Programme Index

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2: A New Heaven, a New Earth: The Tudor Renaissance Written and narrated by Roy Strong
The Tudor and Elizabethan age was a period of great social turmoil and architectural richness. In this film ROY STRONG, director of the Victoria and Albert Museum , shows how those twin upheavals in English life, the Reformation and the Renaissance, were reflected in architecture.
Title music by SIR ARTHUR BLISS Series producer JOHN DRUMMOND
Producer DAVID CHESHIRE
Book (same title), £7.00 from bookshops

Contributors

Unknown:
Roy Strong
Unknown:
Albert Museum
Music By:
Sir Arthur Bliss
Producer:
John Drummond
Producer:
David Cheshire

between Frank Muir
Gabrielle Drake , Russell Harty and Patrick Campbell
Nanette Newman , Patrick Mower Referee Robert Robinson
Devised by MARK GOODSON and BILL TODMAN Director MICHAEL GOODWIN Producer JOHNNY DOWNES

Contributors

Unknown:
Frank Muir
Unknown:
Gabrielle Drake
Unknown:
Russell Harty
Unknown:
Patrick Campbell
Unknown:
Nanette Newman
Unknown:
Patrick Mower
Unknown:
Robert Robinson
Unknown:
Mark Goodson
Unknown:
Bill Todman
Director:
Michael Goodwin
Producer:
Johnny Downes

Investigates, Discovers, Questions with Jeremy James
Jeanne la Chard , Jack Pizzey
Nick Ross , Harold Williamson
Producers TOM CONWAY , JULIAN COOPER IVOR DUNKERTON , DAVID FILKIN HARRY WEISBLOOM
Editor MICHAEL LATHAM

Contributors

Unknown:
Jeremy James
Unknown:
Jeanne La Chard
Unknown:
Jack Pizzey
Unknown:
Nick Ross
Unknown:
Harold Williamson
Producers:
Tom Conway
Producers:
Julian Cooper
Producers:
Ivor Dunkerton
Producers:
David Filkin
Unknown:
Harry Weisbloom
Editor:
Michael Latham

The fifth of 14 comedy programmes starring Valerie Harper with Nancy Walker , David Groh Julie Kavner , Harold Gould
What do you think it's there for?

Contributors

Unknown:
Valerie Harper
Unknown:
Nancy Walker
Unknown:
David Groh
Unknown:
Julie Kavner
Unknown:
Harold Gould

Here to stay? A passing vogue? Who does it satisfy? Who wants it anyway? What next?
Last Saturday's Open Door was the 100th programme in the BBC series in which people make television. Content and editorial control comes from the groups making the programmes; the BBC's role is to act as midwife.
Tonight David Jessel looks at the origins of access television, its achievements and developments in the USA, Canada, Australia and Europe, and chairs a discussion on the way ahead.
Producer FRANCES WHITAKER

Contributors

Producer:
Frances Whitaker

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