Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 283,036 playable programmes from the BBC

(oboe) A programme to celebrate his seventieth birthday with the CARTER STRING TRIO Mary Carter (violin) Anatole Mines (viola)
Eileen McCarthy (cello) and WILFRID PARRY (piano)
The items include
Sonata for oboe and piano
Poulenc and excerpts from works by Bach, Mozart,
Handel Haydn , and Eugene Goossens some of which are on gramophone records

Contributors

Violin:
Mary Carter
Cello:
Eileen McCarthy
Unknown:
Handel Haydn
Unknown:
Eugene Goossens

FIRST TEST MATCH at Headingley, Leeds
The fourth day
Ball-by-ball commentaries by PEARSON SURITA ALAN GIBSON John ARLOTT with comments and summaries by TREVOR BAILEY and NORMAN YARDLEY
11.25-1.35* including lunchtime summary
2.10-4.20* including teatime summary
4.30*-6.35

Contributors

Unknown:
Pearson Surita
Unknown:
Alan Gibson
Unknown:
John Arlott
Unknown:
Trevor Bailey
Unknown:
Norman Yardley

A series of twenty lessons for listeners with a basic knowledge of Spanish
Lesson 13
Introduced by JACINTA CASTILLEJO with the help of PABLO SOTO Script by Maria Victoria Alvarez and Anthony Watson
Produced by George Walton Scott First broadcast January 6. 1966
Repeated: Friday, 7.4 p.m.
A booklet is available

Contributors

Introduced By:
Jacinta Castillejo
Script By:
Maria Victoria Alvarez
Script By:
Anthony Watson
Produced By:
George Walton Scott

1: Unions at Work
Introduced by GEOFFREY STUTTARD Extra-Mural Tutor
University of London
Opinions about Trade Unions are often based more on myth and misinformation than on fact. This first programme of a series of seven looks, without comment, at the actual working of Trade Unions. A stop steward and a trade union General Secretary talk about what happens in their day-to-day jobs. Produced by Chris Cuthbertson
Repeated on Thursday at 7.4 p.m.

Contributors

Introduced By:
Geoffrey Stuttard
Produced By:
Chris Cuthbertson

by DOUGLAS GRANT
Professor of American Studies and Chairman of the School of English in the University of Leeds
Ariadne figured in mosaic. still with a blessing for good fortune above her, lies in the ancient Byzantine city of Cyrene; colonists have come and gone. and through the ancient temples nomads roam. Douglas Grant , travelling from Benghazi to Cyrene. gives his impressions of a recent visit

Contributors

Unknown:
Douglas Grant

Last of four public concerts presented by the Third Programme in the Queen Elizabeth Hall
Amadeus String Quartet Norbert Brainin (violin) Siegmund Nissel (violin) Peter Schidlof (viola) Martin Lovett (cello) with WILLIAM PLEETH (cello)
0 Part 1

Contributors

Unknown:
Queen Elizabeth Hall
Violin:
Norbert Brainin
Viola:
Peter Schidlof
Cello:
Martin Lovett
Cello:
William Pleeth

by JOHN WEEKS
The first of three talks on some architectural developments of current interest
John Weeks , an architect who for many years has taken a special interest in the design of hospitals. considers some of the effects which rapid technical changes may have on the traditional art of architecture A broadcast version of a lecture delivered before London University
The Permanent and Temporary in Architecture by Nicholas Taylor : June 17

Contributors

Unknown:
John Weeks
Unknown:
Nicholas Taylor

by John Milton abridged for radio in thirteen parts by R. D. SMITH Book 9
Reader, MICHEÁL Mac LIAMMOIR
The serpent now grown bolder, with many wiles and arguments induces Eve at length to eat...
Adam at first -amaz'd, but perceiving her lost, resolves through vehemence of love to perish with her ... they seek to cover their nakedness, then fall to variance and accusation of" one another. Second broadcast
Book 10: June 19

Contributors

Unknown:
John Milton
Unknown:
R. D. Smith

Catena for soprano, tenor, and instrumental ensemble
DOROTHY Dorow (soprano) GERALD ENGLISH (tenor)
ENGLISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Led by Kenneth Sillito
Conducted by NORMAN DEL MAR Second broadcast. Part of the Invitation Concert of June 81965

Contributors

Soprano:
Dorothy Dorow
Unknown:
Kenneth Sillito
Conducted By:
Norman Del Mar

Network Three

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