Sapphire buys an evil, magic mirror.
Shown yesterday at 3.40pm on BBC1
The team fly by snow-plane onto a spectacular glacier.
The game show that tests friendships.
Is Sportacus guilty of stealing a birthday cake?
In the garden.
Auntie Mabel explores a wood.
Edie visits a mosque.
Double Date. Michael checks on Claire's boyfriend.
Repeats are not indicated.
10.30 See You, See Me (ages 9-11) 5165944 10.50 BBC Primary History (ages 7-11)
The Forgotten Battlefield. Excavating in Ypres, Belgium.
Westminster updates.
Business news.
Repeats are not indicated.
1.00 What? Where? When? Why?(ages 5-7) Double bill.
Comedy western starring Robert Mitchum and George Kennedy.
Trouble is brewing in the frontier town of Progress, but nobody listens to Marshal Flagg until his old adversary, train robber Big John McKay, arrives in town.
Review page 58. (1969)
(Robert Mitchum stars in The Big Steal, tomorrow at 10.20am)
Revealing the unlikely life story of Castle Howard's architect
John Vanbrugh.
2/10. The allotment inspector visits the Highgate site.
James Tanner and Paul Rankin don their aprons.
Caustic quiz.
Can today's challengers triumph over the champion know-it-alls? Dermot Murnaghan is the man with the questions.
The celebrity leading ladies talk about the pressure of the competition to host Claudia Winkleman , while judges Bruno Tonioli and Arlene Phillips give their views on the contest so far.
5/6. One Day in May. As the people of Britain celebrate peace on VE Day in 1945, a housewife tells of her missing husband, a German soldier imprisoned in Essex speaks out and a rebellious young girl from Norfolk gives her thoughts. Producer Patrick McGrady ; Series producer Ian Cundall
First shown on BBC1 East
The Britons. A whistle-stop tour of ancient British technology, from the 700,000-year-old hand axe recently unearthed in Norfolk, via Stonehenge's impressive architecture to the invention of the chariot. Presented by Adam Hart-Davis .
Series producer Ian Potts Postponed from Tuesday 4 October
(Revised repeat)
With Jeremy Paxman.
John Freeman interviews the broadcaster, chairman of the Brains Trust and outspoken 'What's My Line' panellist Gilbert Harding.(1960) Show more
A Storyville portrait of the iconic war photographer, heralded as the pre-eminent documentarian of the 20th century, who photographed five epic conflicts on three continents - all in the 40 short years of his life. Director Anne Makepeace ; Series editor Nick Fraser
www.bbcco.uk/learningzone
Schools Repeats are not indicated.
2.00 Languages Quinze Minutes Plus
4.00 Languages Vingt Minutes