With Rosemary Foxcroft.
With Sue MacGregor and James Naughtie.
6.25, 7.25, 8.25 Sports News
7.45 Thought for the Day With Bishop Bill Westwood.
The first of four programmes going behind the scenes of the week's big event.
Producer Eleanor Garland. Repeated at 9.30pm
Four programmes in which
Michael Rosen unmasks the subversive past of classic children's literature. 1: Wild Thing The drawings of Maurice Sendak. Producer Matthew Dodd Repeat
With Martha Kearney and guests. Dear Jayne Browne : End of Innocence by Nick Fisher. Part 1 of 5. Daily editor Anne Tyley
E-MAIL: womanshour@bbc.co.uk
Dear Jayne Browne repeated at 7.45pm
Anna Hill follows a sweet-smelling trail to Africa and back to discover how essential oils are cultivated, distilled and used. Producer Sera Lefroy-Owen
A Victorian mystery by Wilkie Collins, dramatised by John Arden.
Felicia leaves her father's manse.
With Liz Barclay and John Waite.
With Nick Clarke.
The last semi-final in the quiz that tests guests' knowledge of words set to music. Presented by Denis Quilley. Producer Adrian Edwards Repeated Sunday 1.30pm
Repeated from yesterday 7pm
By Maggie Allen. Award-winning journalist Abi Maguire reluctantly returns to look after her ailing father in Brighton, only to discover her talents are needed there more than in London. with Tony Anholt. Geoffrey Whitehead , Jimmy Yuill , Barbara Atkinson and Sally Mais Director Marion Nancarrow
(0171)[number removed]Vincent Duggleby returns to take calls on an issue affecting personal finance. Producer Sarah Pennells LINES OPEN from 1.30pm
BBC disabilities correspondent Peter White presents the first of five programmes. 1: Hotfoot to the Footie Producer Eleanor Garland Repeat
Sam West reads from the work of Wordsworth and Coleridge, first published 200 years ago. Producer Melanie Harris
The Italian Deli. With Simon Parkes.
Repeated from Saturday 11am
Jane Franchi and her guests look behind the international headlines.
Producer Gwen Stirling
With Clare English and Chris Lowe.
The comedy series written by and starring Britain's funniest Milton - Milton Jones. Also starring Joanna Scanlon and Alexander Armstrong. Producer David Tyler
Repeated Sunday 12.30pm
Brian puts the boot in. Repeated tomorrow 2pm
Seamus Heaney joins Mark Lawson to discuss poetry and politics in the light of a new collection of his verse. producer Julian May
End of Innocence by Nick Fisher.
Voices from the past call Jayne back to a final reckoning. Part 1 of 5. with Jill Balcon , Stella Gonet ,
Angela Pleasence , Valerie Sarruf. Lizzie Mclnnemy , Julie Cox. David Collings , Federay Holmes , Robert Portal and, Simon Treves Director Celia de Woiff
Repeated from 10.45am
Ian Stafford profiles Hans Muller -
Wohlfahrt, one of the world's leading orthopaedic doctors, whose methods are surrounded by controversy. Producer Tom Alban Repeat
Tony Blair has presented a vision of Britain in which no one is left out. How is it shaping up? In Need. What will happen to the poor who cannot take up the opportunities on offer in Blair's new j Britain? Jenny Cuffe visits families in Whythenshawe, Manchester, to find out. , Producer Smita Patel. Repeated Sunday 9.30pm
Preparations for the return to Iceland of i the killer whale who starred in the film
Free Willy have provided revelatory new discoveries about the mammal. But, as Mark Carwardine finds out, controversy surrounds Keiko's journey to freedom. Producer Sandra Sykes
Repeated from 9am
With Isabel Hilton.
Gerard McSorley reads the first of five short stories by Brian Friel. Joe is visited by old memories. Director Judy Friel
Repeated from yesterday 7.55am
LATE NIGHT ON 4 !
By Brian McCabe. A Better Place. It is 1965, and a Scottish schoolboy is going on an exchange to France. Part 1 of 2. Producer Gaynor MacFarlane
Sue McGarry talks to Russell Grant. Repeated from Saturday 11.30pm
Poet laureate Ted Hughes reads from his award-winning reworking of Ovid's Metamorphoses. Part 6 of 10. Producer Susan Roberts Repeat