Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 277,144 playable programmes from the BBC

Carol Leader,
Andrew Secombe and Simon Davies say Hallo Again with songs, games and play ideas.
'In Mick the Mess's house nothing is where you'd expect it to be, and you should see the way he dresses!' Story: Mick the Mess by MARGARET JOY
Musicians CHRIS WALKER
ALAN GRAHAME. JOHN WHELAN Director SALLY GEORGE Producer PENNY LLOYD
Series producer BARBARA RODDAM Editor CYNTHIA FELGATE
Record or cassette Play On (songs from Play School), REC/ZCM 332 from retailers

Contributors

Leader:
Andrew Secombe
Leader:
Simon Davies
Musicians:
Chris Walker
Unknown:
Alan Grahame.
Unknown:
John Whelan
Director:
Sally George
Editor:
Cynthia Felgate

Pride
Tom Hewitt , Mike Amatt and Tariq Yunus with stories and songs which show that pride often comes before a fall.
Director CELIA THOMSON Producer JUDY MERRY BBC Manchester (R)

Contributors

Unknown:
Tom Hewitt
Unknown:
Mike Amatt
Unknown:
Tariq Yunus
Director:
Celia Thomson
Producer:
Judy Merry

A series in which viewers are united in a service of prayer and fellowship.
Linda Mary Evans joins Florence Griffiths at the Eventide Home in Liskeard, Cornwall. Today's theme is The Royal Road of Suffering. Producer ERNEST REA
Series producer DAVID CRAIG BBC Bristol

Contributors

Unknown:
Linda Mary Evans
Unknown:
Florence Griffiths
Producer:
David Craig

Sab Ras with Sarla Maheshwari Featuring musical contributions from Pukar, Anup Jalota
Samina Iqbal , Tahir Ikram and Shaheen Mahmud An ASIAN UNIT presentation BBCPebbleMill

Contributors

Unknown:
Sarla Maheshwari
Unknown:
Anup Jalota
Unknown:
Samina Iqbal
Unknown:
Tahir Ikram
Unknown:
Shaheen Mahmud

The last of eight programmes Narrated by Anthony Quayle People of the Palace
Two thousand people work at the Palace of Westminster - secretaries, researchers, lawyers, librarians, cooks and cleaners and cellarmen, all known collectively as 'strangers'. Journalists too are known as strangers, and break the law when reporting Parliament's proceedings. Written by CHRISTOPHER JONES Executive producer JOHN GAU Producer ALAN SCALES
*CEEFAX SUBTITLES

Contributors

Unknown:
Anthony Quayle
Written By:
Christopher Jones

While winter lingers, indomitable ravens nest on the bleak mountain crags. In March the lowland air brims with birdsong; by April woods and hedgerows have a mosaic of wild flowers. Spring has arrived ...
Narrator Douglas Leach Producer KEITH HOPKINS BBC Bristol (R)

Contributors

Narrator:
Douglas Leach
Producer:
Keith Hopkins

A series depicting the lives of three of Britain's wild creatures.
Shak the Red Fox (1) by JOSEPHINE POOLE and JOHN KING
Shak is one of several cubs born to an ageing and partially-blind vixen. This is the story of their early days on the Somerset Wetlands. Then, desperate to provide meat for her family, the vixen picks up poisoned bait! Photography SIMON KING Produced by JOHN KING BBC South West (R)

Contributors

Unknown:
Josephine Poole
Unknown:
John King
Produced By:
John King

A fortnightly magazine for people who are deaf and hard-of-hearing, with sign language and subtitles. Introduced by Maggie Woolley , Clive Mason and John Lee
Produced by CHARLES PASCOE (E)

Contributors

Introduced By:
Maggie Woolley
Produced By:
Charles Pascoe

with Philip Wrixon Dan Cherrington Leslie Cottington and Claire Powell Producers
KEN POLLOCK. MARTIN SMALL
Executive producer JOHN KENYON BBC Pebble Mill

Contributors

Unknown:
Philip Wrixon
Unknown:
Dan Cherrington
Unknown:
Leslie Cottington
Unknown:
Ken Pollock.
Unknown:
Martin Small
Producer:
John Kenyon

starring Lome Greene as Ben Dan Blocker as Hoss Michael Landon as Little Joe Mitch Vogel as Jamie Don't Cry My Son
Ben is drawn into the torment of a local doctor whose wife loses their baby while he is attending the birth of another child ... Written and directed by MICHAEL LANDON (R)

Contributors

Unknown:
Lome Greene
Unknown:
Ben Dan Blocker
Unknown:
Hoss Michael Landon
Unknown:
Little Joe
Unknown:
Mitch Vogel
Directed By:
Michael Landon

with Cary Grant
Robert Mitchum Jean Simmons
The impoverished Earl of Rhyall is faced with an unpleasant choice - bankruptcy or opening his stately home, Lynley Hall , to the public. He chooses to swallow his pride and let in the sightseers - which proves to be a profitable nuisance. However the arrival of Charles Delacro , an American oil millionaire, who falls for the beautiful countess, Hilary, brings chaos to Lynley Hall.
This witty romantic comedy features songs by NOËL COWARD, including the famous 'Stately homes of England'.
Screenplay by HUGH AND MARGARET WILLIAMS from their own play
Produced and directed by STANLEY DONEN
0 FILMS: page 18

Contributors

Unknown:
Cary Grant
Unknown:
Robert Mitchum
Unknown:
Jean Simmons
Unknown:
Lynley Hall
Unknown:
Charles Delacro
Play By:
Hugh And
Directed By:
Stanley Donen
Victor Rhyall:
Cary Grant
Hilary Rhyall:
Deborah Kerr
Charles Delacro:
Robert Mitchum
Hattie:
Jean Simmons
Sellers:
Moray Watson

Last in the series Three Miles High with Miles Kington
The highest railroad in the world climbs the Peruvian Andes. Then it's the night steamer across Lake Titicaca. Journey's end was to have been La Paz, but it was not to be....
Series producer ROGER LAUGHTON Producer TONY MORRISON BBC Manchester
* CEEFAX SUBTITLES

Contributors

Producer:
Roger Laughton
Producer:
Tony Morrison

The video eye on nature with Michael Jordan Nick Davies and Peaches Golding
Everyone knows about urban foxes. They're mangy, disease-ridden scavengers! But are they? Wild Britain answers the most commonly asked questions about city foxes, in an attempt to put the record straight.
And an underwater outside broadcast looks at the profusion of wildlife living on the seabed off Plymouth Sound.
Producer MIKE BEYNON BBC Bristol
* BACK PAGES: 78

Contributors

Unknown:
Michael Jordan
Unknown:
Nick Davies

from the East Neuk of Fife Ian Gall visits the Picturesque harbour at Crail. MARY MURRAY from the Scottish Fisheries Museum at Anstruther introduces him to the history of the area while PHILIP HUGHES shows him the Present life of the fishermen. Visitors join with choirs from the churches by the harbour to sing tonight's hymns.
Our God reigns; Now the day is over (Eudoxia); The Lord's my shepherd (Crimond); Will your anchor hold; Fierce raged the tempest (Aelred); Godhead here in hiding; This is the day; Sweet saviour bless us ere we go (Sunset)
Organist ROSALIND EVANS Conductor RICHARD EVANS Producers DAVID KREMER MICHAEL A. SIMPSON
Editor STEPHEN WHITTLE BBC Scotland
*CEEFAX SUBTITLES

Contributors

Unknown:
Fife Ian Gall
Unknown:
Philip Hughes
Organist:
Rosalind Evans
Conductor:
Richard Evans
Producers:
David Kremer
Producers:
Michael A. Simpson
Editor:
Stephen Whittle

starring
VIelina Mercouri Peter Ustinov
Maximilian Schell Robert Morley
\ daring plan is afoot
:o steal a sultan's jewel-encrusted dagger from the electronic security of the Topkapi Palace Museum in Istanbul. But since neither of the thieves has a criminal record, they decide to be assisted only by amateurs. Enter Robert Morley as an eccentric inventor and Peter Ustinov , turning in an Oscar-winning performance as a reluctant spy. Elizabeth Lipp
MELINA MERCOURI
Screenplay by MONJA DANISCHEWSKY Based on the novel The Light of Day by ERIC AMBLER
Produced and directed "y JULES DASSIN
(Postponed fmm 21 June) 0 FILMS: page 18
*CEEFAX SUBTITLES

Contributors

Unknown:
Vielina Mercouri
Unknown:
Peter Ustinov
Unknown:
Maximilian Schell
Unknown:
Robert Morley
Unknown:
Robert Morley
Unknown:
Peter Ustinov
Play By:
Monja Danischewsky
Unknown:
Eric Ambler
Arthur Simpson:
Peter Ustinov
William Walter:
Maximilian Schell
Cedric Page:
Robert Morley
Geven:
Akim Tamiroff
Giulio:
Gilles Segal
Fischer:
Jess Hahn
Harback:
Titos Wandis
Major Tufan:
Ege Ernart
First shadow:
Senih Orkan
Second shadow:
Ahmet Danyal Topatan
Josef:
Joseph Dassin
Nanny:
Amy Dalby
Voula:
Despo Diamantidou

by Paul Alexander

Regent's Close is the home of a paranoid sales-rep, a romantic restaurateur and a worried one-parent family. It's also the cradle of the local neighbourhood watch scheme. But who needs watching most? The burglars or the residents?

(Ceefax subtitles)

Contributors

Writer:
Paul Alexander
Music:
Jim Parker
Sound:
Raymund Angel
Lighting:
Howard King
Designer:
Bryan Ellis
Producer:
Terry Coles
Director:
Jeremy Ancock
Stuart Shooter:
Pete Postlethwaite
Sandra Shooter:
Janet Kay
Tom Anderson:
Robert Glenister
Rhian Jennings:
Maureen O'Brien
PC Crowther:
Philip Jackson
Jason Jennings:
Steven Mackintosh
Lisa Anderson:
Dominique Barnes
Burglar:
Edward Rumfitt
Television reporter:
Julia Binsted

with Rabbi Julia Neuberger Who Cares?
Good health is taken for granted; illness is seen as a misfortune and doctors are there to make us better when we are ill.
Tonight Julia Neuberger examines these assumptions and asks how responsible we are for our own health - and whose responsibility we are when we get older and are less able to look after ourselves.
On the panel are
Ian Kennedy , Professor of Medical Law and Ethics at King's College, London;
David Hobman , Director of Age Concern;
Digby Anderson , Director of the Social Affairs Unit and Angela Philips , co-editor of the feminist guide to health, Our Bodies, Ourselves. Director SIMON HAMMOND
Producer ELIZABETH CLOUGH
Series producer JAMES MURRAY

Contributors

Unknown:
Julia Neuberger
Unknown:
Ian Kennedy
Unknown:
David Hobman
Unknown:
Digby Anderson
Unknown:
Angela Philips
Director:
Simon Hammond
Producer:
Elizabeth Clough
Producer:
James Murray

A Devon Walk with William the dog and David Young
Walking with William, his labrador companion, allows writer and architect David Young to keep a lookout for unusual man-made additions to the north Devon landscape - an artificial hill, a derelict silver mine and a gambler's fantasy alehouse are rich pickings for David's taste for country curiosities.
Photography KEVIN BAXENDALE Producer MIKE WEATHERLEY (E)
For free leaflet, produced with the English Tourist Board, send sae (220mm x 110mm) to Favourite Walks. [address removed]

Contributors

Unknown:
David Young
Unknown:
David Young
Unknown:
Kevin Baxendale
Producer:
Mike Weatherley

The Innermost Planet
Mercury, the closest planet to the sun, is always difficult to study from earth, but it is at its best in the morning sky this month. So far the only space-probe to have bypassed it has been Mariner 10, more than 12 years ago.
Patrick Moore has been to a conference in the USA in which all the information about Mercury has been summarised; tonight he explains what has been learned.
Producer PIETER MORPURGO

Contributors

Unknown:
Patrick Moore
Producer:
Pieter Morpurgo

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

About this data

This data is drawn from the data stream that informs BBC's iPlayer and Sounds. The information shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was/is subject to change and may not be accurate. More