Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,744 playable programmes from the BBC

I'd like you to meet...
Ursula Barnett Potter pilot and authoress tells why she has resolved to fly no more, and how long she thinks her resolution will last.

Bookshelf
E. Arnot Robertson chooses some of the new books she thinks you will enjoy reading.

Home or Away: 2 - Walking Tours

Time for Music
Antony Hopkins talks about Bach, the man and his music, and plays some of his compositions.

Contributors

Speaker (I'd like you to meet...):
Ursula Barnett Potter
Reviewer (Bookshelf):
E. Arnot Robertson
Item presenter/pianist (Time for Music):
Antony Hopkins
Editor:
Jacqueline Kennish
Producer:
S. E. Reynolds

Olive Shapley talks about books.

5.40-6.10 Francis and Juniper
A play by Eric Crozier.
Scene: a square in Assisi

Contributors

Reviewer:
Olive Shapley
Writer (Francis and Juniper):
Eric Crozier
Songs composed by (Francis and Juniper):
James Hartley
Settings (Francis and Juniper):
Lawrence Broadhouse
Producer (Francis and Juniper):
Dorothea Brooking
Francis:
Andrew Downie
Juniper:
Robert Desmond
Quicksilver:
Thomas Conniffe
Merchant:
Jack Howarth
Magistrate:
Howell Davies
Two ancient constables:
Claude Bonser
Two ancient constables:
Arthur Owen
Children:
Judith Russell
Children:
Una Holt
Children:
David Coote

(See top of page)

A new play by Donald Pleasence
Based on the novel by R.L. Stevenson
Television version and production by W.P. Rilla

[Photo captions] Michael Golden plays Captain; Frank Pettingell plays Attwater; Jack Rodney plays Huish; Hugh Burden plays Herrick
Others taking part: Cecile Maurice, Jaron Yaltan, Boscoe Holder, Ben Johnson

The action takes place in Papeete, on board the schooner Farallone, and on an uncharted island in the Pacific

At the opening of Ebb Tide we find three down-and-outs on the beach, at Papeete, in the year 1892. There is Captain Davis, the derelict drunkard; there is Herrick, the young man of family, now gone to seed: and there is the villainous little Cockney, Huish.
They are saved. Out in the harbour lies a schooner, the Farallone, her captain and white crew dead of smallpox, with a cargo of champagne from 'Frisco to Sydney. The Captain is given command; and the ship sails out into the South Seas. And they come to an uncharted island, and its strange, religious-tyrannical owner, Attwater.
Attwater, a pearl-fisher, is also a fisher of souls. Asked what brought him to the South Seas he replies, 'Many things. Youth, curiosity, romance, the love of the sea, and - it will surprise you to learn - an interest in missions. Not the parsonish kind, with roses and church bells and nice old women bobbing in the lanes. My religion is a savage thing - like the universe it illuminates. Savage, cold and bare, but infinitely strong.'
He found the island by accident and 'since then I have had a business, a colony, and a mission of my own. I was a man of the world before I was a Christian, and I am a man of the world still. I made my mission pay. No good ever came of coddling. A man has to stand up in God's sight, and work up to his weight; then I'll talk to him, but not before.'
An oddity of oddities, this elegant and fanatic Attwater, but more than a match for the men who plan to despoil him. Stevenson's dramatic invention was working at full flood in Ebb Tide. (Lionel Hale)

Contributors

Author:
Donald Pleasence
Based on the novel by:
R.L. Stevenson
Television version/Production:
W.P. Rilla
Settings:
by Barry Learoyd
Captain:
Michael Golden
Attwater:
Frank Pettingell
Huish:
Jack Rodney
Herrick:
Hugh Burden
Others taking part:
Cecile Maurice
Others taking part:
Jaron Yaltan
Others taking part:
Boscoe Holder
Others taking part:
Ben Johnson

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