Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,698 playable programmes from the BBC

Introduced by Jeanne Heal.

I'd like you to meet...
Gilbert Harding who explodes some theories about himself.

Introduction to Weaving
William Holt shows how to use a simple hand loom.

Let's Stage a Play: 1: How to choose and cast a play
Alan Sleath, for some years Assistant Director of Technical Courses at the Old Vic Theatre School, explains in a series of four programmes how to run an Amateur Dramatic Society.

Contributors

Presenter:
Jeanne Heal
Speaker (I'd like you to meet...):
Gilbert Harding
Item presenter (Introduction to Weaving):
William Holt
Item presenter (Let's Stage a Play):
Alan Sleath
Editor:
Jacqueline Kennish
Producer:
S. E. Reynolds

by Rudyard Kipling.
Adapted in six weekly episodes by Vera Shepstone.
[Starring] Georgie Wood as Puck
(to 18.00)

Contributors

Author:
Rudyard Kipling
Adapted in six weekly episodes by:
Vera Shepstone
Music composed by:
Kenneth Pakeman
Settings:
Lawrence Broadhouse
Producer:
Matthew Forsyth
Puck:
Georgie Wood
Una:
Carole Lorimer
Dan:
Barry MacGregor
Sir Richard:
John Wyse
Hugh:
John Springett
De Aquila:
Stanley van Beers
Jeihan:
Frederick Victor
Gilbert:
John Roderick
Fulke:
Raymond Rollett
Fulke's son:
John French
A girl:
Elizabeth Prideaux
Her mother:
Lilian Moubrey
A Norman soldier:
Julian Herrington
A Monk:
Gareth Davies

A play written for television by Robert Strevene.
Lionel Hale writes on page 47

Contributors

Writer:
Robert Strevene
Settings:
Frederick Knapman
Producer:
Cleland Finn
Cafe proprietor:
Frank Atkinson
'The Mongoose':
Michael Kingsley
Ted Hoskins:
Geoffrey Bond
Icy:
Stanley Beard
Harry Dukes:
Heron Carvic
Bill King:
John Sharp
Kitty:
Shelagh Fraser
Cora Lane:
Mavis Villiers
Policeman:
William Hitchcock
Brag:
Billy Thatcher
Inspector Jones:
John Bushelle
Barman:
Terence Cook
Insurance representative:
Roy Hannah
Cartwright:
Robert Webber

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