Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 281,454 playable programmes from the BBC

Spanish for beginners
Presented by Alison Skilbeck and Carlos Riera

with Juan-Ignacio Macia, Fiorella Renzi, Esperanza Alonso, Fernando Sanchez Polack, Antonio Cintado, Adriano Dominguez, Miguel Penaranda, Santiago Varela,
Andres Rodriguez

Contributors

Presenter:
Alison Skilbeck
Presenter:
Carlos Riera
Language teaching adviser:
Francisco Ariza
Drama script:
Milo Sperber
Spanish dialogue:
Manuel Fernandez-Gasalla
Director:
Carol Wiseman
Producer:
David Hargreaves
[Actor]:
Juan-Ignacio Macia
[Actress]:
Fiorella Renzi
[Actress]:
Esperanza Alonso
[Actor]:
Fernando Sanchez Polack
[Actor]:
Antonio Cintado
[Actor]:
Adriano Dominguez
[Actor]:
Miguel Penaranda
[Actor]:
Santiago Varela
[Actor]:
Andres Rodriguez

Customers and connoisseurs explore the world of Antiques with Max Robertson
Customers Katy Manning, Gerald English
(from Bristol)

Contributors

Presenter:
Max Robertson
Resident connoisseur:
Arthur Negus
Guest connoisseur:
Hermione Waterfield
Customer:
Katy Manning
Customer:
Gerald English
Director:
Paul Smith
Producer:
John King

Starring Jeanne Crain
with Glenn Langan, Lynn Bari, Alan Young

The fads and fashions of the 20s adorn this warm and nostalgic tale of a quiet, unsophisticated girl who blossoms into the belle of her school.
(This Week's Films: page 9)

Contributors

Director:
Henry King
Margie:
Jeanne Crain
Professor Fontayne:
Glenn Langan
Miss Palmer:
Lynn Bari
Roy Hornsdale:
Alan Young
Marybelle:
Barbara Lawrence
Johnny:
Conrad Janis
Grandma McSweeney:
Esther Dale
Mr McDuff:
Hobart Cavanaugh
Joyce:
Ann Todd
Cynthia:
Hattie McDaniel

Britain gained control of Africa's two gateways to India - Suez and the Cape - but in doing so was drawn into trouble when other European nations began to grab slices of Africa. It looked as if they might get the lion's share until Cecil Rhodes determined to carve a path for a British railway from the Cape to Cairo.

(A BBCtv/Time-Life co-production)
(Colour)

Contributors

Narrator:
Robert Hardy
Series Editor:
Max Morgan-Witts
Writer:
Roy Lewis
Producer:
Anthony Isaacs

The second of three programmes reflecting the songs being sung by young people today, to communicate and celebrate their faith. This programme contains material from a number of Midland schools - mixture of new songs, spirituals, and old hymns set to new tunes.

Introduced by David Winter
with choirs and groups from Aston Manor School, Birmingham; Cockshut Hill Girls' and Boys' Schools, Birmingham; St Nicolas School, Nuneaton; Wellingborough School; Wolverhampton Girls' High School
(from Birmingham)

Contributors

Presenter:
David Winter
Producer:
Michael Shoesmith
Director/Series Producer:
Raymond Short

with his guests Diahann Carroll and The Fifth Dimension
Another chance to see the second of two classic television specials starring the great Frank Sinatra, in which the young-in-heart entertainer puts the accent on the music of the 60s.
A programme recorded in America

Contributors

Singer:
Frank Sinatra
Singer:
Diahann Carroll
Singers:
The Fifth Dimension

Starring Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner
with Robert Morley, E.G. Marshall

A group of foreigners, stranded in Hungary during the 1956 uprising, are detained within sight of the border by a charming but sadistic Russian officer who suspects that one of their number is a Hungarian in disguise.
(This Week's Films: page 9)

Contributors

Screenplay:
George Tabori
Produced and directed by:
Anatole Litvak
Diana Ashmore:
Deborah Kerr
Major Surov:
Yul Brynner
Hugh Deverill:
Robert Morley
Harold Rhinelander:
E.G. Marshall
Paul:
Jason Robards Jr.
Margie Rhinelander:
Anne Jackson
Billy Rhinelander:
Ronny Howard
Flip Rhinelander:
Flip Mark
Csepege:
Kurt Kasznar
Simon Avron:
David Kossoff
Teklel Hafouli:
Gerard Oury
Francoise Hafouli:
Marie Daems
Eva:
Anouk Aimee

John Dankworth, Cleo Laine, Steve Race, Robin Ray Ken Russell
in "Whatever Turns You On"
or "Variations on a noisy theme"

These are some of the 'guinea-pigs' whose reactions to music are measured in tonight's programme, together with: Michael Aspel, James Blades, Johnnie Johnston, Susan Stranks and Eleanor Sommerfield
Play Rossini's William Tell and John Timpson 'rushes for the 8.03'; Strauss's Zarathustra provokes Ken Russell to cries of 'Superman' nonsense; Ken Dodd singing Tears is very upsetting for everybody. To some listeners it's the performance that matters; others simply enjoy a good tune. Why should this be? Why should music affect us in so many ways?

with Dr Kevin Murphy, Audiology Unit, Royal Berkshire Hospital
Duncan Steele, Sunfield Children's Homes
Juliette Alvin, British Society for Music Therapy
Commentary spoken by Michael Hordern
(Cleo Laine's Choice: page 5)

Contributors

Unknown:
John Dankworth
Unknown:
Cleo Laine
Unknown:
Steve Race
Unknown:
Robin Ray
Unknown:
Ken Russell
Unknown:
Michael Aspel
Unknown:
James Blades
Unknown:
Johnnie Johnston
Unknown:
Susan Stranks
Unknown:
Eleanor Sommerfield
Unknown:
John Timpson
Interviewee:
Dr Kevin Murphy
Interviewee:
Duncan Steele
Interviewee:
Juliette Alvin
Narrator:
Michael Hordern
Film cameraman:
Peter Hall
Sound recordist:
Derek Medus
Film editor:
Roger Crittenden
Writer/Producer:
Herbert Chappell

Don Ryder, Chairman of Reed International, the multi-million paper-to-paints corporation that includes IPC, publishers of the Daily Mirror, in its empire about:
The cub reporter who became a tycoon
The sacking of Cecil King
What's wrong with Parliament
What Britain must do to survive
(Radio Times People: page 5)

Contributors

Interviewer:
Kenneth Harris
Interviewee:
Don Ryder
Producer:
Elwyn Parry Jones

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