Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 280,381 playable programmes from the BBC

The final day of the meeting
2.30 The Seabeach Maiden Fillies' Stakes (7f)
3.0 The Selhurst Park Handicap (Old Mile)
3.30 The Lupe Stakes dim)
Last year this important Oaks trial was won by Vielle, who went on to finish a narrowly beaten second at Epsom.
4.0 The Mortar Mill H'cap (Urn) Introduced by JULIAN WILSON
Commentators PETER O'SULLEVAN
JIMMY LINDLEY , JOHN HANMER
Television presentation KEITH PHILLIPS

Contributors

Introduced By:
Julian Wilson
Commentators:
Peter O'Sullevan
Unknown:
Jimmy Lindley
Unknown:
John Hanmer
Unknown:
Keith Phillips

The second of two illustrated extravaganzas by PETER TINNISWOOD The Congo Affair
Told by ROBIN BAILEY
Mr Robin Bailey 's magic lantern slide lectures end with an account of the mcc's first and only tour of the Belgian Congo. Wisden's Almanac gives only the sketchiest outline of this landmark in the history of the 20th century.
Tonight we learn the inside story of a tour whose ramifications are felt to this day wherever cricket is played.
Director BOB BLAGDEN
Producer TONY LARYEA

Contributors

Unknown:
Peter Tinniswood
Told By:
Robin Bailey
Told By:
Mr Robin Bailey
Director:
Bob Blagden
Producer:
Tony Laryea

A third series of ten programmes presented by DELIA SMITH Barbecues and Picnics
Nothing encourages the appetite as much as the prospect of eating out of doors. In this programme Delia Smith , with her husband Michael, demonstrates the art of successful barbecuing and also shows a wide variety of delicious foods suitable for taking on picnics.
Director JENNY STEVENS Producer PETER RIDING
COOKERY COURSE: 3 - page 81

Contributors

Presented By:
Delia Smith
Unknown:
Delia Smith
Director:
Jenny Stevens

The second of seven major interviews with leading British politicians. This week Robert McKenzie talks to The Rt Hon Enoch Powell , MP, about his political philosophy and beliefs. How were his ideas formed? What events and people influenced and changed them? And what is their relevance to Britain now and in the future?
Director TAM FRY
Producer JAMES HOGAN
Executive producer PETER IBOTSON

Contributors

Talks:
Robert McKenzie
Unknown:
Enoch Powell
Producer:
James Hogan
Producer:
Peter Ibotson

by STEPHEN DAVIS
A film about Andrei Sakharov
Inside the secret heart of the Soviet Nuclear Weapons Research Programme a most brilliant and successful young scientist begins to have doubts about the safety of atmospheric testing. So starts the dangerous and remarkable journey of Andrei Sakharov from the pinnacle of Russian society, through growing conflict with a menacing and inflexible bureaucracy. to the moral leadership of a new class of Soviet intelligentsia - the dissidents. It is the story of a personality as strong and forceful as that of Khrushchev, with whom he clashes, and of a vivid and inventive imagination taken over by nightmarish apprehensions for the future of mankind-now armed with his own invention, the hydrogen fusion bomb.
Photography DAVID FEIG Visual effects designer COLIN MAPSON
Film editor JIM LATHAM
Designer HUMPHREY JAEGER Producer MICK JACKSON

Contributors

Unknown:
Stephen Davis
Unknown:
Andrei Sakharov
Unknown:
Andrei Sakharov
Designer:
Colin Mapson
Editor:
Jim Latham
Designer:
Humphrey Jaeger
Producer:
Mick Jackson
Andrei Sakharov:
John Shrapnel
Mikhail Malyarov:
Wolfe Morris
Nikita Khrushchev:
Brian Glover
Yelena Bonner:
Anna Quayle
Igor Kurchatov:
John Franklyn-Robbins
Zhores Medvedev:
Denis Lawson
Igor Tamm:
Patrick Holt
Yefim Slavski:
Kenneth Keeling
Sakharov's driver:
Peter Craze
Head of Security:
Ray Roberts
Institute director:
Seymour Green
Prosecutor's assistant:
David Allister
Klavdia Sakharov:
Maggie Petersen
T D Lysenko:
Alec Mango
G I Gusev:
Malcolm Hayes
G I Gusev:
Malcolm Hayes
Scientist:
John Baker
Colonel:
Matthew Scurfield

investigates, discovers, questions
This week: Trouble in Paradise
In Switzerland, almost every mp is on the board of a bank or a sizeable company, often both.
Jack Pizzey examines connections between the state and big business. An executive of a multinational reports his company to the EEC for breaking its trading laws; he is arrested by the police and imprisoned. An English woman working in Africa buys a Swiss-made medicine banned in the West; she nearly dies. The methods of a baby-food firm selling milk substitute in the Third World break World Health Organisation codes. Could these things happen if the directors of the companies did not sit in board-rooms one day and in parliament the next?
Film editor PETER ORTON Producer ALAN PATIENT Editor TIM SLESSOR

Contributors

Unknown:
Jack Pizzey
Editor:
Peter Orton
Editor:
Tim Slessor

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