taste of Honey: 3
by Shelagh Delaney
[Starring] Diana Dors and Barry Foster

2.35 People of Many Lands: Morocco: Oasis
Commentary by Harvey Hall
(Colour)

Contributors

Writer (Drama:
A Taste of Honey: 3): Shelagh Delaney
Helen:
Diana Dors
Peter:
Barry Foster
Narrator (People of Many Lands):
Harvey Hall
Producer (People of Many Lands):
Andrew Neal

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 Bristol)

Contributors

Presenter:
Johnny Morris
Director:
George Inger
Director:
Brian McDuffie
Producer:
Douglas Thomas

News and opinions from the country at large, and, in particular, Your Region Tonight (including Regional Weather) co-ordinated by Michael Barratt and Bob Wellings

Contributors

Presenter:
Michael Barratt
Presenter:
Bob Wellings
Reporter:
Brian Ash
Reporter:
Robert Langley
Reporter:
Lynn Lewis
Reporter:
Jack Pizzey
Reporter:
Joan Shenton
Reporter:
Philip Tibenham
Assistant Editor:
Phil Sidey
Editor:
Michael Bunce

by Allan Prior
Starring James Ellis, John Slater, Derek Waring
with Douglas Fielding, Jack Carr

Bannion can possibly help Goss to catch a villain... But, is Goss willing to help Bannion in return?

Contributors

Writer:
Allan Prior
Script editor:
Tony Holland
Designer:
Robert Berk
Producer:
Ron Craddock
Director:
Julia Smith
Mrs Bannion:
Kay Gallie
Chris Bannion:
Brent Oldfield
Shaun Bannion:
Eric Holliday
Rita Bannion:
Lesley Roach
Robson:
Leonard Kavanagh
PC Quilley:
Douglas Fielding
Bannion:
Glyn Owen
Det-Sgt Stone:
John Slater
PC Covill:
Jack Carr
Det-Insp Goss:
Derek Waring
Sgt Lynch:
James Ellis
Collis:
Paul Thompson
Don Walker:
David Simeon

Starring Sidney Poitier
with Lilia Skala, Stanley Adams

Itinerant workman Homer Smith little realises the job he is accepting when he stops to do a day's work for a group of nuns living on the edge of the Arizona desert. Sidney Poitier's fine performance as Homer won him the 1963 Oscar as Best Actor. Producer/director Ralph Nelson, whose latest film is the controversial Soldier Blue, also has an acting role as the local contractor who employs Homer.
(This Week's Films: page 13)

Contributors

Producer/Director:
Ralph Nelson
Homer Smith:
Sidney Poitier
Mother Maria:
Lilia Skala
Sister Gertrude:
Lisa Mann
Sister Agnes:
Isa Crino
Sister Albertine:
Francesca Jarvis
Sister Elizabeth:
Pamela Branch
Juan:
Stanley Adams
Father Murphy:
Dan Frazer
Mr. Ashton:
Ralph Nelson

A return to two families in Belfast
Mr Hugh [text removed] - Protestant:
'...every day it's getting worse. The IRA is going further and further - the damage is more and more. There doesn'seem any solution to it. They are going to just try and pull the country down altogether, but they will never pull Ulster down-they have to kill us first before they get rid of us.'
Mrs Nellie [text removed] - Catholic:
'I used to go shopping in the Shankill Road, but I wouldn't go there now. I would have the fear that I was going to meet somebody and they would point me out and anything could happen after that. This would be my fear, that it could happen.'

Jim Douglas Henry and one film crew lived with a Catholic family. Harold Williamson and another crew lived with a Protestant family. With these two families, with their friends and relatives, it is possible to feel something of the tragedy that exists for ordinary people in Belfast.
A year ago things were bad enough. The families filmed then had some hope for the future.
Now, twelve months later, revisiting the same families, there is just despair and fear.

Contributors

Reporter:
Jim Douglas Henry
Reporter:
Harold Williamson
Director:
Tom Conway
Director:
Terence O'Reilly
Editor:
Desmond Wilcox
Editor:
Bill Morton

A daily look at what matters in the news and out of it
Presented by David Dimbleby with the latest news in pictures and with on-the-spot reports by Bernard Falk, Max Hastings, James Hogg, David Lomax, Tom Mangold, Barrie Penrose and David Taylor with special contributions from Keith Kyle and Robert McKenzie

Contributors

Presenter:
David Dimbleby
Reporter:
Bernard Falk
Reporter:
Max Hastings
Reporter:
James Hogg
Reporter:
David Lomax
Reporter:
Tom Mangold
Reporter:
Barrie Penrose
Reporter:
David Taylor
Special contributions:
Keith Kyle
Special contributions:
Robert McKenzie
Producer of the Day:
Michael Townson
Editor:
Peter Pagnamenta

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