Starting with 6.30-6.55 Business Breakfast
News headlines or summaries every quarterhour.
Topical discussion programme with Robert Kilroy-Silk .
Today: Italian bread soups - ribollita and pappa pomodoro. Recipe on Ceefax page 615
With Philippa Forrester.
The Playground Stop. ● STEREO
Animation.
With Mike Smith. Family quiz. ● STEREO
A look at seabirds in the desert and flowers in the wilderness.
Presented by Fergus Keeling.
People tell their own stories of courage, Debi Jones discovers talented people and Miriam Stoppard talks to women in the news. With Adrian Mills.
Including at
Presented by Judi Spiers. With music from Nothing by Chance. STEREO
Followed by Weather
Tom blames Matt for everything. (For cast see Monday. Rptdat 5.35pm) ● STEREO
● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
Quiz hosted by Henry Kelly.
Starring Lilli Palmer Sam Wanamaker
This warm romantic drama is about immigrants dreaming of and striving for happiness in turn-of-the-century New York.
(Black and white)
Films: pages 27-32
with Andi Peters
Joshua Jones
Animation.
Cartoon.
Daisy Pig Goes to the Seaside Told for Jackanory by Dawn French.
Cartoon.
Documentary series. Dominique Shepherd and Chris North meet a millionaire and a pools winner, and also visit the Bank of England's banknote works. * STEREO
The news for children.
Barry joins a gang who send him to buy some cigarettes.
This week's episodes written by Sarah Daniels
STEREO TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
(For cast see Monday. Shown at 1.30pm) STEREO
● TELETEXTSUBTITLES: page 888
With Peter Sissons and Moira Stewart.
Weather Bill Giles
● TELETEXT SUBTITLES (news): page 888
Anneka Rice presents the weekly holiday magazine.
Jimmy Mulville samples Italy's top hotels in Venice and Lake Como - the second prize in the Holiday/Radio Times competition. Moira Stuart cruises down the Nile and rides on a camel, Sue Cook takes a motor caravan through
Cornwall and David Jessel looks at the latest travel-world news.
Producer Simon Shaw
Series producer Jane Lush
STEREO; TELETEXT SUBTITLES: p 888 ● BBC HOLIDAYS MAGAZINE: £ 1.40 from newsagents
HOLIDAY SUPPLEMENT: pages 45-56
"I promise you, Kath, if he comes near you, I'll do ten years for him."
(Stereo)
(Teletext Subtitles: page 888)
David Coleman tests the stars.
Bill Beaumont is joined by Joanne Conway , six times British figure skating champion, and Andy Townsend , Chelsea's captain and Republic of Ireland midfielder.
Ian Botham lines up with Sam Torrance , six times member of Europe's Ryder Cup team, and John Regis , world championship gold medalist with Britain's 4 x 400m relay team in Tokyo. Executive producer Mike Adley STEREO
● TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page888
With Martyn Lewis. Regional News
Weather Bill Giles
● TELETEXT SUBTITLES (news): page 888
Detective series about an unorthodox undercover cop set in Newcastle and created by Ian La Frenais and Jimmy Nail. Starring Jimmy Nail
Fee. Keith is worried about his friend, Fee, who may be in trouble. Spender, suffering from backache after a fall from a roof, is in no mood to be asked to find out. When he reluctantly agrees, he discovers that Fee's girlfriend, Jody, is a heroin addict at the mercy of her supplier, Mick McDonna.
Episode written by Jimmy Nail Producer Martin McKeand
Director Ian Knox
0 STEREO
0 TELETEXT SUBTITLES: page 888
A critical look at the week's cinema releases.
Oliver Stone's JFK is a political thriller which tries to explain the mystery surrounding the assassination in 1963 of President John F Kennedy. Blame It on the Bellboy stars Dudley Moore in a comedy farce of mistaken identity. And Bette Midler and James Caan talk about their latest film, For the Boys, a musical comedy about a wartime song and dance team.
STEREO
COMPETITION: ring [number removed]. Calls are charged at 36p per minute cheap rate. 48p at all other times.
BARRY NORMAN: page 26
A journey round London which goes up towers, round monuments, in pursuit of money and out onto the dancefloor of the 90s.
Contributors include punk impresario Malcolm McLaren , architects Nigel Coates and Richard Rogers , writers
Jeanette Winterson and J G Ballard , and marketing consultant Peter York. What unites them is the conviction that a city isn't just a plan imposed from above, it is also shaped from below by the people who live in it. And in order to understand our capital and its present crisis, we need to explore more carefully the connections between the hard city of buildings and the soft city of the imagination. Director Kim Evans
Series editor Andrew Snell
11.45-11.50 pm Weather