Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,128 playable programmes from the BBC

Introduced by Jeanne Heal.

I'd like you to meet...
Madge Garland, Professor of Fashion at the Royal College of Art

Photography
Expert advice from J. Allan Cash F.I.B.P., F.R.P.S., for the amateur photographer.

Home or Away
Edward Craven Walker talks about exchange holidays abroad.

Music
Kyla Greenbaum plays the piano.

Contributors

Presenter:
Jeanne Heal
Speaker (I'd like you to meet...):
Madge Garland
Item presenter (Photography):
J. Allan Cash
Item presenter (Home or Away):
Edward Craven Walker
Pianist (Music):
Kyla Greenbaum
Editor:
Jacqueline Kennish
Producer:
S. E. Reynolds

A series written for television in four parts by Barbara Euphan Todd.
The action takes place in and around Scatterbrook Farm.

Contributors

Writer:
Barbara Euphan Todd
Settings designed by:
Stephen Taylor
Producer:
Pamela Brown
Worzel Gummidge:
Frank Atkinson
Earthy Mangold:
Mabel Constanduros
Penny:
Carole Olver
Andrew:
David Coote
Mrs. Braithewaite:
Margaret Boyd
Mrs. Bloomsbury-Barton:
Janet Joye
Aunt Sally:
Totti Truman-Taylor
Shirley Morgan:
Alanna Boyce

Temple Newsam, housing many treasures and furnished as befits a great and historic country house, now belongs to the people of Leeds, and their trams run out of the city and up to the gates.
Viewers are invited to make this journey and look round with Philip Robinson and Ernest Musgrave, the Director.
See 'Television Diary,' page 15

Contributors

Presenter:
Philip Robinson
Co-presenter:
Ernest Musgrave
Presented by:
Derek Burrell-Davis

or 'The Intruder'
by Francois Mauriac
Translated by Basil Bartlett
[Starring] Eileen Peel and Peter Cushing
Scene: The country house of Marcelle de Barthas in Les Landes, France
(Previously televised on December 9, 1952)

The success of Asmodee when it was first televised last December was not altogether surprising, since it is an intimate play, well suited to the medium. It was first produced in Paris before the war at the Comedie Francaise, where, in spite of excellent acting, it was rather overwhelmed by the size of the stage. The tiny Gate Theatre, Charing Cross, where it was first seen in London, suited it in some ways better. Indeed Francois Mauriac himself, after visiting the Gate, remarked: "Enfin j'ai retrouve ma piece." The television screen, which is the smallest stage in the world, is perhaps the ideal setting for a play of this kind, dealing, at it does, with the emotional impact on each other of a handful of people.
The title refers to the devil 'Asmodee,' who is reputed to take the roofs off houses and disturb the occupants. In Mauriac's play 'Asmodee' is represented by a young Englishman, Harry Fanning, who comes to stay au pair with a French family living not far from Bordeaux. He falls in love with the daughter of the house, the saintlike Emmy, and both she and her mother, Marcelle de Barthas, fall in love with him. The play is concerned with Emmy's religious scruples, with her mother's jealousy, above all with the twisted mind of the tutor, Blaise Lebel, one of the most fascinating characters in the modern theatre, who himself loves Marcelle with a love half servile, half domineering. Minor parts are played by an anguished Mademoiselle and a wise, tolerant priest.
Asmodee consists mainly of duologues, cunningly strung together. It is a passionate play, written with a bitter pen by a master of prose who has a terrifying gift of penetrating deep into the recesses of the human heart.
Francois Mauriac, who is best known in this country for his novels, was recently awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Asmodee was his first play.
(Basil Bartlett)

[Photo caption] The tutor Blaise Lebel (Peter Cushing) confronts Marcelle (Eileen Peel) who comforts the saintlike Emmy (Elizabeth Henson).

Contributors

Author:
Francois Mauriac
Translated by:
Basil Bartlett
Producer:
Harold Clayton
Settings:
Richard Wilmot
Marcelle de Berthas:
Eileen Peel
Emmanuele:
Elizabeth Henson
Mademoiselle:
Maureen Pryor
Blaise Lebel:
Peter Cushing
Harry Fanning:
Michael Meacham
The Cure:
J. Leslie Frith
Jacques:
Francis Drake
Anne:
Barbara Brown
Jean:
Anthony Lang
Chauffeur:
Harry Hearne

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