With Philippa Forrester. Rpt
Tent Stop
Stories from the Old Testament with a difference. Today: Joshua smashes
Jericho.
David Frost talks to the news makers.
Series editor Barney Jones
Executive editor Bob Wheaton
Including at 8.15 and 9.00 News; plus weather forecasts
On Mothering Sunday, eucharist is celebrated by newly ordained Rev Val Woods - the first Church of England eucharist by a woman to be televised - from St Paul 's, Bristol.
The series goes to Liverpool Deaf Club. With signing and subtitles.
Strategies for success.
A visit to San Marino.
(Details tomorrow at 12.25am)
How to cope if your child has an accident. Rpt Stereo
Girls and puberty.
A series on family life.
Countryside stories, with John Craven. Plus the week's weather at 12.55
Political analysis.
Omnibus edition.
(Stereo) (Subtitled)
Premiership side Chelsea's only FA Cup success was in 1970 and today they meet
First Division Wolves, who have not reached this quarter final stage of the competition since 1981. The draw for the semi-finals takes place after the match. Introduced by Desmond Lynam, with Jimmy Hill and Alan Hansen, commentary by Barry Davies and Trevor Brooking.
(Highlights of the FA Cup quarter-final tie West Ham Utd v Luton Town tomorrow at 11.15pm)
Alan Hansen page 14
Featuring clothes shopping in Paris, and a new designer venue.
The Roadshow visits Gibraltar, where people from the Rock and the Spanish Costa del Sol produce treasures including a 15th-century ship's gun, early surveying instruments, and a painting by Johann Mastenbroek which once belonged to the German National Gallery in Berlin. Presented by Hugh Scully.
Producer Christopher Lewis
COMPETITION page 12
With Moira Stuart.
Weather Richard Edgar
Tonight's programme, celebrating Mothering Sunday - traditionally the fourth Sunday in Lent - comes from Manchester Cathedral. Pam Rhodes explores the history and traditions of this day and, in the International Year of the Family, finds out how women of the 90s deal with the pressures of family life.
The music includes: Praise My Soul the King of Heaven; Come Let Us Sing a Wonderful Love, There's a Spirit in the Air, Jesus, Good Above All Other, Now Thank We All Our God; and The Lord's's My Shepherd (Brother James's Air).
A comedy which brings Felicity Kendal back to our television screens, has a cast including Leslie Phillips and former Casualty star Nigel Le Vaillant, is written by Michael Aitkens (who created Waiting for God), and is produced and directed by Gareth Gwenlan (responsible for Only Fools and Horses), should be guaranteed success. This new six-part series has quite a pedigree. Kendal plays the widow of a "corporate hoodlum" who leaves Los Angeles to take her 20-year-old son to Cambridge, England, where her late husband had invested in a college.
After 25 years in the force, Richard Griffiths's heavyweight detective is more interested in culinary pursuits than the pursuit of criminals. Henry Crabbe has a dream - to retire and open a restaurant. His accountant wife is not so keen, but then she's practically taste-blind. His superior isn't enthusiastic either, but then he doesn't want to lose Crabbe's sleuthing skills.
This new ten-part drama series comes from the same stable as Lovejoy and Auf Wiedersehen Pet and is created by Andrew Payne, who wrote some of the early Minder episodes and, more recently, You, Me and It. This first episode, The Best of Both Worlds, features Michael (To Play the King) Kitchen as an international villain.
A Witzend production for BBCtv
Clement Freud on the cooking detective
SEE FEATURE page 42
I The hit detective spoof starring
Dan Aykroyd , Tom Hanks When Los Angeles is struck by a series of bizarre crimes, by-the-book cop Joe Friday and his unconventional new partner Pep Streebek have only one clue - cards left at the scene of each crime bearing the name Pagan (People against
Goodness and Normalcy). With a mystery to solve, the mis-matched duo are in trouble up to their necks.
Director Tom Mankiewicz (1987)
With Martyn Lewis.
Weather Richard Edgar
Clive James is joined in the studio this week by film actor Tony Curtis and guest commentator Dave Barry , the American humorist.
Executive producer Richard Drewett Series producer Beatrice Ballard
In the wake of the massacre at Hebron last month by a Jewish fundamentalist, another chance to see this 1992 film on the Jewish Gush Emunim settlers on the Palestinian West Bank. The settlers argue that God commands them to occupy biblical lands - rhetoric and territorial claims which the film explores and traces to their religious roots.
(Revised rpt)
The series on job-hunting in Europe takes a look at Berlin.
Producer Mary Sprent FREE BOOKLET: write to [address removed]