Programme Index

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

Story: Clocks and More Clocks
Written and illustrated by Pat Hutchins
Presenters Carol Chell, Michael Scholes

(Repeated on BBC1 at 4.0 pm)
(Colour)

Contributors

Presenter:
Carol Chell
Presenter:
Michael Scholes
Author/Illustrator (Clocks and More Clocks):
Pat Hutchins
Pianist:
Harry Hayward
Percussionist:
Alan Grahame
Designer:
Mary Spencer
Scriptwriter:
Zennia Esterson
Director:
Barbara Deenan
Producer:
Anne Gobey
Executive Producer:
Cynthia Felgate

The images around us: Where do they come from? How do they affect us?
A series of five programmes 4: The Nostalgia Boom
Nostalgia: Escapism? Back to nature? Revivalism? Exoticism? Or Gatsbyisation? Images of nostalgia are discussed by experts inside and outside the business of selling. Join in the search for London's Gatsby Girl....
Director TERRY DOYLE
Producer TONY Roberts

Contributors

Director:
Terry Doyle
Producer:
Tony Roberts

Sun Pictures
In the early 1840s, HIPPOLYTE BAYARD in Paris, and D. o. HILL and ROBERT ADAMSON in Edinburgh, were to raise photography to the level of art.
Narrated by BRIAN COE Quotations spoken by ANDREW FAULDS , SHEILA RAYNOB and JOHN LEESON
Series adviser AARON SCHARF
RostTum cameraman IVOR RICHARDSON Film cameramen
PETER SAWGENT , RAYMOND CROSJEAN Film editor ALAN J. CUMNER-PRICE Producer ANN TURNER

Contributors

Unknown:
Hippolyte Bayard
Unknown:
D. O. Hill
Unknown:
Robert Adamson
Unknown:
Brian Coe
Spoken By:
Andrew Faulds
Spoken By:
Sheila Raynob
Spoken By:
John Leeson
Unknown:
Aaron Scharf
Unknown:
Ivor Richardson
Unknown:
Peter Sawgent
Unknown:
Raymond Crosjean
Editor:
Alan J.

Kiwi TV
Television in New Zealand is 14 years old and is just about to get its second channel. For the Kiwis this doesn't just mean more choice, it also means more home-grown programmes. Tonight's Worldwide looks at the sort of TV the New Zealanders are producing themselves.
Introduced by Frank Gillard
Producer MARYSE ADDISON

Contributors

Introduced By:
Frank Gillard
Producer:
Maryse Addison

Champions of Crown Green
Bowling compete for the BBC2 Masters Trophy Alan Powell
(Warwick and Worcester) v
Joe Stanway (Potteries)
Powell, with 56 consecutive county appearances to his credit, must be favourite in this all-Midlands clash.
Introduced by STUART HALL from the green of the Waterloo Hotel, Blackpool
Commentator HARRY RIGBY
Producer RAY LAKELAND

Contributors

Introduced By:
Stuart Hall
Commentator:
Harry Rigby

Seeking the Bubbles by RAY LAWLER with Peter Egan as Millais Bernard Lloyd as Holman Hunt
The two lifelong painter friends -Hunt with his 'Light of the World' and Millais with his ' Bubbles ' - were the most successful of their generation. Were they successful in their own eyes?
Costumes RITA REEKIE Make-up EILEEN MAIR
Designer STUART WALKER Producer ROSEMARY HILL Director PIERS HAGGARD

Contributors

Unknown:
Ray Lawler
Unknown:
Peter Egan
Unknown:
Bernard Lloyd
Unknown:
Rita Reekie
Unknown:
Eileen Mair
Designer:
Stuart Walker
Producer:
Rosemary Hill
Director:
Piers Haggard
Frederick Stephens:
David Troughton
Effie Millais:
Anne Kidd
Thomas Woolner:
Gareth Hunt
Thomas Combe:
Desmond Llewelyn
Annie Miller:
Sheila White
John Ruskin:
David Collings
Queen Victoria:
Christine Ozanne
Edith Waugh:
Jennifer Armitage
Mrs Waugh:
Patricia Moore
Fanny Waugh:
Angela Morant
Alice Waugh:
Anne Rutter
Mr Gladstone:
Harold Goldblatt
Attendant at Grosvenor Gallery:
Jack Lambert
an older womanEdith,:
Daphne Newton
Cathedral visitor:
James Garbutt

Introduced by William Hardcastle A weekly look at the television world.
In Vision examines the programmes, talks to the stars and looks at the stories behind the screen.
Producer FRANCES WHITAKER Editor WILL WYATT

Contributors

Introduced By:
William Hardcastle
Producer:
Frances Whitaker
Editor:
Will Wyatt

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