SATURDAY 27 JULY 2024

SAT 19:00 Cricket: Today at the Test (m0021l61)
England v West Indies 2024

Third Test: Day 2 Highlights

Day two highlights from the third Test between England and the West Indies at Edgbaston.


SAT 20:00 Bruce Forsyth and The Generation Game (m0021l63)
Bruce Forsyth hosts a special New Year's Day edition of the classic family game show from 1973. With Anthea Redfern and Ronnie Hazlehurst and his Orchestra.


SAT 20:50 Blankety Blank Classic (m0021l65)
Series 2

Episode 4

Terry Wogan hosts the comedy quiz game in which contestants attempt to match their 'blanks' with Larry Grayson, David Jason, Moira Lister, Pete Murray, Isla St Clair and Barbara Windsor.


SAT 21:25 Blankety Blank Classic (m0021l67)
Wogan's Best of Blankety Blank

Episode 1

Terry Wogan recalls a memorable episode of the celebrity panel game show from 8 February 1979.


SAT 22:00 Bob's Full House (m0021l69)
Series 1

Episode 12

Bob Monkhouse fires the questions in the fast-moving comedy quiz show, where contestants compete for a chance to win a dream holiday.


SAT 22:25 Parkinson (m0021l51)
Duke Ellington

Michael Parkinson's special guest is the great American musician, composer and bandleader Duke Ellington.


SAT 23:30 Mark Lawson Talks To... (b01dpph9)
Terry Wogan

Mark Lawson talks to legendary broadcaster Terry Wogan about his life and 50-year career. In this thoughtful interview Terry explores his early years growing up in Ireland, recalls how the shaky beginnings of Irish television provided him with a great training ground for a career in live broadcast and talks about how, because of his gentle demeanour, he has eluded the censors more than any of his peers.

Wogan made a name for himself as a DJ for Raidió Teilifís Éireann in Ireland in the 1960s. When Irish television started up in 1962, he began his career in front of the camera, transferring across the Irish Sea in 1967 as one of the first DJs for the BBC's new station Radio 1. Loved for his genial charm and cheeky optimism, he has seduced audiences and listeners for over half a century. His stamina and ambition to be a major player in live broadcast continues well into his 70s, as the face of BBC's Children in Need and the front of his ever-popular Radio 2 show.


SAT 00:30 One on One (m001b0dw)
Terry Wogan

Series profiling famous people in show business. Terry Wogan looks back at his entertainment career. Includes archive footage from Wogan, Blankety Blank and the Eurovision Song Contest.


SAT 01:10 Keeping Up Appearances (b007bk0z)
Series 1

Daddy's Accident

The first episode of the comedy series about fastidious housewife Hyacinth Bucket sees Hyacinth's father have a nasty accident with a milk bottle.


SAT 01:40 Butterflies (p00hm2ls)
Series 2

Fox Hunting

Ria is upset when she encounters a fox hunt when out in the country with Ben. She determines to mount a protest.


SAT 02:10 Mark Lawson Talks To... (b01dpph9)
[Repeat of broadcast at 23:30 today]



SUNDAY 28 JULY 2024

SUN 19:00 Cricket: Today at the Test (m0021l4s)
England v West Indies 2024

Third Test: Day 3 Highlights

Day three highlights from the third Test between England and the West Indies at Edgbaston.


SUN 20:00 BBC Proms (m0021l4v)
2024

Sarah Vaughan: Tribute to a Legend at the Proms

Clive Myrie presents a celebration of one of the most iconic voices of the 20th century. Featuring some of the songs that Vaughan brought to fame, including Misty, If You Could See Me Now and Body and Soul.

Sarah, or 'Sassy' as she was known, would have celebrated her 100th birthday this year. Her spellbinding voice defied the boundaries of a single genre, working alongside the likes of Dizzy Gillespie, Count Basie and Michael Tilson Thomas.

Mercury Prize-nominated Guy Barker arranges for and conducts the BBC Concert Orchestra, taking the audience on a journey through Sarah Vaughan’s illustrious career with soloists Marisha Wallace, CHERISE, Lucy-Anne Daniels and Lizz Wright. Clarke Peters performs the role of Sassy collaborator Billy Eckstine.


SUN 21:40 Sarah Vaughan at the BBC (m0021l4x)
The singer Jack Jones once said 'there is no greater tribute in the music business than an affectionate nickname'. Known as Sassy, Sarah Vaughan forged a career across five decades, making a reputation in New York clubs, then combining a highly successful recording career with her outstanding work as a live performer.

Craig Charles leads us through some of her best-known tracks recorded for the BBC on flagship programmes, including Jazz Scene and Music from Montreux to light entertainment staples, appearing with Jack Jones and Cleo Laine.

Once described as ‘the ageless voice of modern jazz', Sarah Vaughan’s sassy interpretations of classic songs, from chart hits like Send in the Clowns to excerpts from South Pacific, will thrill anyone with a love for her music.


SUN 23:00 Jazz Ship (m0021l4z)
The SS Rotterdam, the third biggest passenger liner in the world (in 1975), leaves New York bound for the Caribbean sunshine with some of the greatest names in jazz aboard.

Featuring performances by Lionel Hampton and his Orchestra, The Cannonball Adderley Quintet, Count Basie and his Orchestra, Sarah Vaughan and her Trio and Joe Williams.


SUN 23:55 Oscar Peterson: Words and Music (b008wdpp)
Series 1

Count Basie and Joe Pass

Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson is joined by guests Count Basie and his Orchestra and Joe Pass for conversation and music.


SUN 00:40 Show of the Week (b00g81g9)
Count Basie

A 1965 concert by Count Basie, with guitarist Freddie Green, drummer Rufus 'Speedy' Jones, trombonist Al Grey and saxophonist Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis.


SUN 01:25 Parkinson (m0021l51)
[Repeat of broadcast at 22:25 on Saturday]


SUN 02:30 Sarah Vaughan at the BBC (m0021l4x)
[Repeat of broadcast at 21:40 today]



MONDAY 29 JULY 2024

MON 19:00 Cricket: Today at the Test (m0021l4g)
England v West Indies 2024

Third Test: Day 4 Highlights

Day four highlights from the third Test between England and the West Indies at Edgbaston.


MON 20:00 Art of France (b08d7qlq)
Series 1

There Will Be Blood

Andrew Graham-Dixon explores how art in France took a dramatic turn following the French Revolution that ushered in a bold new world. From the execution of King Louis XVI and the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte - a figure who simultaneously repelled and inspired artists of his time - through to the rise of Romanticism and an art of seduction, sex and high drama, Andrew explores artists including Jacques-Louis David - whose art appeared on the barricades and in the streets - as well as the work of Delacroix, Ingres and the tragic but brilliant Theodore Gericault.


MON 21:00 Eiffel Tower: Building the Impossible (m0021l4j)
A majestic presence, towering over Paris for more than 130 years, the Eiffel Tower is an iconic symbol of 19th-century progress and grandeur. When it was built for the 1889 Paris world’s fair, its creator, Gustave Eiffel, was at the height of his fame and ready to take on the dream of every engineer and architect - to build the world’s tallest man-made structure. He had just two years, two months and five days to erect his 300-metre iron colossus. Drawing on three decades of civil engineering innovation and works across the globe, Eiffel, a magician of iron building, was perfectly poised for this extraordinary feat.


MON 22:00 Paris (m000rgmx)
Series 1

Blood and Chocolate

Art historian Sandrine Voillet continues her history of Paris, from its origins on a small island in the River Seine to its emergence as a hotbed of revolution. It is a story of elegant squares and romantic bridges, mean streets and sexual excess, cafes and conversation, chocolate and high fashion, guillotines and liberty.

In this episode, Sandrine meets top fashion designer Christian Lacroix, leading porn star Ovidie and rebel rap band Sniper.

An interactive service is available for digital viewers to brush up on their language skills and hear the entire programme in French.


MON 23:00 How to Build a Cathedral (b00b09rb)
The great cathedrals were the wonders of the medieval world - the tallest buildings since the pyramids and the showpieces of medieval Christianity. Yet they were built at a time when most of us lived in hovels. Architectural historian Jon Cannon explores who the people were that built them and how they were able to achieve such a bold vision.


MON 00:00 Art on the BBC (m0013mb3)
Series 2

Monet - The French Revolutionary

Art historian Katy Hessel examines six decades of BBC archive to create a television history of Claude Monet.

Monet is known as the father of impressionism, the movement that arguably kick-started modern western art. But his work has become so commercialised – used on everything from chocolate boxes to wastepaper bins – that most of us have little sense of how radical an artist he really was.

Now, by delving deep in the BBC archives, Katy rediscovers Monet as an artist driven by a burning ambition to relentlessly reinvent his technique and reshape art again and again. Katy learns how Monet set impressionism alight, a movement that shocked and confused the public and critics alike, created his series paintings in an extraordinarily ambitious attempt to capture the nature of time, and would go on to influence America’s mid-century artistic revolutionaries such as Jackson Pollock.

The subject of Monet has fascinated many of the BBC’s greatest programme-making talents. We meet Monet portrayed by Richard Armitage as a strapping, young firebrand thumbing his nose at the art establishment in a 2006 costume drama romp, while Andrew Graham-Dixon and Waldemar Januszczak investigate the unexpected and electrifying impact of the modern industrial world on an artist synonymous with pastoral poppy fields and idyllic river scenes. In contrast, Simon Schama opens up Monet’s story with a deep investigation of the dazzling influence of Japanese art on his work, while Robert Hughes takes us on a breathtaking journey through Monet’s extraordinary gardens at Giverny.


MON 01:00 Eiffel Tower: Building the Impossible (m0021l4j)
[Repeat of broadcast at 21:00 today]


MON 02:00 Private Life of a Masterpiece (m000xw49)
Series 3

The Kiss

Auguste Rodin's The Kiss has had a more colourful life than most sculptures. At the time of its conception 100 years ago, the intertwined lovers' erotically charged embrace was seen as dangerous. Now housed in London's Tate Modern, The Kiss's byzantine history is told in this documentary.


MON 02:50 Art of France (b08d7qlq)
[Repeat of broadcast at 20:00 today]



TUESDAY 30 JULY 2024

TUE 19:00 Cricket: Today at the Test (m0021l5s)
England v West Indies 2024

Third Test: Day 5 Highlights

Day five highlights from the third Test between England and the West Indies at Edgbaston.


TUE 20:00 Keeping Up Appearances (b01sp831)
Series 1

The New Vicar

Sitcom. Hyacinth has asked the new vicar to tea and - in her usual meticulous way - she has organised the event down to the last sugar lump. Events take a sudden turn.


TUE 20:30 Butterflies (p00hm2nt)
Series 2

Worrying

After a row with Russell and Adam, Ben suffers from pains in the chest and thinks he's having a heart attack.


TUE 21:00 Timeshift (b053pxdr)
Series 14

The Nation's Railway: The Golden Age of British Rail

Timeshift revisits Britain's railways during the era of public ownership. For all its bad reputation today, the old British Rail boldly transformed a decayed, war-torn Victorian transport network into a system fit for the 20th century. With an eye firmly on the future, steam made way for diesel and electric, new modern stations like Euston were built, and Britain's first high-speed trains introduced.

Made with unique access to the British Transport Films archive, this is a warm corrective to the myth of the bad old days of rail, but even it can't hide from the horror that was a British Rail sandwich.


TUE 22:00 A Storm Foretold (m0021l5v)
In October 2018, with Donald Trump's political godfather Roger Stone as his central character, film-maker Christoffer Guldbrandsen set out to follow the Make America Great Again movement. Where was the world’s most powerful democracy heading, and why were so many Americans seemingly turning on each other?

Fuelled by Stone’s sloganeering, the film follows the movement to a violent climax on the steps of the US Capitol on 6 January 2021, where lives were lost and hundreds were injured.

The 2020 election ended in vicious disarray, but where does Guldbrandsen think the future lies? 'As to the events I witnessed, I believe they were only the beginning. A warning of what is yet to come.'


TUE 23:30 The World's Most Photographed (b0078xvb)
John F Kennedy

John F Kennedy was one of the most popular presidents of the United States of America. At the core of his appeal was his image; Kennedy was highly photogenic. He also understood the power of the photograph and exploited it more effectively than any other politician before him.

Kennedy was a totally new kind of president - glamorous and informal, a patriot with a glittering war record and a loving father and husband. But while he seemed to be exposing his whole life to the camera, he was in fact concealing two secrets - secrets so explosive they had the power to destroy his presidency. This film explores the way that Kennedy used photography to help to promote an image that was at odds with his frail state of health and his compulsive promiscuity.


TUE 00:00 Paris (m000rgmx)
[Repeat of broadcast at 22:00 on Monday]


TUE 01:00 Timeshift (b053pxdr)
[Repeat of broadcast at 21:00 today]


TUE 02:00 Art on the BBC (m0013mb3)
[Repeat of broadcast at 00:00 on Monday]


TUE 03:00 How to Build a Cathedral (b00b09rb)
[Repeat of broadcast at 23:00 on Monday]



WEDNESDAY 31 JULY 2024

WED 19:00 Coastal Path (b07wbzgt)
Episode 5

Paul Rose explores the Jurassic Coast, taking a walk through some two hundred million years of the earth's history. He uncovers prehistoric treasures in Charmouth and greets hatching signets at Abbotsbury Swannery.


WED 19:30 Canal Walks with Julia Bradbury (b01173hc)
The Kennet and Avon Canal

Seasoned stomper Julia Bradbury dons her walking boots once again to explore her own British backyard, travelling along the country's network of canals and their accompanying towpath trails. This sees her navigating Highland glens, rolling countryside and river valleys, as well as our industrial heartlands, following these magical waterways as they cut a sedate path through some of the country's finest scenery.

Julia starts this walk in the beautiful world heritage city of Bath, where the Kennet and Avon Canal provided a 19th-century 'canal superhighway' between the country's two most important ports, Bristol and London. But only forty years later the trade along the canal was usurped by rail travel, leaving the once great waterway neglected and derelict. Julia's 20-mile walk along what is arguably the most picturesque stretch of the canal tells the story of how the waterway was restored to its former glory after it was awarded the biggest ever lottery heritage grant. The walk ends at the spectacular Caen Hill flight of locks, listed as one of the seven wonders of British waterways.


WED 20:00 Pole to Pole (p02j8qy4)
Mediterranean Maze

Arriving by ferry in Istanbul, Michael takes a Turkish bath before visiting Greece and Cyprus as he crosses the Mediterranean en route to Egypt, where he takes a boat up the Nile.


WED 20:50 Around the World in 80 Treasures (b00qg8jb)
Series 1 Shorts

Mali - Dogon Art

Dan Cruickshank visits the Dogon people and sees some masks and wall paintings.


WED 21:00 Catching Britain's Killers: The Crimes That Changed Us (m0009dz2)
Series 1

Double Jeopardy

Beginning in 1989, this episode tells the story of a murder in Billingham in Teesside that would lead to one mother challenging an 800-year-old law.

In November 1989, Julie Hogg, a young single mother, disappeared without word, leaving her parents and young son distraught. Three months later her body was found and a suspect arrested. Weaving together interviews with Julie’s mother Ann and Julie’s son Kevin, as well as friends, journalists, police officers and leading politicians, the programme tells the story of how the failure to convict her daughter’s killer led Ann Ming to overturn the law on double jeopardy.

After a jury failed to convict her daughter’s murderer, Billy Dunlop, Ann fearlessly took on the political and legal establishments in a campaign to overturn the ancient law of double jeopardy. Ann knew that unless the law was reformed, Dunlop could never face a re-trial. After years of tireless campaigning, Ann finally succeeded and in 2006 Dunlop was tried again and became the first person to be convicted under the newly reformed double jeopardy law.

As this episode traces the twists and turns of Ann’s campaign, the story of other cases that benefited from the legal changes are also explored, from Gary Dobson and Clifford Norris, the killers of Stephen Lawrence, who were convicted in 2012, to the killer of Surjit Chokkar, finally convicted 18 years after his murder.

Exploring the ripples of one single case, the programme explores how one mother’s determination to get justice for her daughter would lead to an historic change in the law that has benefited other families who had also seen the killers of their loved ones walk free.


WED 22:00 Peter Davison Remembers... Campion (m0021l6x)
British screen legend Peter Davison sits down to give us an invaluable insight into the iconic 1989-1990 mystery drama series Campion, the BBC’s second adaptation of Margery Allingham’s highly celebrated set of detective novels.

In a string of mysteries that call for a Lagonda-fuelled romp through 1930s England, Campion captivated audiences with its imaginative storytelling and string of inspired characters.

Davison reveals how he embodied Campion’s gleaming eccentricities, what the preparation was like for his third leading role in a major BBC series, following on from his successes in Doctor Who and A Very Peculiar Practice, and what it was like to be immersed in the world of one of Britain’s most-loved authors from the golden age of detective fiction.


WED 22:15 Campion (p0hqgyck)
Series 1

Look to the Lady - Part 1

Campion and Lugg agree to help a prominent British family protect the Gyrth Chalice, a priceless goblet, from a gang of international thieves.


WED 23:10 Campion (p0hqgzs5)
Series 1

Look to the Lady - Part 2

After learning the name of their leader, Campion thwarts the international gang attempting to steal the Gyrth Chalice with some local help.


WED 00:05 The World's Most Photographed (b0078xvb)
[Repeat of broadcast at 23:30 on Tuesday]


WED 00:35 Coastal Path (b07wbzgt)
[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 today]


WED 01:05 Canal Walks with Julia Bradbury (b01173hc)
[Repeat of broadcast at 19:30 today]


WED 01:35 Pole to Pole (p02j8qy4)
[Repeat of broadcast at 20:00 today]


WED 02:25 Catching Britain's Killers: The Crimes That Changed Us (m0009dz2)
[Repeat of broadcast at 21:00 today]



THURSDAY 01 AUGUST 2024

THU 19:00 Great British Railway Journeys (m000d2dn)
Series 11

Newcastle to County Durham

Michael Portillo begins a new series of railway journeys through 1930s Britain, armed with an interwar Bradshaw's guide. He explores an unmistakably modern era of glamorous locomotives, cinema and dance halls but also a time of high unemployment and widespread poverty, when storm clouds gathered across the Channel.

Beginning just outside Newcastle in Jarrow, Michael uncovers the desperation which led 200 men to march 300 miles to Westminster in order to petition the government for work.

In Newcastle, Michael admires the city's iconic railway bridge before heading to Byker, where he discovers a new innovation in greyhound racing. Tips for picking a winner lead to a photo finish.

There's a visit to Durham Cathedral to see the bones of the Father of English History and a chance to fire up the fryer at a coal-powered fish and chip shop frozen in time.

In Spennymoor, Michael meets the son of a Durham miner who became one of the most famous 20th-century artists of the North East.


THU 19:30 Canal Walks with Julia Bradbury (b011g6dw)
The Llangollen Canal

Seasoned stomper Julia Bradbury dons her walking boots once again to explore her own British backyard, travelling along the country's network of canals and their accompanying towpath trails. This sees her navigating Highland glens, rolling countryside and river valleys, as well as our industrial heartlands, following these magical waterways as they cut a sedate path through some of the country's finest scenery.

Julia's final walk takes her to north Wales, where 200 years ago the great engineer Thomas Telford had to overcome seemingly impossible challenges in order to access the valuable slate industries of Snowdonia. In doing so, he created a masterpiece of 19th-century engineering - an aqueduct 126 feet high and spanning 1,000 feet across the Vale of Llangollen. To find out why it has become a world heritage site, Julia follows the cut of the Llangollen Canal, starting at the picturesque Horseshoe Falls. Her six-mile walk takes her along the winding Dee Valley, ending on the aqueduct that Telford described as 'a stream through the skies'.


THU 20:00 Francesco's Venice (b0078sx5)
Death

Final episode of a documentary series telling the story of Venice, presented by Francesco da Mosto.

Venice may be sinking, it may even be in peril, but da Mosto is in no mood to throw in the towel. The fate of Venice still hangs in the balance, and he puts at least some of the blame at the door of the British. From the moment that Byron put Venice on the tourist map, the city has been caught up in a trail of events that has made life harder and harder for the Venetians.

But this episode is also Francesco's personal story, and he has pledged his belief in the future of Venice by continuing to live and bring up his children there, even though his life has been affected by the dangers the city faces. In the great flood of 1966 that threatened to wash the city away, he was a terrified child of five who watched the waters invade his home and wondered if life could ever continue. Francesco's father, Count da Mosto, reminisces about the 1966 floods with chilling immediacy, and Francesco swims the Grand Canal.

It has not just been the tourists or the rising waters of the lagoon that have threatened the city. Outrageous ideas to bring the city into the modern age have included bridges linking the city with mainland Italy, flattening old churches and even converting the Grand Canal into an eight-lane motorway.


THU 21:00 The Shining (m000l4ml)
When writer Jack Torrance, who has a history of alcoholism and child abuse, takes a job as winter caretaker at a hotel high in the Rocky Mountains, the accumulated power of evil deeds committed at the hotel begins to drive him mad. Now there may be no escape for his wife and son in this story of madness, memory and family violence.


THU 22:55 Mark Kermode's Secrets of Cinema (m000rpkv)
Series 3

Cult Movies

Mark Kermode invites you on an entertaining journey into the weird and wonderful world of cult movies, filled with some of the strangest, most truly original and unexpected moments in cinema.

Film-makers don’t decide what becomes a cult movie, argues Mark. We - the audience - do. Mark looks at the qualities a film needs to acquire cult status, and the main types of cult movie, from films that are so bad they’re good, to groundbreaking masterpieces of foreign language cinema.

Some cult films set out to shock and break taboos; others are camp classics embraced by audiences who find new or hidden meanings in them. Mark also explores the strange phenomenon of cult films about actual cults, and looks at the future of cult cinema in an age when even the most obscure and offbeat movie is just a download away.


THU 23:55 A Storm Foretold (m0021l5v)
[Repeat of broadcast at 22:00 on Tuesday]


THU 01:25 Great British Railway Journeys (m000d2dn)
[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 today]


THU 01:55 Canal Walks with Julia Bradbury (b011g6dw)
[Repeat of broadcast at 19:30 today]


THU 02:25 Francesco's Venice (b0078sx5)
[Repeat of broadcast at 20:00 today]



FRIDAY 02 AUGUST 2024

FRI 19:00 Top of the Pops (b0499f9b)
Weekly pop chart programme presented by Peter Powell, with performances from Sham 69, Olympic Runners, ABBA, The Korgis, BA Robertson, Sparks, The Specials, The Boomtown Rats and The Gibson Brothers and a dance sequence by Legs & Co.


FRI 19:30 Top of the Pops (m000hqmy)
Steve Wright and Jenny Powell present the pop chart programme, first broadcast on 3 August 1989 and featuring Kylie Minogue, Paul McCartney and Gun.


FRI 20:00 BBC Proms (m0021l5d)
2024

Messiaen’s Turangalila Symphony at the Proms

Messiaen’s vibrant and electrifying Turangalila Symphony is performed in the splendour of the Royal Albert Hall. The kaleidoscopic programme also includes a spellbinding world premiere of Anna Clyne’s The Gorgeous Nothings, inspired by the poems of Emily Dickinson and featuring Grammy Award-winning vocal group The Swingles. The BBC Philharmonic Orchestra is conducted by Nicholas Collon and the programme is presented by Petroc Trelawny.


FRI 22:05 Sir Cliff Richard at the BBC (m000ng7h)
As the Peter Pan of Pop reaches the milestone of his 80th birthday, the BBC celebrates with a look back through its archives at some of his most memorable performances and biggest hits.

Starting with the release of Sir Cliff’s first single Move It in 1958, we follow his incredible career through his appearances on a variety of BBC music programmes and television specials. The programme takes in his early, much-loved songs of the 1960s, the comeback and credibility of his work in the 1970s, the successes he enjoyed throughout the 80s and 90s, as he consolidated his reputation as a pop superstar, right up until the controversy and vindication that came with his Millennium Prayer.

Amongst the classic songs featured are The Young Ones, Living Doll, Bachelor Boy, the Eurovision Song Contest contenders Congratulations and Power To All Our Friends, Devil Woman, Miss You Nights, Wired for Sound and Cliff’s much-praised 80s duet with Van Morrison, Wherever God Shines His Light.


FRI 23:05 Cliff in London (m0021l5g)
Highlights from a 1980 Cliff Richard concert recorded at the Apollo Victoria Theatre in London. Including hits Livin' Doll, Green Light, Carrie and We Don't Talk Anymore.


FRI 00:00 Cliff Richard: Live at the Albert Hall (m001gcdz)
Cliff Richard is accompanied by the London Philharmonic Orchestra in a concert recorded at the Royal Albert Hall.

In a dynamic performance, Cliff displays the talent which has sustained his brilliant career. Included in the programme are Miss You Nights, We Don't Talk Anymore, Carrie, True Love Ways and Devil Woman.


FRI 00:50 Top of the Pops (b0499f9b)
[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 today]


FRI 01:20 Top of the Pops (m000hqmy)
[Repeat of broadcast at 19:30 today]


FRI 01:50 Sir Cliff Richard at the BBC (m000ng7h)
[Repeat of broadcast at 22:05 today]


FRI 02:50 Cliff in London (m0021l5g)
[Repeat of broadcast at 23:05 today]