Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,694 playable programmes from the BBC

Just Between Ourselves
with Janet Brown.

Children's Newsreel

All Your Own
A programme in which children from all over Great Britain have been invited to take part.
Introduced by Huw Wheldon.

(Janet Brown is appearing in 'Cinderella' at the New Cross Empire, London)

(to 18.00)

Contributors

Presenter (Just Between Ourselves):
Janet Brown
Presenter (All Your Own):
Huw Wheldon
Music directed by (All Your Own):
Steve Race
Editor (All Your Own):
Cliff Michelmore
Presented by (All Your Own):
Peter Graham Scott

A play by C.E. Webber.
[Starring] John Slater
Second performance: Thursday at 7.30 p.m.

Language, they say, is not what it was. What has happened to the tongue that Shakespeare spake? Does it bear any relation to the clipped and commonplace trivialities of our everyday modern speech? We, the people possessing the most poetic of literatures seem to have come down to speaking the most prosaic of prose. On the other hand, how would it sound if somebody were to start speaking poetry as if it were normal usage while the rest of us went on as before? If, say, a pleasant young clerk like John Parker were to come by an accident that made him speak in nothing but poetic form and language to his fellow-employees, his girlfriend, his family, and those who try to nurse him? That, at any rate, is the situation in this light comedy; for one gift, in this case, is that of the gab. Peter Forster

Contributors

Writer:
C.E. Webber
Producer:
Ian Atkins
Director/setting:
Barry Learoyd
John Parker:
John Slater
Charles Hepworth:
Bryan Forbes
Mr. Braithwaite:
Richard Caldicot
Pauline Wilson:
Jill Fenson
Megan Owen:
Frances Hyland
Dr. Willoughby:
Ian Fleming
Mrs. Parker:
Vi Stevens
Dr. Hantman:
William Devlin
Other parts played by:
Muriel Gleed
Other parts played by:
Clement Lister
Other parts played by:
Joan Marlowe
Other parts played by:
Ann Marriott
Other parts played by:
Anthony Rea
Other parts played by:
John Soort

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