Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 283,020 playable programmes from the BBC

Third Test:
England v Pakistan First day
Introduced by PETER WEST
This decisive match of the series is played at Kennington Oval, the ground where Pakistan defeated England for the first and only time in 1954. Commentators RICHIE BENAUD
JIM LAKER , TED DEXTER
Television presentation by DAVID KENNING and JOHN SHREWSBURY
International Golf
The Double Diamond
International Team Tournament Further coverage

Contributors

Introduced By:
Peter West
Commentators:
Richie Benaud
Unknown:
Jim Laker
Presentation By:
David Kenning

just switch off your television set and go and do something less boring instead?
Such as - what? A collection of ideas from children all over the country. The WDY gang use your ideas of something more interesting to do or make, so Why Don' You send us a card?
Designer JOHN BONE
Producer PATRICK DOWLING
(Why Don' You. BBC Television Centre, London W12 8QT)

Contributors

Producer:
Patrick Dowling

Children's words and pictures War and Hate
When patience and love run out, all that is left is hate. That is certainly how our young writers see the world. Although none of them has memories of a World War, images of battle haunt their imagination. Spiders, snakes and heartless boyfriends also come in for their share of hate.
Presented by Harriet Crawley with Alan Dobie , Sara Kestelman
Music .JOHN TURNER with BRIDGET ST JOHN Designer CHRIS ROBILLIARD Director colin godman
Producer JOHN KING (Bristol)

Contributors

Presented By:
Harriet Crawley
Unknown:
Alan Dobie
Unknown:
Sara Kestelman

Introduced by Paul Burnett TOP OF THE POPS ORCHESTRA
Musical director JOHNNY PEARSON PAN'S PEOPLE
Choreography FLICK COLBY Sound RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN Director BRUCE milliard Producer ROBIN NASH

Contributors

Introduced By:
Paul Burnett
Director:
Johnny Pearson
Unknown:
Chamberlain Director Bruce
Producer:
Robin Nash

Starring Tim Brooke-Taylor, Graeme Garden, Bill Oddie
With Bill Weston

The Goodies, in France, build a car and go racing at Le Mans.

Contributors

Writer:
Graeme Garden
Writer/Music:
Bill Oddie
Additional Material ('with'):
Tim Brooke-Taylor
Music:
Michael Gibbs
Producer:
Jim Franklin
Tim:
Tim Brooke-Taylor
Graeme:
Graeme Garden
Bill:
Bill Oddie
[Actor]:
Bill Weston

Hippo!
How do you persuade an irate hippo to pose for your underwater cameras? On an expedition to study the wildlife of Africa's inland shorelines, Cousteau tries several methods.
A plastic life-sized hippo called ' Lolita,' concealing two divers, proves hilarious but unsuccessful; so Cousteau moves to another lake only to find that it's the mating season for hippos and the massive animals are aggressive and unpredictable.
Two remote-controlled cameras have to be used but are soon smashed by a charging hippo. So there's nothing left but to risk going into the pool with the restive hippos ...
Narrated by JACQUES COUSTEAU and HUGH FALKUS
A production of LES REQUINS associes and METROMEDIA PRODUCERS CORPORATION

Contributors

Unknown:
Jacques Cousteau
Unknown:
Hugh Falkus

A film starring
Dirk Bogarde , Stanley Baker
Jacqueline Sassard , Michael York Vivien Merchant, Delphine Seyrig Alexander Knox
A complex web of relationships is revealed when an Oxford undergraduate is killed in a car crash.
Screenplay by HAROLD PINTER
Based on the novel by NICHOLAS MOSLEY Director JOSEPH LOSEY
This Week's Films: page 12

Contributors

Unknown:
Dirk Bogarde
Unknown:
Stanley Baker
Unknown:
Jacqueline Sassard
Unknown:
Delphine Seyrig
Unknown:
Alexander Knox
Unknown:
Harold Pinter
Novel By:
Nicholas Mosley
Director:
Joseph Losey
Stephen:
Dirk Bogarde
Charley:
Stanley Baker
Anna:
Jacqueline Sassard
William:
Michael York
Rosalind:
Vivien Merchant
Francesca:
Delphine Seyrig
The Provost:
Alexander Knox
Laura:
Ann Firbank
Police Sergeant:
Brian Phelan
Plain-clothes policeman:
Terence Rigby
TV receptionist:
Jane Hillary
Mr Belt:
Harold Pinter
Frantic man in TV studio:
Freddie Jones
A don:
Nicholas Mosley

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