Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,901 playable programmes from the BBC

9.38 Maths Workshop: Stage 1: Axes and Grids

10.0 History 1917-71: The New Europe

10.25-10.45 Look and Read: The Boy from Space (7)

11.0 Watch!: Johnny-Cake
A traditional story about a rolling cake.
Presented by Andrew Bradford

11.18 Going to Work: Working with Gas

11.40 Science Extra: Biology: Living on Others

12.5 New Horizons: Creative Computers?

Contributors

Presenter (Watch!):
Andrew Bradford

Customers and connoisseurs explore the world of antiques with Max Robertson
Resident connoisseur Arthur Negus
Guest connoisseur Julian Thompson
Customers Robert and Nan Dougall
(from Bristol)

Contributors

Presenter:
Max Robertson
Resident connoisseur:
Arthur Negus
Guest connoisseur:
Julian Thompson
Customer:
Robert Dougall
Customer:
Nan Dougall
Director:
Paul Smith
Producer:
John King

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
Producer:
Douglas Thomas

with Look North, South Today, Look East, Midlands Today, Points West and Spotlight South West bringing you news and views in your region tonight
(including Regional Weather)
Presented by Michael Barratt, Frank Bough and Bob Wellings
(Regional details as Monday)

Contributors

Presenter:
Michael Barratt
Presenter:
Frank Bough
Presenter:
Bob Wellings

A new comedy series created by Brian Clemens and Richard Waring
Written by Richard Waring
Starring John Alderton and Hannah Gordon
with Edwin Apps, James Beck

George does his best to put off prospective buyers of his cottage, until he hears a disquieting rumour.

(Colour)

Contributors

Created by:
Brian Clemens
Created by/Writer:
Richard Waring
Music:
Dennis Wilson
Designer:
Paul Allen
Producer:
Graeme Muir
George:
John Alderton
Mr Mitchell:
Edwin Apps
Suzy:
Hannah Gordon
Mrs Fielding:
Anne Jameson
Mr Fielding:
James Beck
Alan Hargreaves:
Clive Graham

A personal look by Robert Vas at 30 years' output of BBC Television, compiled from material in the BBC archives and with the opinions of British TV viewers.
More than 100,000 hours of television have been transmitted by the BBC since 1936. In its archives, among 270,000 cans of film and 24,000 boxes of video-tape, the makers of television history sit side by side, from Richard Dimbleby to Muffin the Mule, from the News in Ulster to the Eurovision Song Contest. What is its impact on our lives and what role does it play in our society? What does it give and what does it take?

Tonight's programme is a thoughtful, affectionate and sometimes irreverent browse along the archive shelves. Television looks at itself and what television is all about. The voices of viewers from all over the country provide the commentary. For some of them, television is a 'window on the world' and for others it merely 'fills a hole in the living-room.' Their spontaneous comments provide a taste of public opinion about television from 1936 to today.

Contributors

Presenter:
Robert Vas
Film Editor:
John Needham
Film Editor:
Julian Stenhouse
Executive Producer:
Norman Swallow

Today 140 million Americans have voted for the new President of the United States. With his lead in the opinion polls, can the incumbent Richard Nixon lose?
On election night:
Ludovic Kennedy will be in New York with a studio full of prominent young Americans to discuss the campaign, the war, the quality of life in America today and the problems that will still be there in 1973. Robert MacNeil in the New York results studio gives the election news, watches the presidential candidates waiting, and expects a firm projection of who has won between 12.30 and 1.30 am.
Austin Mitchell in London asks Britons: what does the result mean to us?

11.40* Late Night News; Weather

Programme arranged in association with EBU and NBC
(Results continue all night on Radio 2)
(If Bob Hope - and John Wayne..: pp 17-18)

Contributors

Presenter:
Ludovic Kennedy
Reporter:
Robert MacNeil
Reporter:
Austin Mitchell
New York Presentation:
Michael Towson
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