Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,943 playable programmes from the BBC

Geoffrey Gilbert (flute)
David Martin (violin)
James Whitehead (cello) Frederick Stone (piano)
James Ching (piano)
Viola Sonata in G
Partita in A minor, for piano
Trio-Sonata in C minor, for flute, violin, cello, and piano (The Musical Offering)

Contributors

Flute:
Geoffrey Gilbert
Violin:
David Martin
Cello:
James Whitehead
Piano:
Frederick Stone
Piano:
James Ching
Piano:
Viola Sonata

by Max Beerbohm
Adapted for broadcasting and produced by Douglas Cleverdon Music arranged and conducted by Alan Rawsthorne

Contributors

Unknown:
Max Beerbohm
Produced By:
Douglas Cleverdon
Conducted By:
Alan Rawsthorne
Lord George Hell:
Raymond Lovell
Jenny Mere:
Deborah Kerr
La Signora Gambogi:
Violet Marquesita
The Duchess of Cheel:
Martita Hunt
Lady Lavinia:
Cherry Cottrell
Captain Tarleton:
Deryck Guyler
Garble:
Esm6 Percy
Mr Aeneas, the mask-maker:
Miles Malleson
Fitzroy:
Roger Snowdon
The merry dwarf:
Mar Jorie Westbury
The old woodman:
T Hannam Clark
The Prince Regent:
Bryan Powley
The Narrator:
James McKechnie

v Rose Macaulay, whose special interest in radio is possibly less well known than her writings, is following Cecil McGivern and Professor Andrade as one of the independent critics who are being invited to criticise the dramatic and feature productions in the Third Programme
In this, the first three talks, she deals principally with ' The Canterbury Tales' and ' A Garland of Beards '

Contributors

Unknown:
Cecil McGivern

Edited by Anthony Lewis
7-Elizabethan Music for voices and strings
Margaret Field-Hyde (soprano)
Rene Soames (tenor)
Aeolian String Quartet:
Max Salpeter (violin), Colin Sauer (violin), Watson Forbes (viola), John Moore (cello) and David Martin (violin)

Contributors

Edited By:
Anthony Lewis
Soprano:
Margaret Field-Hyde
Tenor:
Rene Soames
Violin:
Max Salpeter
Violin:
Colin Sauer
Violin:
Watson Forbes
Viola:
John Moore
Viola:
David Martin

Third Programme

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