Programme Index

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

Story: Splodges
Written and illustrated by MALCOLM CARRICK Presenters
Elizabeth Millbank, Johnny Ball
Designer DAVID BUCKINGHAM Script writer ANNE DENEHY
Production PETER WILTSHIRE
Executive producer CYNTHIA FELGATE
Book, Play School: Ready to Play, £1.50, from' bookshops. Play On (record REC
332, cassette ZCM 332); Bang on a Drum, songs from Play School and Play Away (record REC 242, cassette MRMC 004), from record shops

Contributors

Unknown:
Johnny Ball
Designer:
David Buckingham
Unknown:
Anne Denehy
Unknown:
Peter Wiltshire
Producer:
Cynthia Felgate

The Cornhill Insurance Test Series
England v West Indies from Headingley First day
PETER WEST introduces live coverage of this afternoon's play.
Commentators RICHIE BENAUD , JIM LAKER , TED DEXTER , TOM GRAVENEY , TONY COZIER

Contributors

Introduces:
Peter West
Commentators:
Richie Benaud
Commentators:
Jim Laker
Unknown:
Ted Dexter
Unknown:
Tom Graveney

Secrets
Lucy's mother Valene again defies J.R. and returns to Dallas - only to receive a distressingly hostile reception from her daughter. And Pamela, still keeping the dreadful secret of her father's genetic disease, is due for an even more frightening shock.
Written and directed by LEONARD KATZMAN

Contributors

Directed By:
Leonard Katzman

The first in a series of four programmes featuring some of the finest model makers and collectors. This week: Miniature Furniture
We meet Denis Hillman in Sussex who is probably the finest miniature furniture maker in the world. Presenter ERIC THOMSON
Producer PAUL SMITH BBC Bristol

Contributors

Unknown:
Denis Hillman
Producer:
Paul Smith

Encounter with Jupiter
NASA's two robot spacecraft, Voyager I and II, are making one of the most remarkable voyages of discovery ever. They are en route through the solar system, skimming past the vast alien worlds of the giant outer planets. They have already encountered Jupiter and its moons and sent back 33,000 TV pictures.
Narrated by MARTIN JARVIS
A spectacular Horizon (DAILY TELEGRAPH) Editor SIMON CAMPBELL-JONES
Written and produced by FISHER DIKE (Kepeat)

Contributors

Unknown:
Martin Jarvis
Produced By:
Fisher Dike

A duel of words and wit between Arthur Marshall
Gillian Miles , Edward Blishen and Frank Muir
Kate Coleridge , Andrew Sachs Referee Robert Robinson
Call My Bluff devised by MARK GOODSON and BILL TODMAH Director ALAN BELL
Producer JOHNNY DOWNES

Contributors

Unknown:
Arthur Marshall
Unknown:
Gillian Miles
Unknown:
Edward Blishen
Unknown:
Frank Muir
Unknown:
Kate Coleridge
Unknown:
Mark Goodson
Unknown:
Bill Todmah
Director:
Alan Bell
Producer:
Johnny Downes

The last in a series of five documentary films on topical subjects.

Could brothels ever become legal in Britain? As a Home Office Committee study the possibility of changes in the law on prostitution, the City Fathers of Southampton, faced with a nest of legally untouchable prostitutes in the notorious Derby Road, agonise publicly over the ethics of a council-run brothel. In this story of Southampton's battle with its own conscience, the council considers other systems of control in the Western World.

Inside Story examines too the alternative - roaming the streets of Soho, the red-light areas of The Hague, and brothels in Nevada and on the infamous Reeperbahn in Hamburg, talking to policemen, prostitutes and pimps.

Although denounced from pulpit and bench, the prostitute continues to ply her trade. Hers is indeed the oldest profession, for she seems to fill some deep social and biological need.

Contributors

Film Cameraman:
Jim Peirson
Film Recordist:
Ron Keightley
Film Editor:
Howard Billingham
Producer:
Roger Mills

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