Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,776 playable programmes from the BBC

Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player play The Final Round of their $50,000 stroke-play competition at Naruo Golf Club.
$25,000 for the winner $15,000 for second $10,000 for third
Produced in Japan by the Tokyo Broadcasting System

Last time the Big Three played a fifty-four-hole tournament on television it ended, astonishingly, in a three-way tie. The odds are obviously against a repetition in this Japanese event, but a close and exciting final round seems certain tonight.
The pine-lined Inagawa course of the Naruo Club is near Osaka. It measures 6,740 yards, par 70, and should provide a test both stern and beautiful for Palmer, Nicklaus, and Player.
(Colour)

Contributors

Golfer:
Arnold Palmer
Golfer:
Jack Nicklaus
Golfer:
Gary Player
Commentator:
Henry Longhurst

The international singing star from Greece in the first of a new series of six programmes accompanied by The Athenians and with her special guest, John Williams.
(Colour)

Contributors

Singer:
Nana Mouskouri
Musicians:
The Athenians
Guitarist:
John Williams
Design:
David Chandler
Production:
Yvonne Littlewood

by Emile Zola
Dramatised in five parts by Robert Muller

Nana fell in love with Fontan but was rejected by him. She was at the nadir of degradation when she met Count Muffat again.
(Colour)

Contributors

Author:
Emile Zola
Dramatised by:
Robert Muller
Script Editor:
Lennox Phillips
Designer:
Susan Spence
Producer:
David Conroy
Director:
John Davies
Bordenave:
Barry Linehan
Fauchery:
Roland Curram
Simonne Cabiroche:
Jenifer Armitage
Fontan:
Alan Browning
Rose Mignon:
Sheila Brennan
Nana:
Katharine Schofield
Labordette:
John Ringham
Prulliere:
Clifford Parrish
Barillot:
Ian Fairbairn
Auguste Mignon:
John Turner
Count Muffat:
Freddie Jones
Vandeuvres:
Donald Burton
Julien:
Arnold Peters
Zoe:
Josie Kidd
Georges Hugon:
Peter Craze
Laure:
Nancy Gabrielle
Satin:
Angela Morant
Lucy Stewart:
Mary Mitchell
Daguenet:
Eric Flynn
Queen Pomare:
Beatrice Greeke

Tomorrow the vast temples of Abu Simbel - now safe above the rising waters of the Nile - are to be opened again to the public.
The threatened temples were sawn into pieces, transported up the cliff and rebuilt in a five-year operation that used the skills of an international team of archaeologists, engineers, and workmen. Magnus Magnusson, from its new site, tells the story of a unique achievement - the rebirth of Abu Simbel.
(Colour)

Contributors

Presenter:
Magnus Magnusson
Director:
Julia Cave
Producer:
Paul Johnstone

The weekly arts magazine.

Exit the Lord Chamberlain
After hundreds of years as censor of plays, fraught with ridicule, embarrassment, and absurdity, the Lord Chamberlain is finally to be relieved of this job next Thursday.
Release examines the current position of censorship in the arts.

The Bauhaus Story
The most important experiment in design education in this century is the subject of the Royal Academy exhibition opening today. The influence of Walter Gropius, the school's founder, and fellow architects Marcel Breuer and Mies van der Rohe is worldwide and still unsurpassed.

(Colour)

Contributors

Director (Exit the Lord Chamberlain):
Gavin Millar
Producer:
Colin Nears
Producer:
Darrol Blake
Editor:
Lorna Pegram

Starring Kirk Douglas, E.G. Marshall, Christine Kaufmann

The burgomaster of a small German town demands the death penalty when four G.I.s are accused of molesting a young girl. However, the Defence Attorney, Major Steve Garrett, feels that there are extenuating circumstances. The girl's own testimony is crucial.

Contributors

Screenplay:
Silvia Reinhardt
Screenplay:
Georg Hurdalek
Based on a novel by:
Manfred Gregor
Produced and directed by:
Gottfried Reinhardt
Major Steve Garrett:
Kirk Douglas
Major Jerome Pakenham:
E.G. Marshall
Karin:
Christine Kaufmann
Inge:
Barbara Rutting
Herr Steinhof:
Hans Nielsen
Frank Borgmann:
Gerhart Lippert
Jim:
Robert Blake
Bidie:
Richard Jaeckel
Chuck:
Frank Sutton
Joey:
Mal Sondock

BBC Two England

About BBC Two

BBC Two is a lively channel of depth and substance, carrying a range of knowledge-building programming complemented by great drama, comedy and arts.

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