Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,372 playable programmes from the BBC

Tony Hart, Pat Keysell and Ben Benison including The Prof also Burbles, Mr Blue and Cuckoo, Humphrey Umbrage and Susanne

(Send a painting for the 'Gallery' to 'Vision On.' [address removed]. We are sorry we cannot return them, but there is a prize for any shown)
(Colour)

Contributors

Artist/Presenter:
Tony Hart
Presenter:
Pat Keysell
Mime:
Ben Benison
Designer:
John Bone
Director:
Clive Doig
Producer:
Patrick Dowling

More items of interest, information and investigation for collectors about collecting.
This week's subjects include:

A Special Exhibition: Arthur Negus looks at some of the antique treasures brought from all over Europe to Olympia for a special display to mark the 50th Ideal Home Exhibition.

Naive Paintings: In general, English primitive paintings have been ignored by collectors - a situation which is not likely to continue. Hungarian Andras Kalman believes it takes a foreigner to appreciate the 'Englishness of English Art.' His collection admirably demonstrates this belief.

Arthur Negus answers viewers' questions
Hugh Scully introduces the programme

(from Bristol)

Contributors

Presenter:
Hugh Scully
Reporter (A Special Exhibition)/Expert:
Arthur Negus
Subject (Naive Paintings):
Andras Kalman
Director:
Robin Drake
Director:
Paul Smith
Producer:
John King

Cliff Michelmore introduces the first of three programmes about ships, boats, and the sea.

Tonight: Ocean Racing
The Admiral's Cup, the most coveted prize in ocean racing, was awarded in 1971 to a British team led by Mr Edward Heath in his yacht Morning Cloud. This summer, at Cowes Week, the world's best crews line up against each other once again to contest this world championship of ocean racing. Will the trophy stay in Britain? The Prime Minister's sailing-master Owen Parker says why he believes Mr Heath will win again.
On the spectacular 600-mile race from Sydney to Hobart, Bob Fisher follows the three Australian yachts chosen for the Admiral's Cup and weighs up their chances over here.
And at Cowes and Lymington, boat-builders Wilfred Souter and David May take the covers off some of their Admiral's Cup contenders for 1973.
(People: page 4)

Contributors

Presenter:
Cliff Michelmore
Interviewee:
Owen Parker
Reporter:
Bob Fisher
Expert:
Wilfred Souter
Expert:
David May
Director:
Tony Salmon
Director:
Peter Cleaver
Editor:
Brian Robins

BBC2 Snooker Competition
Tonight from the League of Champions: Fred Davis makes his first appearance in this series for the 1973 Championship v John Pulman, needing a win here to compensate for his defeat by Alex Higgins.
The first meeting in this competition between two players who monopolised the World Professional Championship for 20 years.
Introduced by Alan Weeks
(From Birmingham)

Contributors

Presenter:
Alan Weeks
Snooker player:
Fred Davis
Snooker player:
John Pulman
Referee:
Sydney Lee
Commentator:
Ted Lowe
Director:
Jim Dumighan
Producer:
Reg Perrin

by Seiji Hoshikawa
The first of a short season of television dramas from abroad.

Awarded the 1972 Italia Prize for Drama, this production from Japan is a portrait of one of that country's most famous artists-Hokusai, the eccentric genius of the art of Ukiyoe, wood block painting.
A production of Mainichi Broadcasting System, Osaka

Contributors

Writer:
Seiji Hoshikawa
Director:
Hiroyasu Segi
Hokusai:
Rentaro Mikuni
Oei, his daughter:
Mariko Okada
Tominosuke, his son:
Masakazu Tamura
Bakin:
Kan-Emon Nakamura
Tsutaya:
Masaya Takahashi
Bakin's wife:
Kayoko Matsui

Tonight Linda Blandford and Gordon Snell report on an exorcism and a haunted hotel, and on the search for a missing policeman by a dowser who didn't find him and a medium who did...
(From Bristol)

Contributors

Reporter:
Linda Blandford
Reporter:
Gordon Snell
Executive Producer:
John King
Producer:
Anne Owen
Director:
Colin Godman

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