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SATURDAY 21 NOVEMBER 2009SAT
SAT
00:00 Midnight News b00nwt1q (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4. Followed by Weather.SAT
SAT
00:30 Book of the Week b00ny29t (Listen)SAT
Stirred But Not Shaken: The Autobiography, Episode 5SAT
By Keith Floyd, with James Steen.SAT
Keith Floyd was one of the first chefs to become aSAT
celebrity and led the way in filming cookery programmes onSAT
location. With trademark bow tie and glass of wine inSAT
hand, he inspired a generation to cook.SAT
Keith was beginning to hate food and his excessiveSAT
drinking was about to take its toll.SAT
Read by Michael Cochrane.SAT
Abridged by Libby Spurrier.SAT
A Pier production for BBC Radio 4.SAT
SAT
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nwt1s (Listen)SAT
The latest shipping forecast.SAT
SAT
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nwt1v (Listen)SAT
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. BBC Radio 4SAT
resumes at 5.20am.SAT
SAT
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nwt1x (Listen)SAT
The latest shipping forecast.SAT
SAT
05:30 News Briefing b00nwt1z (Listen)SAT
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.SAT
SAT
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nwt22 (Listen)SAT
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Peter Baker.SAT
SAT
05:45 iPM b00nwt24 (Listen)SAT
The weekly interactive current affairs magazine featuringSAT
online conversation and debate.SAT
SAT
06:00 News and Papers b00nwt26 (Listen)SAT
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SAT
SAT
06:04 Weather b00nwt28 (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
06:07 Open Country b00nwvx2 (Listen)SAT
The Hanbury CraterSAT
In the Staffordshire countryside, just a few miles fromSAT
Burton-on-Trent, a wire fence surrounds a deep craterSAT
measuring over half a mile wide. Nearby signs warn passersSAT
by of the sudden drop and that the land containsSAT
unexploded bombs which, in the event of an explosion,SAT
could cause injury or death. This is where what is widelySAT
believed to be the UK's largest explosion occurred onSAT
November 27th 1944 when an underground ammunition store atSAT
nearby Fauld blew up detonating 3-4,000 tons of explosivesSAT
and devastating acres of countryside, killing 70 people,SAT
hundreds of sheep and cattle and completely obliterating aSAT
nearby farm. The Cock Inn in Hanbury was so badly damagedSAT
that it had to beSAT
On the 65th anniversary of the explosion, Helen MarkSAT
visits Hanbury, the scene of this wartime tragedy, andSAT
talks to local people and survivors about their memoriesSAT
of that day and how the explosion changed their lives andSAT
the landscape around them forever. For over 40 years,SAT
nothing would grow in what became known to locals as theSAT
'bomb hole' until slowly nature began to reclaim theSAT
Hanbury Crater. Helen is joined by the Time Team'sSAT
Professor Mick Aston and together they visit the craterSAT
and go underground at Fauld Gypsum Mine, which dates backSAT
to Roman times. The mine was connected to the ill-fatedSAT
ammunitions store by the reservoir supplying the steam toSAT
operate a nearby plastic factory. The greSAT
SAT
06:30 Farming Today b00nwy31 (Listen)SAT
Farming Today This WeekSAT
Rural crafts like hedge laying, thatching and dry-stoneSAT
walling have recently been on the decline, leaving aSAT
shortage of workers experienced in countryside skills.SAT
Anna Hill hears that more young people are taking to aSAT
career in rural Britain and are breathing new life intoSAT
these dying traditions.SAT
SAT
06:57 Weather b00nwyqd (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
07:00 Today b00nwyqg (Listen)SAT
With John Humphrys and Evan Davis. Including Sports Desk;SAT
Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.SAT
SAT
09:00 Saturday Live b00nwyqj (Listen)SAT
Real life stories in which listeners talk about the issuesSAT
that matter to them.SAT
Fi Glover is joined by the actor Robert Lindsay.SAT
With poetry from Kate Fox.SAT
SAT
10:00 Excess Baggage b00nwyql (Listen)SAT
John McCarthy explores the relationship between humanSAT
rights and travel - what should the responsible tourist beSAT
aware of whilst journeying? Has the water supply in theSAT
hotel deprived a local community of theirs? Is your guideSAT
adequately equipped when he leads you up a mountain? AreSAT
you intruding by taking photographs of local people goingSAT
about their business? John is joined by lawyer BaronessSAT
Kennedy and Tourism Concern's Tricia Barnett to discussSAT
whether the freedom of the traveller infringes theSAT
liberties of the host.SAT
After the White House, Elvis Presley's mansion, Graceland,SAT
is America's most visited house. But there is lot more toSAT
Memphis musical pilgrimages than replicas of HeartbreakSAT
Hotel. John talks to two music writers, Patrick HumphriesSAT
and Garth Cartwright, about the attraction of MississippiSAT
and Tennessee for those interested in whether juke jointsSAT
still exist, whether 'country' means 'commercial' and theSAT
survival of the soulful sounds of Stax. John follows theSAT
heritage trail of Highway 61.SAT
SAT
10:30 Payola, The Pluggers and the Father of Rock and RollSAT
b00nwyqn (Listen)SAT
Continuing his fascination with maverick American radioSAT
DJs, Nick Barraclough tells the story of Alan Freed, theSAT
Pluggers and the Payola scandal which blew up in the lateSAT
1950s.SAT
SAT
11:00 Week in Westminster b00nwyqq (Listen)SAT
Jackie Ashley examines claims that the Queen's Speech wasSAT
more about scoring political points than ensuring goodSAT
government. She asks if the appointment of an EU PresidentSAT
has lived up to expectations; and she hears about the helpSAT
being offered to people who wish to stand as INDEPENDENTSAT
candidates in the general election. There are alsoSAT
reflections to mark the 20th anniversary of the arrival ofSAT
the television cameras in the House of Commons.SAT
SAT
11:30 From Our Own Correspondent b00nwyqs (Listen)SAT
Kate Adie introduces BBC foreign correspondents with theSAT
stories behind the headlines.SAT
You couldn't make it up! Hugh Sykes, who is just back fromSAT
Kabul, says the story of the linkage between the Taleban,SAT
Afghanistan and Pakistan would sound far-fetched even in aSAT
novel. He adds that the Americans and British areSAT
supporting a country, Pakistan, which has elements who areSAT
supporting the movement that's killing British andSAT
American troops.SAT
'It's déjà vu all over again!' Jeremy Bowen quotes anSAT
American baseball star as he looks at the building ofSAT
settlements on occupied land in Jerusalem - one of theSAT
issues dogging President Obama as he tries, with littleSAT
apparent success, to make progress down the path towardsSAT
Middle East peace.SAT
A lighter look at Jerusalem, and in particular at livingSAT
in within the city's old walls, comes from Heather Sharp.SAT
She conjures up the characters in her neighbourhood: theSAT
cats, the smells and the noises in this labyrinth ofSAT
ancient stone alleyways.SAT
'A town as shrouded in layers of forgetting and denial asSAT
it is in wet leaves and November mists.' That's the viewSAT
of Tim Whewell, who has been to the Polish town ofSAT
Radzilow, the scene of a massacre of Jews, burned toSAT
death, in 1941. His account centres on a local manSAT
determined to uncover the truth about who exactly wasSAT
responsible, however painful and shameful that truth mightSAT
be.SAT
The scientists were once very excited about Java Man. WhenSAT
his bones were uncovered in Indonesia they were convincedSAT
he was the 'missing link' between the apes and mankind.SAT
But then another so-called missing link was discovered.SAT
And then another. Christine Finn has been to the riverbankSAT
in Indonesia where Java Man, now the forgotten hero ofSAT
science, was found amid great excitement.SAT
SAT
12:00 Money Box b00nwyqv (Listen)SAT
Paul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSAT
finance.SAT
SAT
12:30 The News Quiz b00nws6r (Listen)SAT
Series 69, Episode 9SAT
Sandi Toksvig chairs the topical comedy quiz. TheSAT
panellists are Jeremy Hardy, Francis Wheen, Carrie QuinlanSAT
and Sue Perkins.SAT
SAT
12:57 Weather b00nwyqx (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
13:00 News b00nwyqz (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4.SAT
SAT
13:10 Any Questions? b00nws6t (Listen)SAT
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs the live debate fromSAT
Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, with questions from theSAT
audience for the panel including: leader of the HouseSAT
Harriet Harman; former leader of the Liberal Party LordSAT
Steel; the Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury PhilipSAT
Hammond; and historian Tristram Hunt.SAT
SAT
14:00 Any Answers? b00nwyr1 (Listen)SAT
Jonathan Dimbleby takes listeners' calls and emails inSAT
response to this week's edition of Any Questions?SAT
SAT
14:30 Saturday Play b00nwz36 (Listen)SAT
The Great Tennessee Monkey TrialSAT
In 1925, the same year that Franz Kafka's The Trial wasSAT
published, one of the most unusual trials ever seen in aSAT
United States courtroom took place. Earlier that year, theSAT
state of Tennessee had passed the Butler Act, which madeSAT
the teaching of evolution illegal. In the stifling JulySAT
heat, and in a courtroom hung with banners proclaimingSAT
'Read Your Bible Daily', 24-year-old teacher John ScopesSAT
stood trial.SAT
Adapted from the original trial transcript by PeterSAT
Goodchild.SAT
John Scopes ...... Neil Patrick HarrisSAT
William Jennings Bryan ...... Edward AsnerSAT
Dudley Field Malone ...... Stacy KeachSAT
Clarence Darrow ...... John de LancieSAT
Judge John Raulston ...... Jerry HardinSAT
Attorney General Stewart ...... Rob NagleSAT
Arthur Garfield Hays ...... Arye GrossSAT
Howard Morgan ...... Tirosh SchneiderSAT
Mr Riley ...... David SelbySAT
Mr Robinson ...... James GleasonSAT
Mr White ...... David Alan NovakSAT
Court Usher ...... Matt GaydosSAT
Directed by Kate McAll.SAT
SAT
15:30 The Inner World of Music b00nvdvc (Listen)SAT
Composer Matthew King discovers how the extraordinarySAT
abilities of musical savant Derek Paravicini are unlockingSAT
the secret of how we all makes sense of music.SAT
Pianist Derek Paravicini is a phenomenon, possessor of aSAT
truly extraordinary musical mind. His abilities areSAT
renowned: he can play virtually any piece, in any styleSAT
you wish, in any key, and identify complex chords of moreSAT
than a dozen notes in split seconds. He has wowed crowdsSAT
from London to Las Vegas, performed at Ronnie Scott's andSAT
Queen Elizabeth Hall, and been the subject of mediaSAT
attention across the world.SAT
Yet Derek was born totally blind, with severeSAT
developmental and learning disabilities. He finds everydaySAT
tasks difficult, and requires 24-hour support. Derek is aSAT
musical 'savant' - owner of a talent that far transcendsSAT
his disability, like the autistic artist Stephen WiltshireSAT
or Dustin Hoffman's character Raymond Babbitt in the filmSAT
Rain Man. Over the last three decades Derek has stunnedSAT
experts with his seemingly effortless musicalSAT
understanding, an innate ability to know what 'fits' inSAT
any musical context, from classical to jazz to rock.SAT
Prof Adam Ockelford has been Derek's friend and mentorSAT
since he was a small child. Now one of the UK's leadingSAT
experts in music psychology, Prof Ockelford believes thatSAT
Derek's remarkable abilities may hold the key toSAT
understanding how humans make sense of music, and theSAT
unique effect it has on us all.SAT
Matthew King explores the world of the musical savant,SAT
meeting Derek Paravicini to try and find out how his brainSAT
processes, understands and remembers music. The programmeSAT
features contributions from Dr Darold Treffert, adviser onSAT
Rain Man and the world's most renowned expert on savantSAT
syndrome, and the parents of a young autistic girl withSAT
remarkable musical gifts.SAT
SAT
16:00 Woman's Hour b00nwzhv (Listen)SAT
Weekend Woman's HourSAT
Weekend Woman's Hour with Jane Garvey.SAT
Vampires and their allure; the on-line mums puttingSAT
politicians through their paces; the iconic style ofSAT
Audrey Hepburn's wardrobe; the rights of couples whoSAT
cohabit; doulas and their role in pregnancy andSAT
childbirth; and those washday blues - is it time to ditchSAT
the dryer?SAT
SAT
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nwzzg (Listen)SAT
21st November 1989SAT
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SAT
years ago.SAT
In El Salvador, as rebels continue to occupy the SheratonSAT
Hotel, the manager tells the BBC that everything is underSAT
control; MPs relish their day in the limelight as TVSAT
cameras are permitted in the House of Commons.SAT
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SAT
SAT
17:00 PM b00nx0cw (Listen)SAT
Saturday PMSAT
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with GlenSAT
Campbell, plus the sports headlines.SAT
SAT
17:30 The Bottom Line b00nw3rx (Listen)SAT
Evan Davis is joined by a panel of top business guests toSAT
discuss creative accounting; do companies try to makeSAT
their books look better than they are? And from theSAT
featureless to the funky, what is it that makes aSAT
productive office workplace?SAT
Evan is joined by Ian Powell, UK chairman ofSAT
PricewaterhouseCoopers, one of the world's biggestSAT
accountancy firms; Mark Dixon, the chief executive ofSAT
Regus, a global provider of serviced office space; JohnSAT
Hitchcox, chairman of Yoo, an international design andSAT
property development company.SAT
SAT
17:54 Shipping Forecast b00nx0cy (Listen)SAT
The latest shipping forecast.SAT
SAT
17:57 Weather b00nx0d0 (Listen)SAT
The latest weather forecast.SAT
SAT
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00nx0d2 (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4.SAT
SAT
18:15 Loose Ends b00nx0d4 (Listen)SAT
Peter Curran and guests with an eclectic mix ofSAT
conversation, music and comedy.SAT
He is joined by actresses Alison Steadman and Meera SyalSAT
and the restaurateur and television chef Raymond Blanc.SAT
Allegra McEvedy talks to David Quantick about theSAT
dangerous period of a man's life: middle age!SAT
With comedy from satirical double act The Black Sheep andSAT
music from singer-songwriter Pete Molinari and rock groupSAT
Marillion.SAT
SAT
19:00 From Fact to Fiction b00nx0d6 (Listen)SAT
Series 7, Jam Today?SAT
Series in which writers create a fictional response to theSAT
week's news.SAT
In the week in which Transparency International publishedSAT
their Corruption Perceptions Index, citing the MPs'SAT
expenses scandal as a key factor in the UK's lowestSAT
placing yet, DJ Britton tells the story of a youngSAT
politician hoping to land a safe seat in the next election.SAT
With Anne-Marie Duff, Rory Kinnear and John Biggins.SAT
SAT
19:15 Saturday Review b00nx0d8 (Listen)SAT
Tom Sutcliffe is joined by novelist Linda Grant, literarySAT
editor Boyd Tonkin and writer and critic Matthew Sweet toSAT
discuss the cultural highlights of the week - featuringSAT
bad habits and good ones.SAT
The latest film from the Coen Brothers, A Serious Man,SAT
tells the story of an ordinary man's search for clarity inSAT
a universe where Jefferson Airplane is on the radio andSAT
F-Troop is on TV. It is 1967, and Larry Gopnik, a physicsSAT
professor at a quiet Midwestern university, has just beenSAT
informed by his wife Judith that she is leaving him.SAT
Larry's unemployable brother Arthur is sleeping on theSAT
couch, his son Danny is a discipline problem and a shirkerSAT
at Hebrew school, and his daughter Sarah is filching moneySAT
from his wallet in order to save up for a nose job. HowSAT
will Larry cope?SAT
Poet WH Auden had some bad habits but you would have toSAT
balance that against his unbreakable urge to write poetry.SAT
It's one of the subjects of Alan Bennett's new play, TheSAT
Habit of Art, which centres around an extraordinarySAT
meeting between Auden and composer Benjamin Britten.SAT
Vladimir Nabokov couldn't shake the creative compulsionSAT
either, continuing to work on a new novel even in duringSAT
his final illness. He wanted the results destroyed but 30SAT
years on, his son Dmitri has published it as The OriginalSAT
of Laura - a novel in fragments.SAT
Cast Offs is a new Channel Four drama series that presentsSAT
itself as an unusual twist on reality programming. TheSAT
drama features disabled actors sent to a deserted island,SAT
but none of them are acting their disability and the dramaSAT
is shaped so that the struggles of life in the wild areSAT
intercut with the struggles of life in a world shaped forSAT
the able bodied.SAT
The Water Table, by Philip Gross, shortlisted for the TSSAT
Eliot Prize, is a collection of poetry with water at itsSAT
heart.SAT
SAT
20:00 Archive on 4 b00nx0db (Listen)SAT
Politics Between the CoversSAT
From The West Wing to The Thick of It, politics lendsSAT
itself to high drama. Politicians themselves often writeSAT
thinly-disguised versions of their own experiences asSAT
fiction, and films and TV are awash with fictionalisedSAT
versions of the political world. Does it really representSAT
a truthful portrayal of the machinations of government,SAT
and to what extent can powerful fiction influence those inSAT
positions of power?SAT
Mark Lawson delves into the seamier side of politics toSAT
consider the fascinating line where fact meets fiction.SAT
SAT
21:00 Classic Serial b00nshqr (Listen)SAT
Fair Stood The Wind For France, Episode 1SAT
Dramatisation by Maddy Fredericks of HE Bates' classicSAT
tale of danger, suspense and romance in Second World WarSAT
France.SAT
When a British aircrew ditch over Occupied territory inSAT
the summer of 1942, injury and suspicion dog theirSAT
attempts to survive and escape.SAT
Franklin ...... Rory KinnearSAT
O'Connor ...... Tom Goodman-HillSAT
Francoise ...... Louise BrealeySAT
Grandmother ...... Ellie HaddingtonSAT
Father ...... Bruce AlexanderSAT
Doctor ...... Ewan HooperSAT
With Kate Layden and Kenneth Collard.SAT
Directed by Jonquil Panting.SAT
SAT
22:00 Weather b00nx0dd (Listen)SAT
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT
4, followed by weather.SAT
SAT
22:15 Moral Maze b00nvx6v (Listen)SAT
Michael Buerk chairs a debate on the moral questionsSAT
behind the week's news. Claire Fox, Matthew Taylor,SAT
Melanie Phillips and Michael Portillo cross-examineSAT
witnesses.SAT
Australia's Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has apologised toSAT
the thousands of child migrants taken from the UK toSAT
Australia after the war, often without their parents'SAT
consent. No one in the current government was involved inSAT
the policy, which ended in 1970 and Kevin Rudd wasn't evenSAT
born when it started. For some, such declarations are atSAT
best meaningless and at worst offensive. By expressingSAT
contrition for other people's behaviour, does it make aSAT
mockery of the very notion of apology?SAT
From politicians to celebrities, the culture of the publicSAT
apology has been gaining ground. But how do we measure theSAT
value of these gestures? When should we say sorry and whatSAT
should we apologise for?SAT
With:SAT
Douglas MurraySAT
Author and commentatorSAT
Professor Aaron LazareSAT
Author of On Apology, Psychiatrist and PsychotherapistSAT
Professor Kathryn EcclestoneSAT
Professor of Education and Social InclusionSAT
Laurie HumphriesSAT
A child migrant - sent from the UK to Australia in 1947.SAT
SAT
23:00 Brain of Britain b00nv7j5 (Listen)SAT
Russell Davies chairs the sixth heat of the perennialSAT
general knowledge contest, with contestants from the northSAT
of England.SAT
SAT
23:30 Adventures in Poetry b00nshqw (Listen)SAT
Series 10, To My Dear and Loving HusbandSAT
Peggy Reynolds explores the background, effect and lastingSAT
appeal of some well-loved poems.SAT
Anne Bradstreet's poem has been anthologised in nearlySAT
every collection of love poetry published. How did aSAT
near-invalid woman, who had to endure not only theSAT
privations of migrating to the New World but also theSAT
strict Puritan ethic established there, manage to writeSAT
something so warm and personal that it still speaks to usSAT
today?SAT
SAT
SUN
SUNDAY 22 NOVEMBER 2009SUN
SUN
00:00 Midnight News b00nx0vp (Listen)SUN
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN
4. Followed by Weather.SUN
SUN
00:30 Original Shorts b008pvmx (Listen)SUN
Series 3, SarahSUN
New short stories by well-known authors.SUN
Actress Gemma Jones reads her own heartfelt story of anSUN
impoverished young 1880s farm girl who lives a surprisingSUN
fantasy life.SUN
SUN
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nx0vr (Listen)SUN
The latest shipping forecast.SUN
SUN
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nx0vt (Listen)SUN
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.SUN
SUN
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nx0vw (Listen)SUN
The latest shipping forecast.SUN
SUN
05:30 News Briefing b00nx0vy (Listen)SUN
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
05:43 Bells on Sunday b00nx0w0 (Listen)SUN
The sound of bells from St Mary's Church in Lymm, Cheshire.SUN
SUN
05:45 The Cases That Changed Our World b00nvx6x (Listen)SUN
Episode 3SUN
Clive Coleman tells the stories of cases that shaped ourSUN
lives but which are little known outside the legal world.SUN
The case of Reginald Woolmington, a young farm labourerSUN
who shot his wife dead with a sawn-off gun in 1934. ButSUN
had he intended to kill, and thus was it murder? The caseSUN
against him seemed strong, but Woolmington's legal battleSUN
eventually reinforced the presumption of innocence for allSUN
defendants.SUN
SUN
06:00 News Headlines b00nx0w2 (Listen)SUN
The latest national and international news.SUN
SUN
06:05 Something Understood b00nx0w4 (Listen)SUN
An Opinion of DignitySUN
Mark Tully explores the meaning of dignity. For some,SUN
dignity is an innate and noble quality of humanity, forSUN
others it is a meaningless notion, and for Dr Johnson itSUN
is a complicating factor in human relationships.SUN
The readers are Janice Acquah and Nicholas Boulton.SUN
A Unique production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
06:35 The Living World b00nx14y (Listen)SUN
Dartford WarblerSUN
Dartford warbler numbers were reduced to only 20 pairs inSUN
Britain during the 1960s, thus becoming an iconic emblemSUN
of conservation. Lionel Kelleway visits the Arne RSPBSUN
reserve in Dorset in an attempt to see one of these rareSUN
and secretive little birds for himself.SUN
SUN
06:57 Weather b00nx150 (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
07:00 News and Papers b00nx152 (Listen)SUN
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUN
SUN
07:10 Sunday b00nx154 (Listen)SUN
Roger Bolton discusses the religious and ethical news ofSUN
the week. Moral arguments and perspectives on stories,SUN
both familiar and unfamiliar.SUN
SUN
07:55 Radio 4 Appeal b00nx156 (Listen)SUN
Children in NeedSUN
Terry Wogan appeals on behalf of Children in Need.SUN
Donations: BBC Children in Need Appeal, PO Box 1000,SUN
London W12 7WJ, or you can give online atSUN
bbc.co.uk/pudsey, or call 0345 733 2233 (Calls to 03SUN
numbers are charged at no more than UK geographic ratesSUN
(as for 01 and 02 numbers) and will be included as part ofSUN
any inclusive minutes. This applies to calls from anySUN
network including mobiles.SUN
SUN
07:58 Weather b00nx158 (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
08:00 News and Papers b00nx15b (Listen)SUN
The latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUN
SUN
08:10 Sunday Worship b00nx15d (Listen)SUN
A service from St Andrew's Church in Balligan, CountySUN
Down, led by Canon John Bowley.SUN
Preacher: Canon Noel Battye.SUN
With the Balligan Consort.SUN
SUN
08:50 A Point of View b00nws6w (Listen)SUN
Clive James reflects on the revelation of the identity ofSUN
Belle de Jour, the author of The Diary of a London CallSUN
Girl.SUN
SUN
09:00 Broadcasting House b00nx15g (Listen)SUN
News and conversation about the big stories of the weekSUN
with Paddy O'Connell.SUN
SUN
10:00 The Archers Omnibus b00nx15j (Listen)SUN
The week's events in Ambridge.SUN
SUN
11:15 Desert Island Discs b00nx7mk (Listen)SUN
Sir Stuart RoseSUN
Kirsty Young's castaway is Sir Stuart Rose.SUN
As the boss of Marks and Spencer, he has held a nationalSUN
institution - and the nation's knickers - in his hands.SUN
After seeing off a hostile takeover bid and revamping itsSUN
tired image, he is regarded by many as the store'sSUN
saviour. Now, after five years in one of the top jobs onSUN
the high street, his successor has been announced and, inSUN
this timely interview, Sir Stuart looks to the future andSUN
considers where life might take him next.SUN
SUN
12:00 I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue b00nv8ng (Listen)SUN
Series 52, Episode 1SUN
The perennial antidote to panel games comes from the OldSUN
Vic Theatre in London, with Jack Dee taking over theSUN
chairman's role.SUN
Regulars Barry Cryer, Graeme Garden and Tim Brooke-TaylorSUN
are joined by Rob Brydon.SUN
With Colin Sell at the piano.SUN
SUN
12:32 Food Programme b00nx7rh (Listen)SUN
30th Anniversary: BusinessSUN
As the Food Programme celebrates 30 years of broadcasting,SUN
Sheila Dillon looks at the impact of some of theSUN
pioneering food businesses featured on the programme overSUN
the years and assesses their impact on the food world.SUN
Fair trade, organic, local, authentic - all are conceptsSUN
launched as food products during this time, in the form ofSUN
the likes of Ben and Jerry's ice cream, Yeo Valley yogurt,SUN
the Village Bakery artisan bread and Green and Black'sSUN
ethical chocolate.SUN
So what challenges do food entrepreneurs face when successSUN
beckons? How easy is it to grow big enough to supply ourSUN
increasingly large retailers, and what role do privateSUN
equity investors have in progressing small entrepreneurialSUN
businesses into the big time? We talk to Langholm CapitalSUN
who did just that with Dorset Cereals and Tyrrell'sSUN
crisps. And we ask if it matters when food businesses thatSUN
set out to change the world are themselves consumed by theSUN
industry's behemoths; is anything crucial lost?SUN
With the help of recordings from the archive, programmeSUN
finds out how these companies have fared and why foodSUN
entrepreneurs matter to the future food industry. WithSUN
studio guest William Kendall: entrepreneur, farmer, andSUN
formerly of Green and Blacks.SUN
SUN
12:57 Weather b00nx7rk (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
13:00 The World This Weekend b00nx7rm (Listen)SUN
A look at events around the world with Edward Stourton.SUN
SUN
13:30 What Became of the Bank Manager? b00mgz1m (Listen)SUN
Clive Anderson, whose father was a bank manager,SUN
investigates the demise of the traditional face of ourSUN
high street banks.SUN
For decades these reliable Captain Mainwarings kept ourSUN
money safe, were prominent in the Rotary Club and made itSUN
their business to know every detail of the local economy.SUN
Yet over the years they were gradually phased out, as cashSUN
machines and credit cards changed banking for ever, andSUN
their risk-averse DNA stood at odds with the desire toSUN
sell, sell, sell.SUN
Clive goes in search of the reasons why his father'sSUN
profession no longer exists, and asks how this changeSUN
reflects on today's consumer society and the bankingSUN
industry's rush to lend money.SUN
Interviewees include Duncan Bannatyne, multi-millionaireSUN
of Dragon's Den fame, whose branch bank manager set him onSUN
the road to a fortune; Sid Brittin, a former old-styleSUN
Lloyds bank manager, who describes how he had a nervousSUN
breakdown under the pressure to meet new targets; JohnSUN
Hackett, HSBC's Chief Operating Officer of Retail, whoSUN
says that banks are now far more responsive to theirSUN
customers' needs.SUN
A Perfectly Normal production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
14:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00nws6k (Listen)SUN
Peter Gibbs chairs a 'postbag' edition of the programmeSUN
from Sparhsolt College in Hampshire.SUN
Pippa Greenwood, John Cushnie and Anne Swithinbank answerSUN
questions sent in via post and email.SUN
Plus an update on the slug trials set up at our gardenSUN
party in Harlow Carr; how have our lettuces faired sinceSUN
September?SUN
Including Gardening weather forecast.SUN
SUN
14:45 Brother Mine b00cm7hb (Listen)SUN
Sibling RivalrySUN
Julian Lloyd Webber explores different social and culturalSUN
attitudes towards siblings.SUN
From the Bible to modern times, sibling rivalry has alwaysSUN
been present in society.SUN
SUN
15:00 Classic Serial b00nx8k4 (Listen)SUN
Fair Stood The Wind For France, Episode 2SUN
Dramatisation by Maddy Fredericks of HE Bates' classicSUN
tale of danger, suspense and romance in Second World WarSUN
France.SUN
John Franklin, a wounded British airman, is finally fitSUN
and planning his escape from France. He could go the fastSUN
way - or the slow way.SUN
Franklin ...... Rory KinnearSUN
Francoise ...... Louise BrealeySUN
Grandmother ...... Ellie HaddingtonSUN
Father ...... Bruce AlexanderSUN
Boat Man ...... Kenneth CollardSUN
O'Connor ...... Tom Goodman-HillSUN
With John Biggins, Kate Layden, Rhys Jennings and PiersSUN
Wehner.SUN
Directed by Jonquil Panting.SUN
SUN
16:00 Open Book b00nx8k6 (Listen)SUN
Mariella's guests include the novelist James Meek, whoSUN
talks about his passion for Tolstoy. As a new translationSUN
of some of the Russian master's shorter fiction isSUN
published, Meek explains how a man best known for writingSUN
epic works including War and Peace was also one of theSUN
supreme geniuses of the short story.SUN
Novelists often dedicate their work to friends, relativesSUN
or lovers. Marlene Wagman-Geller, the author of a new bookSUN
which uncovers some of the surprising stories behind theseSUN
dedications, and Peter Kemp, fiction editor of the SundaySUN
Times, reveal some of the secrets hidden by writers inSUN
their inscriptions.SUN
Five years before the coup which brought him to power inSUN
France, Napoleon Bonaparte penned a romantic novella. AsSUN
the full text is published in English for the first time,SUN
Michele Roberts joins Mariella to discuss what thisSUN
unexpected piece of fiction reveals about the sometimeSUN
Emperor of the French.SUN
And Mariella talks to the author of one of the year's mostSUN
unusual books, a novel masquerading as an auctionSUN
catalogue. Its author Leanne Shapton explains why sheSUN
decided to tell the story of a relationship through theSUN
medium of photographs of the couple's possessions.SUN
SUN
16:30 Adventures in Poetry b00nx8k8 (Listen)SUN
Series 10, Mending WallSUN
Peggy Reynolds explores the background, effect and lastingSUN
appeal of some well-loved poems.SUN
Robert Frost's Mending Wall gave us the epigram 'goodSUN
fences make good neighbours'. They don't, of course, butSUN
we still need our walls and hedges. Peggy meets sheepSUN
farmers, wall artists and poetry enthusiasts as sheSUN
explores the stories behind the poem.SUN
SUN
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nx8kb (Listen)SUN
22nd November 1989SUN
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SUN
years ago.SUN
Lebanon's President Muawad is killed, 17 days after beingSUN
elected; in Prague the snow falls and rumours sweepSUN
through the tens of thousands who continue their protestSUN
for the sixth successive day in Wenceslas Square.SUN
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
17:00 File on 4 b00nvhlg (Listen)SUN
With record gold prices stimulating demand, Jenny CuffeSUN
reports from the Democratic Republic of Congo on the scaleSUN
of illegal mining and asks if the industry does enough toSUN
ensure that gold supplies aren't being used to fundSUN
conflict.SUN
SUN
17:40 From Fact to Fiction b00nx0d6 (Listen)SUN
Series 7, Jam Today?SUN
Series in which writers create a fictional response to theSUN
week's news.SUN
In the week in which Transparency International publishedSUN
their Corruption Perceptions Index, citing the MPs'SUN
expenses scandal as a key factor in the UK's lowestSUN
placing yet, DJ Britton tells the story of a youngSUN
politician hoping to land a safe seat in the next election.SUN
With Anne-Marie Duff, Rory Kinnear and John Biggins.SUN
SUN
17:54 Shipping Forecast b00nx8kd (Listen)SUN
The latest shipping forecast.SUN
SUN
17:57 Weather b00nx8kg (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00nx8kj (Listen)SUN
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN
4.SUN
SUN
18:15 Pick of the Week b00nx8kl (Listen)SUN
Clive Coleman introduces his selection of highlights fromSUN
the past week on BBC radio.SUN
Bleak Expectations - Radio 4SUN
Stirred But Not Shaken - An Autobiography - Radio 4SUN
Payola, the Pluggers and the Father of Rock and Roll -SUN
Radio 4SUN
The Inner World of Music - Radio 4SUN
The Probate Game - Radio 4SUN
Simpson Returns - Radio 4SUN
Midweek - Radio 4SUN
Parting Shots - Radio 4SUN
Politics Between the Covers - Radio 4SUN
Laura Solon - Talking and Not Talking - Radio 4SUN
The Loop - Radio 4SUN
Front Row - Radio 4SUN
Journeys to Glory - The Spandau Ballet Story - Radio 2SUN
I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue - Radio 4.SUN
SUN
19:00 The Archers b00nx8t8 (Listen)SUN
The old traditions are the best for Phil.SUN
SUN
19:15 Americana b00nx92n (Listen)SUN
Matt Frei presents an insider guide to the people and theSUN
stories shaping America today. Combining location reportsSUN
with lively discussion and exclusive interviews, the showSUN
provides new and surprising insights into contemporarySUN
America.SUN
As Sarah Palin kicks off her book tour around the nation,SUN
Americana takes time to learn more about the women thatSUN
represent America as well as the women who work each daySUN
to make it run. Although females account for over 50 perSUN
cent of the population, women in the United States areSUN
under-represented in the halls of Congress and theSUN
boardrooms of corporate America. Matt Frei talks toSUN
National Public Radio's senior news analyst Cokie Roberts.SUN
She's the author of the best-selling book We Are OurSUN
Mothers' Daughters, and helps to highlight the week's topSUN
news as well as the many views and characterizations ofSUN
women's lives in the United States.SUN
Matt Frei talks with Democratic Congresswoman LorettaSUN
Sanchez of California and Republican Congresswoman MarshaSUN
Blackburn of Tennessee about the challenges of working inSUN
positions of political power and representing diverseSUN
constituencies. American women from around the nationSUN
weigh in on the challenges of the glass ceiling or lackSUN
thereof.SUN
SUN
19:45 Afternoon Reading b008020s (Listen)SUN
Sputnik, DoorsSUN
A selection of stories celebrating the Russian satelliteSUN
which started the space race in 1957.SUN
By Andrew Smith, read by Trevor White.SUN
Sputnik might be in space but here on earth Ron Paget'sSUN
automated garage door has gone beserk. Is it a CommunistSUN
plot or might it have something to do with his neighbour?SUN
A Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
20:00 Feedback b00nw3ws (Listen)SUN
Roger Bolton airs listeners' views on BBC radio programmesSUN
and policy.SUN
SUN
20:30 Last Word b00nws6m (Listen)SUN
Matthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingSUN
and celebrating the life stories of people who haveSUN
recently died. The programme reflects on people ofSUN
distinction and interest from many walks of life, someSUN
famous and some less well known.SUN
SUN
21:00 Money Box b00nwyqv (Listen)SUN
Paul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSUN
finance.SUN
SUN
21:26 Radio 4 Appeal b00nx156 (Listen)SUN
Children in NeedSUN
Terry Wogan appeals on behalf of Children in Need.SUN
Donations: BBC Children in Need Appeal, PO Box 1000,SUN
London W12 7WJ, or you can give online atSUN
bbc.co.uk/pudsey, or call 0345 733 2233 (Calls to 03SUN
numbers are charged at no more than UK geographic ratesSUN
(as for 01 and 02 numbers) and will be included as part ofSUN
any inclusive minutes. This applies to calls from anySUN
network including mobiles.SUN
SUN
21:30 Analysis b00nvdgd (Listen)SUN
Divorcing EuropeSUN
What would happen if Britain chose to leave the EuropeanSUN
Union? The new Lisbon Treaty contains a clause whch setsSUN
out the exit process for the first time. But, as ChrisSUN
Bowlby reports, the final deal between Britain and itsSUN
former EU partners would depend a lot on the mood of theirSUN
'divorce' - amicable or acrimonious.SUN
SUN
21:58 Weather b00nx92q (Listen)SUN
The latest weather forecast.SUN
SUN
22:00 Westminster Hour b00nx92s (Listen)SUN
Reports from behind the scenes at Westminster. IncludingSUN
The Cases That Changed Our World.SUN
SUN
23:00 1989: Day by Day Omnibus b00nx92v (Listen)SUN
Week ending 21st November 1989SUN
A look back at the events making the news 20 years ago,SUN
with Sir John Tusa.SUN
Bulgaria witnesses its biggest demonstrations in 40 years,SUN
Lebanon's President Muawad is killed 17 days after beingSUN
elected and in Prague, protesters call for reforms and theSUN
ousting of the Czech leadership.SUN
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
23:30 Something Understood b00nx0w4 (Listen)SUN
An Opinion of DignitySUN
Mark Tully explores the meaning of dignity. For some,SUN
dignity is an innate and noble quality of humanity, forSUN
others it is a meaningless notion, and for Dr Johnson itSUN
is a complicating factor in human relationships.SUN
The readers are Janice Acquah and Nicholas Boulton.SUN
A Unique production for BBC Radio 4.SUN
SUN
MON
MONDAY 23 NOVEMBER 2009MON
MON
00:00 Midnight News b00nx96s (Listen)MON
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON
4. Followed by Weather.MON
MON
00:15 Thinking Allowed b00nvwg6 (Listen)MON
In a series of special programmes in association with theMON
Open University, Laurie Taylor explores the subject ofMON
white collar crime.MON
Is it right that middle-class offenders should spend moreMON
of their sentence in open prisons? Should the loss of aMON
professional position be taken into account whenMON
sentencing white collar criminals? Is our prison systemMON
set up to cope with professionals who offend? LaurieMON
concludes his exploration of white collar crime and talksMON
to past offenders including Jonathan Aitken, leadingMON
criminologist Michael Levi, and the former Director ofMON
Public Prosecutions, Sir Ken MacDonald, about theMON
punishment of white collar criminals.MON
Is it time we changed our attitude to crime in theMON
workplace? Should we put more effort into enforcing theMON
law and detecting white collar crime?MON
MON
00:45 Bells on Sunday b00nx0w0 (Listen)MON
The sound of bells from St Mary's Church in Lymm, Cheshire.MON
MON
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nx98v (Listen)MON
The latest shipping forecast.MON
MON
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nx9qp (Listen)MON
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.MON
MON
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nx9p4 (Listen)MON
The latest shipping forecast.MON
MON
05:30 News Briefing b00nx9wf (Listen)MON
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nxclg (Listen)MON
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Peter Baker.MON
MON
05:45 Farming Today b00nxcrx (Listen)MON
The first commercially available 100 per cent British loafMON
will be sold in January 2010. Anna Hill finds out why, forMON
the past 160 years, it's been impossible to use completelyMON
home-produced wheat in bread.MON
Also, British food which isn't quite British - FarmingMON
Today hears more demands for the laws over food labellingMON
to be tightened up.MON
MON
05:57 Weather b00ny7jy (Listen)MON
The latest weather forecast for farmers.MON
MON
06:00 Today b00nxd1v (Listen)MON
With James Naughtie and Justin Webb. Including SportsMON
Desk; Weather; Thought for the Day.MON
MON
09:00 Start the Week b00ny7k0 (Listen)MON
Andrew Marr finds out how much faith and science can tellMON
us about identity with Tariq Ramadan and Sir Mark Walport;MON
historian Jonathan Phillips explores the relevance of theMON
Crusades, and curator Kate Bush on finding the next YoungMON
British Artist.MON
MON
09:45 Book of the Week b00nxd1x (Listen)MON
Family Britain, All Madly EducativeMON
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andMON
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theMON
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryMON
people.MON
The Festival of Britain heralds the beginning of the endMON
of austerity.MON
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.MON
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nxd7d (Listen)MON
With Jane Garvey.MON
The Inquiry into the Iraq War is imminent and one of itsMON
priorities is to hear from families of British serviceMON
personnel killed in the conflict. Rose Gentle's son GordonMON
aged 19, a Royal Highland Fusilier, was killed when theMON
Land Rover in which he was travelling was hit by aMON
roadside bomb. She describes her campaign for informationMON
about his death and for the inquiry into the war.MON
Approximately 350,000 children are born worldwide everyMON
day. In the UK the registration of every birth is takenMON
for granted, and with it the recognition of every child.MON
Yet there are around 51 million children born every yearMON
across the globe who do not officially exist. TheMON
children's charity Plan International has just completed aMON
five-year campaign for Universal Birth Registration,MON
managing to register 40 million children who did notMON
exist. So why is registration so important?MON
Within the past two decades bras have become big news.MON
Retailers now talk about customers having a 'bra wardrobe'MON
containing the average woman's sports bras, fashion bras,MON
T-shirt bras, nude bras, gel bras, sexy bras and more. ButMON
despite this wealth of choice an estimated 80 per cent ofMON
women are still wearing the wrong sized bra. Why are weMON
all still so confused about bras?MON
A new BBC drama claims married ballerina Margot FonteynMON
enjoyed a passionate affair with her gay dance partner,MON
Rudolf Nureyev, 19 years her junior. Their electricMON
onstage partnership transformed the fortunes of the ageingMON
Fonteyn, extending her career by 17 years. Jane is joinedMON
by Anne-Marie Duff, the BAFTA nominated Shameless actorMON
who is playing the title role in the film, and MeredithMON
Daneman, a former student at the Royal Ballet School andMON
Margot Fonteyn's biographer.MON
MON
11:00 1989: The '89 Generation b00ny7k2 (Listen)MON
Anne McElvoy meets British politicians to find out whatMON
impact the revolutions of 1989 had on them and on theMON
worldview they use to govern us.MON
She compares notes with culture secretary Ben Bradshaw,MON
who at the time was a BBC reporter in West Berlin, andMON
plays him archive of his younger self interviewingMON
Berliners selling bits of the Wall to tourists.MON
German-born Labour MP Gisela Stuart talks about theMON
emotional impact of watching the Wall fall, on TV inMON
Birmingham. And Conservative Party Chairman Eric PicklesMON
tells Anne how in 1968 he was a teenage communist, but wasMON
so angry at the sight of Soviet tanks crushing the PragueMON
Spring that he joined the Tory Party. He talks about hisMON
feelings on watching the final overthrow of communism inMON
Prague 21 years on.MON
Anne brings together former London Mayor Ken LivingstoneMON
and shadow schools secretary Michael Gove, who spent partMON
of the winter of 1989 as a picket, to compare notes aboutMON
the impact of 1989 on their personal politics.MON
Shadow Cabinet member David Willetts recalls how primeMON
minister Margaret Thatcher stunned guests at a lunch heldMON
by his think-tank in December 1989. When the Wall fell sheMON
responded with joy, but a few weeks later she was greetingMON
the prospect it opened up - a united Germany - withMON
vehement hostility.MON
Anne also talks to foreign secretary David Miliband, hisMON
Conservative shadow William Hague and Liberal DemocratMON
leader Nick Clegg about the impact that the death ofMON
communism still has today on British foreign policy, ourMON
involvement in global turbo-capitalism and what ourMON
political parties are for.MON
MON
11:30 Tickets Please b00ny7k4 (Listen)MON
Episode 2MON
Comedy drama by Mark Maier about the ongoing trials of theMON
staff and passengers on an intercity rail service.MON
The 9.27 London to Exeter emotional rollercoasterMON
continues as the staff's personal embroilments deepen, andMON
a member of a wedding party joins in the melee. And whyMON
are there fingerholes in the muffins?MON
Robin ...... Jeremy SwiftMON
Nadine ...... Alex KellyMON
Peter ...... Malcolm TierneyMON
Carol ...... Tessa NicholsonMON
Carl ...... Nicholas BoultonMON
Diana ...... Melissa AdvaniMON
Linda ...... Kate LaydenMON
Keith ...... Stephen HoganMON
Other parts played by Piers Wehner, Philip Fox and JosephMON
Cohen-Cole.MON
Directed by Peter Kavanagh.MON
MON
12:00 You and Yours b00nxd9s (Listen)MON
Consumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.MON
MON
12:57 Weather b00nxdb5 (Listen)MON
The latest weather forecast.MON
MON
13:00 World at One b00nxgd1 (Listen)MON
National and international news with Shaun Ley.MON
MON
13:30 Brain of Britain b00ny7k6 (Listen)MON
Russell Davies chairs the seventh heat of the perennialMON
general knowledge contest.MON
MON
14:00 The Archers b00nx8t8 (Listen)MON
The old traditions are the best for Phil.MON
MON
14:15 Afternoon Play b00bvz91 (Listen)MON
Girl from MarsMON
Eleanor's sister Amy disappeared five years ago. SheMON
simply walked out of her house and into the records of theMON
'missing'. Lucy Caldwell's play explores her family'sMON
attempts to come to terms with the loss of a daughter andMON
sister.MON
Eleanor ...... Alana KerrMON
Chris ...... Joe ArmstrongMON
Judith ...... Maggie CroninMON
James ...... Kieran LaganMON
Darryl ...... Andy MooreMON
Eleanor aged 15 ...... Hannah R GordonMON
Eleanor aged 5 ...... Martha GordonMON
Amy aged 10 ...... Naomi FearnonMON
Jake aged 5 ...... Harry RobinsonMON
Jake aged 15 ...... Connor WilliamsonMON
Amy/Air hostess ...... Nikki DohertyMON
Police officer/Pilot ...... Patrick FitzsymonsMON
Police officer/Directory Enq ...... Fo CullenMON
Senora Garcia ...... Mary KellyMON
Directed by Heather Larmour.MON
MON
15:00 Archive on 4 b00nx0db (Listen)MON
Politics Between the CoversMON
From The West Wing to The Thick of It, politics lendsMON
itself to high drama. Politicians themselves often writeMON
thinly-disguised versions of their own experiences asMON
fiction, and films and TV are awash with fictionalisedMON
versions of the political world. Does it really representMON
a truthful portrayal of the machinations of government,MON
and to what extent can powerful fiction influence those inMON
positions of power?MON
Mark Lawson delves into the seamier side of politics toMON
consider the fascinating line where fact meets fiction.MON
MON
15:45 A Very Scottish Homecoming b00nxhhy (Listen)MON
WhiskyMON
To celebrate Scotland's year of Homecoming, Aasmah MirMON
explores five themes that have been chosen to encapsulateMON
the Scottish contribution to the world.MON
Aasmah finds out if whisky is still as popular a drinkMON
among Scots as its vital contribution to the economy mightMON
suggest.MON
MON
16:00 Food Programme b00nx7rh (Listen)MON
30th Anniversary: BusinessMON
As the Food Programme celebrates 30 years of broadcasting,MON
Sheila Dillon looks at the impact of some of theMON
pioneering food businesses featured on the programme overMON
the years and assesses their impact on the food world.MON
Fair trade, organic, local, authentic - all are conceptsMON
launched as food products during this time, in the form ofMON
the likes of Ben and Jerry's ice cream, Yeo Valley yogurt,MON
the Village Bakery artisan bread and Green and Black'sMON
ethical chocolate.MON
So what challenges do food entrepreneurs face when successMON
beckons? How easy is it to grow big enough to supply ourMON
increasingly large retailers, and what role do privateMON
equity investors have in progressing small entrepreneurialMON
businesses into the big time? We talk to Langholm CapitalMON
who did just that with Dorset Cereals and Tyrrell'sMON
crisps. And we ask if it matters when food businesses thatMON
set out to change the world are themselves consumed by theMON
industry's behemoths; is anything crucial lost?MON
With the help of recordings from the archive, programmeMON
finds out how these companies have fared and why foodMON
entrepreneurs matter to the future food industry. WithMON
studio guest William Kendall: entrepreneur, farmer, andMON
formerly of Green and Blacks.MON
MON
16:30 Debating Animals b00jj13p (Listen)MON
Episode 2MON
Rod Liddle examines our differing responses to relatedMON
animal species and tries to establish what those responsesMON
tell us not merely about the animals but about ourselves.MON
As the millenium turned a few years back there wasMON
another, less trumpeted shift in emphasis in Britain.MON
After years, perhaps thousands of years, of ascendancy asMON
man's favoured domestic animal, the dog gave way to theMON
cat. It is now cat and dog, literally, at the top of theMON
popular pet league, and Rod Liddle takes a long, hardMON
stare at this stand-off and what it tells us aboutMON
ourselves.MON
Cats are the ultimate urban companion. The old debate isMON
whether you own them or they own you. Independent, brimfulMON
of attitude and well equipped to operate in a semi-feralMON
environment.MON
Dogs, on the other hand, spent thousands of years beingMON
honed as servants. They might be perfect for the hunt, forMON
herding, for guarding or simply for companionship, butMON
what they never achieved was a capacity for going itMON
alone. Own a dog and you have to be ready to sacrificeMON
your time for them.MON
So is it just a simple question of 21st-century BritainMON
indulging itself rather than taking on the duties requiredMON
of dog ownership? And what are the costs of this shiftingMON
balance? Dogs eat what dogs are given to eat. Cats eatMON
that and half the urban wildlife around them.MON
Peter Purves, Ann Widdecombe and Sir David AttenboroughMON
are among those informing this domestic animal debate.MON
MON
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nxhxq (Listen)MON
23rd November 1989MON
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20MON
years ago.MON
Demonstrations in Prague continue to gather pace and theMON
Conservative Party faces a leadership challenge asMON
Margaret Thatcher announces that she is happy to contestMON
two more elections.MON
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.MON
MON
17:00 PM b00ny46z (Listen)MON
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieMON
Mair. Plus Weather.MON
MON
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00ny48d (Listen)MON
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON
4.MON
MON
18:30 I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue b00ny7n8 (Listen)MON
Series 52, Episode 2MON
The perennial antidote to panel games comes from the OldMON
Vic Theatre in London, with Jack Dee taking over theMON
chairman's role.MON
Regulars Barry Cryer, Graeme Garden and Tim Brooke-TaylorMON
are joined by Rob Brydon.MON
With Colin Sell at the piano.MON
MON
19:00 The Archers b00nxgf2 (Listen)MON
Lilian's patience is tested to the limit.MON
MON
19:15 Front Row b00ny497 (Listen)MON
Arts news and reviews with Mark Lawson. Including anMON
interview with writer Dave Eggers about his screenplay forMON
Where the Wild Things Are, based on Maurice Sendak'sMON
renowned book.MON
MON
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00ny5pn (Listen)MON
Our Mutual Friend, Episode 11MON
Adaptation by Mike Walker of Charles Dickens' classicMON
novel.MON
Bella visits her parents and tries her hand at cooking,MON
with mixed results.MON
Charles Dickens ...... Alex JenningsMON
John Rokesmith ...... Carl PrekoppMON
Bella Wilfer ...... Daisy HaggardMON
Lizzie Hexam ...... Lizzy WattsMON
Mr Boffin ...... Jason WatkinsMON
Betty Higden ...... Lynn FarleighMON
Sloppy ...... Benjamin AskewMON
Eugene Wrayburn ...... Patrick KennedyMON
Mortimer Lightwood ...... Matt AddisMON
Silas Wegg ...... Lee RossMON
Aenus Venus ...... Stephen HoganMON
Pleasant Riderhood ...... Annabelle DowlerMON
Rogue Riderhood ...... Jamie ForemanMON
Bradley Headstone ...... Neil StukeMON
Abbey Potterson ...... Janice AcquahMON
Pa Wilfer ...... Philip FoxMON
Ma Wilfer ...... Annabelle DowlerMON
Jenny Wren ...... Nicola Miles-WildinMON
Jenny's Father ...... Paul RiderMON
Solomon Riah ...... Jonathan TaflerMON
Organ Grinder ...... Malcolm TierneyMON
Music by Roger GoulaMON
Directed by Jessica Dromgoole and Jeremy MortimerMON
This episode is available until 7.45pm on 11th December asMON
part of the Series Catch-up Trial.MON
MON
20:00 Document b00ny7nb (Listen)MON
Mike Thomson presents the series using documentaryMON
evidence to throw new light on past events.MON
Mike investigates Britain's role during the 1970 coup inMON
oil-rich Oman. History records that it was a familyMON
affair, but documents reveal London's hidden hand.MON
Offically, the architect of the coup was the Sultan's son,MON
but in papers seen by the programme, Britain is seen to beMON
calling the shots. Worried that the country's falteringMON
regime could fall to communism and so threaten its vitalMON
oil interests, London decided to act. Formerly secretMON
documents clearly show British civil servants and militaryMON
leaders plotting regime change in Oman, by the use ofMON
force if necessary. They concealed their plans and onlyMON
now can the real story be told.MON
MON
20:30 Crossing Continents b00nvz74 (Listen)MON
The Congo ConnectionMON
Peter Greste investigates whether Rwandans in France andMON
Germany are controlling a deadly African militia. For theMON
last 15 years, the rebels of the FDLR have enforced theirMON
control through a series of brutal atrocities. NowMON
Crossing Continents has secret intelligence suggestingMON
that they were taking orders from political leaders livingMON
openly in Europe.MON
MON
21:00 Frontiers b00ny7nd (Listen)MON
British physicists are about to start the next phase ofMON
their search for dark matter. Sue Nelson joins them downMON
the UK's deepest mine and asks why they need to set upMON
their experiment underground.MON
MON
21:30 Start the Week b00ny7k0 (Listen)MON
Andrew Marr finds out how much faith and science can tellMON
us about identity with Tariq Ramadan and Sir Mark Walport;MON
historian Jonathan Phillips explores the relevance of theMON
Crusades, and curator Kate Bush on finding the next YoungMON
British Artist.MON
MON
21:58 Weather b00ny644 (Listen)MON
The latest weather forecast.MON
MON
22:00 The World Tonight b00ny655 (Listen)MON
National and international news and analysis with RitulaMON
Shah.MON
MON
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00ny6vq (Listen)MON
Notwithstanding: Stories from an English Village, MrsMON
Griffiths and the Carol SingersMON
Hugh Bonneville reads from Louis de Bernieres' new book ofMON
linked stories which cast an affectionate but acute eye onMON
the vanishing charms and eccentric characters of theMON
fictional Surrey village of Notwithstanding.MON
Abridged by Sara Davies.MON
MON
23:00 Word of Mouth b00nvfg8 (Listen)MON
In a special edition of the programme for Radio 4's 1989MON
season, Michael Rosen talks to playwright David EdgarMON
about the rise and fall of the language that becameMON
synonymous with communism - from the hyperbole ofMON
Ceaucescu's Romania ('General Secretary, President,MON
President of the State Council, Chairman of the NationalMON
Defence Council, Chairman of the Supreme Council forMON
Socio-Economic Development' was his own job description)MON
to phrases that have passed into the very definition ofMON
the Marxist-Leninist dialectic. The demolition of theMON
Berlin Wall led to dramatic changes not only in theMON
political and economic lives of those living in the formerMON
Eastern Bloc, but also to the lMON
Also, political journalist Anne McElvoy tells of herMON
lingustic adventures in East Germany both before and afterMON
1989, and Dr Zoran Milutinovic examines how Serbo-CroatMON
has changed since the break-up of the former Yugoslavia.MON
MON
23:30 Today in Parliament b00ny701 (Listen)MON
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentMON
with Sean Curran.MON
MON
TUE
TUESDAY 24 NOVEMBER 2009TUE
TUE
00:00 Midnight News b00nx94t (Listen)TUE
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE
4. Followed by Weather.TUE
TUE
00:30 Book of the Week b00nxd1x (Listen)TUE
Family Britain, All Madly EducativeTUE
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andTUE
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theTUE
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryTUE
people.TUE
The Festival of Britain heralds the beginning of the endTUE
of austerity.TUE
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.TUE
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nx96v (Listen)TUE
The latest shipping forecast.TUE
TUE
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nx9p6 (Listen)TUE
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.TUE
TUE
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nx98x (Listen)TUE
The latest shipping forecast.TUE
TUE
05:30 News Briefing b00nx9qr (Listen)TUE
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nxcj2 (Listen)TUE
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Peter Baker.TUE
TUE
05:45 Farming Today b00nxclj (Listen)TUE
News and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.TUE
TUE
06:00 Today b00nxcrz (Listen)TUE
With John Humphrys and Justin Webb. Including Sports Desk;TUE
Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.TUE
TUE
09:00 The Choice b00ny8f6 (Listen)TUE
Michael Buerk interviews people who have madeTUE
life-altering decisions and talks them through the wholeTUE
process, from the original dilemma to living with theTUE
consequences.TUE
Michael talks to Cathy O'Dowd about the terrible choiceTUE
she had to make when she came across a dying climber onTUE
Everest.TUE
TUE
09:30 Pilots That Never Flew b00g633l (Listen)TUE
Comedy PerformersTUE
Series in which Director of the National Youth TheatreTUE
Paul Roseby examines the laborious process of creatingTUE
successful pilot programmes.TUE
Paul talks to comedy performers Alistair McGowan, BeaTUE
Holland and Samantha Sanns about unsuccessful pilots theyTUE
have made.TUE
TUE
09:45 Book of the Week b00p298n (Listen)TUE
Family Britain, Family FavouritesTUE
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andTUE
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theTUE
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryTUE
people.TUE
Deference, respectability, conformity, restraint and trustTUE
- the core values of family and society begin to fray atTUE
the edges.TUE
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.TUE
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nxd3l (Listen)TUE
With Jane Garvey. Including drama: Our Mutual Friend.TUE
TUE
11:00 1989: Restitching the City b00ny9y2 (Listen)TUE
Rosie Goldsmith goes underground in Berlin, searching outTUE
the men and women involved in reunifying the city belowTUE
street level, examining how the tubes, telephone, waterTUE
and electricity systems of east and west were reconnectedTUE
after the fall of the Wall.TUE
When the Berlin Wall fell in November 1989, the world sawTUE
images of ecstatic Berliners celebrating a new freedom ofTUE
movement across their city. But after the jubilation hadTUE
died down, council chiefs were faced with a task withoutTUE
precedent in any city in the world. Public transport inTUE
the two halves of the city was in chaos and the mainTUE
arteries of Berlin became clogged with polluting Trabants;TUE
using the telephone was an infuriating experience; utilityTUE
companies faced similar problems trying to bring togetherTUE
two systems which had developed completely separately.TUE
The great symbolism of the fall of communism had beenTUE
replaced by a more practical but no less crucial questionTUE
- how to reunite the infrastructure and fabric of a vastTUE
city that had been divided for nearly 30 years.TUE
Rosie speaks to the key figures involved in the hugelyTUE
costly task of restitching the city - among them formerTUE
West Berlin mayor Walter Momper - as well as ordinaryTUE
Berliners who recall everyday life in the city after theTUE
fall of the Wall. City officials knew that rebuildingTUE
their infrastructure was vital to making citizens feelTUE
that they were part of a city - and a country - that wasTUE
physically as well as symbolically reunited.TUE
TUE
11:30 Fallout from the Shore b00ny9y4 (Listen)TUE
Libby Purves considers the impact of On the Beach, StanleyTUE
Kramer's groundbreaking film which 50 years ago reducedTUE
cinema-goers to tears with its bleak vision of aTUE
post-apocalyptic world.TUE
Based on Nevil Shute's novel and starring Gregory Peck andTUE
Ava Gardner, On the Beach tells the story of a group ofTUE
Third World War survivors awaiting death from radiationTUE
from the northern hemisphere moving inexorably towardsTUE
them. The on-screen drama was matched off screen whenTUE
Shute and Kramer clashed over changes the filmmaker madeTUE
to appease his backers and the mainstream audience.TUE
The programme hears from Shute's daughter and Kramer'sTUE
widow, who describe the impact of the row on both men andTUE
the difficulties getting the film made in the first place.TUE
Although not universally acclaimed, On the Beach wasTUE
considered a brave film to make and, judging by audienceTUE
reaction at the time, it was a terrifying warning to theTUE
world.TUE
TUE
12:00 You and Yours b00nxd7g (Listen)TUE
Consumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.TUE
TUE
12:57 Weather b00nxd9v (Listen)TUE
The latest weather forecast.TUE
TUE
13:00 World at One b00nxg9v (Listen)TUE
National and international news with Shaun Ley.TUE
TUE
13:30 Nightingale of the Nile b00ny9y6 (Listen)TUE
Singer-songwriter, record producer and world music expertTUE
Justin Adams travels to Cairo, where he grew up, to tellTUE
the story of the woman whose voice dominated the cultureTUE
and politics of the Middle East in the 20th century, UmmTUE
Kulthum.TUE
Once described as a combination of 'Ella Fitzgerald,TUE
Eleanor Roosevelt and Elvis Presley', her radio broadcastsTUE
often brought the entire Arabic world to a standstill. HerTUE
incredible voice and skilful handling of the media quicklyTUE
made her the most prominent celebrity in the Arab world atTUE
the time, and her close friendship with both the royalTUE
circle of King Farouk I before the revolution, andTUE
President Nasser in its wake, gave her unprecedentedTUE
political influence.TUE
Justin Adams is Robert Plant's songwriting partner, recordTUE
producer for the Tuareg desert blues band Tinariwen, amongTUE
others, and an ex-collaborator with Jah Wobble. As the sonTUE
of a British diplomat, Justin grew up in Cairo duringTUE
Kulthum's golden age. Now he travels back, talking toTUE
those that knew her to discover more about this icon ofTUE
the Arabic world.TUE
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
14:00 The Archers b00nxgf2 (Listen)TUE
Lilian's patience is tested to the limit.TUE
TUE
14:15 Afternoon Play b008z61b (Listen)TUE
CobwebsTUE
Psychological drama by David Hodgson.TUE
Greg Drake is just getting his life back together afterTUE
the death of his wife. But then his house is broken intoTUE
when he is asleep. Nothing is taken, but his peace of mindTUE
is destroyed.TUE
Greg ...... Kevin DoyleTUE
Cathy ...... Fiona ClarkeTUE
Louise ...... Helen LongworthTUE
Jenny ...... Beth PalmerTUE
PC Morgan ...... Roy CarruthersTUE
Denny ...... Mark Winstanley.TUE
TUE
15:00 Home Planet b00nybx4 (Listen)TUE
Richard Daniel and the team discuss listeners' questionsTUE
about the natural world and our impact on it.TUE
'Eagled-eyed' implies an ability to spot objects at aTUE
great distance, but perhaps a more extraordinary skill isTUE
shown by another bird of prey, the osprey. It can spotTUE
fish underwater despite the reflected glare of the AfricanTUE
Sun, and then pick them off with pinpoint accuracy. WeTUE
find out how they manage such a feat and whether we humansTUE
could learn a trick or two from them.TUE
Ospreys also use all four limbs - two wings and two legs -TUE
to pursue and then grab their prey but what is so specialTUE
about the number four. Why do all land vertebrates haveTUE
four limbs?TUE
We also feature a round up of our warm, wet and windyTUE
autumn, the key environmental issues. And puzzle over why,TUE
when we have the same technological know how, CaliforniansTUE
can buy powerful and versatile electric cars that areTUE
unavailable to the British consumer.TUE
On the panel are planning expert Professor Yvonne Rydin;TUE
sustainable development specialist Dr Ros Taylor andTUE
Professor Philip Stott, an environmental scientist fromTUE
the University of London.TUE
TUE
15:30 Afternoon Reading b00nyby7 (Listen)TUE
An Important Passenger, Miss Pearman Takes the TrainTUE
Series of three crime stories celebrating and inspired byTUE
the 75th anniversary of the publication of AgathaTUE
Christie's Murder on the Orient Express.TUE
By Christobel Kent, read by Anna Massey.TUE
Artemis Pearman is a spinster of a certain age, with aTUE
fondness for detective stories. Setting off on a weekendTUE
to Paris, reading Murder on the Orient Express andTUE
observing her fellow passengers, she lets her mind wander.TUE
A Heavy Entertainment production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
15:45 A Very Scottish Homecoming b00nz9x8 (Listen)TUE
GolfTUE
To celebrate Scotland's year of Homecoming, Aasmah MirTUE
explores five themes that have been chosen to encapsulateTUE
the Scottish contribution to the world.TUE
Aasmah visits the Open golf championship at Turnberry toTUE
discover if the sport invented by Scots is still a validTUE
theme for celebration in the Scottish year of Homecoming.TUE
TUE
16:00 Word of Mouth b00nycby (Listen)TUE
Michael Rosen investigates coded language.TUE
TUE
16:30 A Good Read b00nycc0 (Listen)TUE
Sue MacGregor talks to poet Kate Clanchy and zoologist andTUE
director of the Natural History Museum Michael Dixon aboutTUE
their favourite books, featuring an acclaimed poetryTUE
anthology and the novel Salmon Fishing in the Yemen byTUE
Paul Torday.TUE
TUE
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nxhxg (Listen)TUE
24th November 1989TUE
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20TUE
years ago.TUE
The Czech leadership are forced to resign and AlexanderTUE
Dubcek makes his first pubic appearance in Prague for 21TUE
years.TUE
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
17:00 PM b00ny443 (Listen)TUE
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieTUE
Mair. Plus Weather.TUE
TUE
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00ny471 (Listen)TUE
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE
4.TUE
TUE
18:30 Jo Caulfield Won't Shut Up! b00nycc2 (Listen)TUE
Episode 3TUE
She came, she saw, she criticised: stand-up comedian JoTUE
Caulfield holds forth with a glorious mixture of bitchyTUE
friendliness and foot-in-mouth populism.TUE
In this episode, Jo fails to shut up about about ScotlandTUE
in general, Scotsmen in particular and a little tea shopTUE
in Dundee.TUE
With Zoe Lyons, Nick Revell and Paul Sneddon.TUE
Written by Jo Caulfield and Kevin Anderson, withTUE
additional material by Michael Beck, Dan EvansTUE
Brian Mitchell, Joseph Nixon, Matt Ross, and Paul Sneddon.TUE
A Pozzitive production for BBC Radio 4.TUE
TUE
19:00 The Archers b00nxgd3 (Listen)TUE
Ian gets an exercise in diplomacy.TUE
TUE
19:15 Front Row b00ny48h (Listen)TUE
Arts news and reviews with Mark Lawson, including theTUE
announcement of the shortlists for the 2009 Costa BookTUE
Awards.TUE
TUE
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00ny5nm (Listen)TUE
Our Mutual Friend, Episode 12TUE
Adaptation by Mike Walker of Charles Dickens' classicTUE
novel.TUE
Rogue Riderhood comes face to face with fate on a darkTUE
Thames night.TUE
Charles Dickens ...... Alex JenningsTUE
John Rokesmith ...... Carl PrekoppTUE
Bella Wilfer ...... Daisy HaggardTUE
Lizzie Hexam ...... Lizzy WattsTUE
Mr Boffin ...... Jason WatkinsTUE
Betty Higden ...... Lynn FarleighTUE
Sloppy ...... Benjamin AskewTUE
Eugene Wrayburn ...... Patrick KennedyTUE
Mortimer Lightwood ...... Matt AddisTUE
Silas Wegg ...... Lee RossTUE
Aenus Venus ...... Stephen HoganTUE
Pleasant Riderhood ...... Annabelle DowlerTUE
Rogue Riderhood ...... Jamie ForemanTUE
Bradley Headstone ...... Neil StukeTUE
Abbey Potterson ...... Janice AcquahTUE
Pa Wilfer ...... Philip FoxTUE
Ma Wilfer ...... Annabelle DowlerTUE
Jenny Wren ...... Nicola Miles-WildinTUE
Jenny's Father ...... Paul RiderTUE
Solomon Riah ...... Jonathan TaflerTUE
Organ Grinder ...... Malcolm TierneyTUE
Music by Roger GoulaTUE
Directed by Jessica Dromgoole and Jeremy MortimerTUE
This episode is available until 7.45pm on 11th December asTUE
part of the Series Catch-up Trial.TUE
TUE
20:00 File on 4 b00nycc4 (Listen)TUE
With around 8,000 people waiting for an organ transplantTUE
in the UK, hospitals are having to use organs from theTUE
elderly, smokers, cancer sufferers and drug abusers. GerryTUE
Northam examines the dilemmas posed for doctors andTUE
assesses the risks to transplant patients.TUE
TUE
20:40 In Touch b00nycc6 (Listen)TUE
Peter White with news and information for the blind andTUE
partially sighted.TUE
TUE
21:00 All in the Mind b00nycc8 (Listen)TUE
The wisdom of adopted children having ongoing contact withTUE
their birth family has achieved axiomatic status inTUE
adoption and fostering services, but some professionalsTUE
are now challenging the current orthodoxy. When childrenTUE
aren't told the full truth about their early maltreatment,TUE
they argue, ongoing contact amounts to a 'grievousTUE
mistake'. Claudia Hammond talks to adopting and fosteringTUE
families about the harm they believe was caused by theirTUE
child maintaining a relationship with their birthTUE
families, and hears why some professionals think theTUE
policy should be re-thought.TUE
TUE
21:30 The Choice b00ny8f6 (Listen)TUE
Michael Buerk interviews people who have madeTUE
life-altering decisions and talks them through the wholeTUE
process, from the original dilemma to living with theTUE
consequences.TUE
Michael talks to Cathy O'Dowd about the terrible choiceTUE
she had to make when she came across a dying climber onTUE
Everest.TUE
TUE
21:58 Weather b00ny61k (Listen)TUE
The latest weather forecast.TUE
TUE
22:00 The World Tonight b00ny646 (Listen)TUE
National and international news and analysis with RitulaTUE
Shah.TUE
TUE
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00nzwsj (Listen)TUE
Notwithstanding: Stories from an English Village, TheTUE
Auspicious MeetingTUE
Hugh Bonneville reads from Louis de Bernieres' new book ofTUE
linked stories which cast an affectionate but acute eye onTUE
the vanishing charms and eccentric characters of theTUE
fictional Surrey village of Notwithstanding.TUE
A chance meeting in a country lane brings together twoTUE
keen but lonely musicians. When they are joined by aTUE
visiting genealogist with a bassoon, the FamousTUE
Notwithstanding Wind Quartet is well on its way toTUE
formation.TUE
Abridged by Sara Davies.TUE
TUE
23:00 Vent b00nyccb (Listen)TUE
Series 3, Episode 1TUE
Comedy series by Nigel Smith about a man in a coma,TUE
travelling through the distinctly odd landscape of his ownTUE
unconscious mind.TUE
Ben makes the ambulance journey home to begin life in aTUE
wheelchair. On the way he remembers an argument aboutTUE
cheesecake, invents a panel game and meets Buzz Aldrin.TUE
Ben ...... Neil PearsonTUE
Mary ...... Fiona AllenTUE
Mum ...... Josie LawrenceTUE
Blitz ...... Leslie AshTUE
Nurse ...... Jo MartinTUE
Derek ...... Stephen FrostTUE
Marley ...... Spencer BrownTUE
Chairman ...... Robert WebbTUE
Buzz ...... Peter BanksTUE
Announcer ...... Bruce AlexanderTUE
Bea ...... Scarlett Milburn-SmithTUE
Directed by Nigel Smith.TUE
TUE
23:30 Today in Parliament b00ny6zq (Listen)TUE
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentTUE
with Susan Hulme.TUE
TUE
WED
WEDNESDAY 25 NOVEMBER 2009WED
WED
00:00 Midnight News b00nx94y (Listen)WED
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED
4. Followed by Weather.WED
WED
00:30 Book of the Week b00p298n (Listen)WED
Family Britain, Family FavouritesWED
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andWED
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theWED
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryWED
people.WED
Deference, respectability, conformity, restraint and trustWED
- the core values of family and society begin to fray atWED
the edges.WED
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.WED
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nx96x (Listen)WED
The latest shipping forecast.WED
WED
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nx9p8 (Listen)WED
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.WED
WED
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nx98z (Listen)WED
The latest shipping forecast.WED
WED
05:30 News Briefing b00nx9qt (Listen)WED
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nxcj4 (Listen)WED
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Peter Baker.WED
WED
05:45 Farming Today b00nxclm (Listen)WED
News and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.WED
WED
06:00 Today b00nxcs1 (Listen)WED
With John Humphrys and Sarah Montague. Including SportsWED
Desk; Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday inWED
Parliament.WED
WED
09:00 Midweek b00nycw1 (Listen)WED
Lively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWED
guests.WED
WED
09:45 Book of the Week b00p298q (Listen)WED
Family Britain, God Save Our QueenWED
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andWED
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theWED
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryWED
people.WED
While the country is spellbound by the Coronation of 1953,WED
another royal soap opera is about to unfold.WED
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.WED
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nxd3n (Listen)WED
With Jenni Murray. Including drama: Our Mutual Friend.WED
WED
11:00 The Herschel Space Telescope b00nycw3 (Listen)WED
Episode 2WED
Following the engineers and astronomers working on theWED
biggest telescope ever sent to space, in one of the mostWED
important missions in the history of European spaceflight.WED
Jonathon Amos joins Professor Matt Griffin of CardiffWED
University and his international team as they aim to peerWED
through the areas in space that are invisible to otherWED
telescopes. This is the story of their aim to solve theWED
mystery of how galaxies and stars were formed, and howWED
these processes eventually gave rise to life-bearingWED
planets like Earth.WED
In this episode, the telescope is blasted into space; canWED
the team's 20-year project bring discovery and futureWED
promise for the waiting astronomers back on Earth?WED
WED
11:30 Ballylenon b00nydb9 (Listen)WED
Series 7, Episode 1WED
Comedy drama series by Christopher Fitz-Simon, set in theWED
1950s in a Donegal town.WED
It is 1959. When Muriel experiences a 'miraculousWED
apparition' on pilgrimage to Lourdes, Phonsie Doherty isWED
quick to seize on its business potential for Ballylenon.WED
Muriel Maconchy ...... Margaret D'ArcyWED
Vera Maconchy ...... Stella McCuskerWED
Phonsie Doherty ...... Gerard MurphyWED
Vivienne Hawthorne ...... Annie McCartneyWED
Rev Samuel Hawthorne ...... Miche DohertyWED
Stumpy Bonner ...... Gerard McSorleyWED
Pianist: Michael HarrisonWED
Directed by Eoin O'CallaghanWED
This episode is available until 11.30am on 6th JanuaryWED
2010 as part of the Series Catch-up Trial.WED
WED
12:00 You and Yours b00nxd7j (Listen)WED
Consumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.WED
WED
12:57 Weather b00nxd9x (Listen)WED
The latest weather forecast.WED
WED
13:00 World at One b00nxg9x (Listen)WED
National and international news with Shaun Ley.WED
WED
13:30 The Media Show b00nyf2k (Listen)WED
Steve Hewlett presents a topical programme about theWED
fast-changing media world.WED
WED
14:00 The Archers b00nxgd3 (Listen)WED
Ian gets an exercise in diplomacy.WED
WED
14:15 Afternoon Play b00fl092 (Listen)WED
Flaw in the Motor, Dust in the BloodWED
Exploration of life with bipolar disorder by TrevorWED
Preston. When Thomas dreams, he's in the world of theWED
crime thriller; his daily life is rather less glamorous.WED
Thomas ...... Rory KinnearWED
Dr Klein ...... Susan EngelWED
Amy ...... Fenella WoolgarWED
Lizzie ...... Janice AcquahWED
Peter ...... Paul RiderWED
Dr Beard ...... Jonathan TaflerWED
Nita ...... Manjeet MannWED
Ratched ...... Inam MirzaWED
Directed by Toby Swift.WED
WED
15:00 Money Box Live b00nyf2m (Listen)WED
Vincent Duggleby and a panel of answer calls on rentingWED
and letting.WED
Guests:WED
Simon Gordon, chair, National Landlords AssociationWED
John Gallagher, principal solicitor, ShelterWED
Tracey Bloom, barrister at Doughty Street Chambers,WED
specialist in housing law.WED
WED
15:30 Afternoon Reading b00p27f1 (Listen)WED
An Important Passenger, The Plymouth ExpressWED
Series of three crime stories celebrating and inspired byWED
the 75th anniversary of the publication of AgathaWED
Christie's Murder on the Orient Express.WED
By Agatha Christie, read by Tim Pigott-Smith.WED
When a murdered woman's body is found hidden in theWED
first-class compartment of the Plymouth Express, HerculeWED
Poirot is once more called to investigate a perplexingWED
murder on a train.WED
A Heavy Entertainment production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
15:45 A Very Scottish Homecoming b00nz9x0 (Listen)WED
Great MindsWED
To celebrate Scotland's year of Homecoming, Aasmah MirWED
explores five themes that have been chosen to encapsulateWED
the Scottish contribution to the world.WED
Scottish inventors have made a huge contribution to theWED
world, from the steam engine to the telephone; but whatWED
has Scotland done for the world lately? Aasmah finds outWED
if Scotland still has the spirit of invention.WED
WED
16:00 Thinking Allowed b00nyfhk (Listen)WED
Barack Obama famously used new technologies in his 2008WED
election campaign. Could those same techniques be used toWED
reinvigorate the next UK general elction in the same wayWED
it did for Obama's Web 2.0 campaign? From MySpace andWED
Facebook, text messages to email, will new media transformWED
the election in the same way it did for America? Or is theWED
UK too party political for digital technology to have theWED
same impact? Laurie Taylor discusses with Rachel Gibson,WED
Professor of Political Science at the University ofWED
Manchester.WED
Also, how musicians performing can give new insights intoWED
negotiation, learning and decision making. Howard SWED
Becker, professional jazz player and acclaimedWED
sociologist, joins Laurie to discuss what jazz and musicWED
can teach the rest of the world.WED
WED
16:30 All in the Mind b00nycc8 (Listen)WED
The wisdom of adopted children having ongoing contact withWED
their birth family has achieved axiomatic status inWED
adoption and fostering services, but some professionalsWED
are now challenging the current orthodoxy. When childrenWED
aren't told the full truth about their early maltreatment,WED
they argue, ongoing contact amounts to a 'grievousWED
mistake'. Claudia Hammond talks to adopting and fosteringWED
families about the harm they believe was caused by theirWED
child maintaining a relationship with their birthWED
families, and hears why some professionals think theWED
policy should be re-thought.WED
WED
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nxhxj (Listen)WED
25th November 1989WED
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20WED
years ago.WED
In Czechoslovakia, demonstrators keep up the pressure forWED
free elections, while schoolchildren in BuckinghamshireWED
organise a protest against Nestle for its promotion ofWED
dried milk in the Third World.WED
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
17:00 PM b00ny445 (Listen)WED
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynWED
Quinn. Plus Weather.WED
WED
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00ny473 (Listen)WED
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED
4.WED
WED
18:30 Laura Solon: Talking and Not Talking b00nywl0 (Listen)WED
Series 3, Episode 2WED
Perrier Award-winning comedian Laura Solon presents aWED
series of sketches, monologues and one-liners.WED
Olga the ex-tyrant takes on a British Post Office, a manWED
tries to buy his mother a gift in an expensive departmentWED
store and Sandrine, the Parisian radio host, chats aboutWED
why French culture is much better then the culture of,WED
say, Britain.WED
With Ben Moor, Rosie Cavaliero and Ben Willbond.WED
WED
19:00 The Archers b00nxgd7 (Listen)WED
Lynda has some lessons in parenting.WED
WED
19:15 Front Row b00ny48k (Listen)WED
Arts news and reviews with John Wilson. Including a reviewWED
of the stage version of Terry Pratchett's book Nation,WED
adapted for the National Theatre by Mark Ravenhill.WED
WED
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00ny5np (Listen)WED
Our Mutual Friend, Episode 13WED
Adaptation by Mike Walker of Charles Dickens' classicWED
novel.WED
Silas Wegg is determined to find a copy of old Harmon'sWED
will.WED
Charles Dickens ...... Alex JenningsWED
John Rokesmith ...... Carl PrekoppWED
Bella Wilfer ...... Daisy HaggardWED
Lizzie Hexam ...... Lizzy WattsWED
Mr Boffin ...... Jason WatkinsWED
Betty Higden ...... Lynn FarleighWED
Sloppy ...... Benjamin AskewWED
Eugene Wrayburn ...... Patrick KennedyWED
Mortimer Lightwood ...... Matt AddisWED
Silas Wegg ...... Lee RossWED
Aenus Venus ...... Stephen HoganWED
Pleasant Riderhood ...... Annabelle DowlerWED
Rogue Riderhood ...... Jamie ForemanWED
Bradley Headstone ...... Neil StukeWED
Abbey Potterson ...... Janice AcquahWED
Pa Wilfer ...... Philip FoxWED
Ma Wilfer ...... Annabelle DowlerWED
Jenny Wren ...... Nicola Miles-WildinWED
Jenny's Father ...... Paul RiderWED
Solomon Riah ...... Jonathan TaflerWED
Organ Grinder ...... Malcolm TierneyWED
Music by Roger GoulaWED
Directed by Jessica Dromgoole and Jeremy MortimerWED
This episode is available until 7.45pm on 11th December asWED
part of the Series Catch-up Trial.WED
WED
20:00 Moral Maze b00nywwg (Listen)WED
Michael Buerk chairs a debate on the moral questionsWED
behind the week's news. Michael Portillo, Matthew Taylor,WED
Melanie Phillips and Clifford Longley cross-examineWED
witnesses.WED
WED
20:45 The Cases That Changed Our World b00nywwj (Listen)WED
Episode 4WED
Clive Coleman tells the stories of cases that shaped ourWED
lives but which are little known outside the legal world.WED
Clive revisits Donohue vs Stevenson, better known as TheWED
Case of the Paisley Snail. Finding a snail (or was it aWED
slug?) in a bottle of ginger beer may seem a minor upset,WED
but the resulting case in 1932 produced the firstWED
comprehensive definition of neglect in tort law andWED
established the meaning of the 'duty of care'.WED
WED
21:00 The Eureka Years b00cmb4q (Listen)WED
Series 4, 1893 - The Internal Combustion EngineWED
Adam Hart-Davis explores spectacular years in the historyWED
of science.WED
Henry Ford builds his first car, Karl Benz constructs hisWED
first four-wheeler and Gottlieb Daimler succeeds inWED
putting his new engines in horseless carriages. TheWED
internal combustion engine, hailed as the answer toWED
London's pollution problem, is born.WED
WED
21:30 Midweek b00nycw1 (Listen)WED
Lively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWED
guests.WED
WED
21:58 Weather b00ny61n (Listen)WED
The latest weather forecast.WED
WED
22:00 The World Tonight b00ny648 (Listen)WED
National and international news and analysis with RobinWED
Lustig.WED
WED
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00nzwsl (Listen)WED
Notwithstanding: Stories from an English Village, TheWED
Happy Death of the GeneralWED
Hugh Bonneville reads from Louis de Bernieres' new book ofWED
linked stories which cast an affectionate but acute eye onWED
the vanishing charms and eccentric characters of theWED
fictional Surrey village of Notwithstanding.WED
Although he has dressed himself carefully, as always, forWED
his shopping trip into town, there is one thing theWED
General has forgotten.WED
Abridged by Sara Davies.WED
WED
23:00 The Ladies b00g3dtz (Listen)WED
Episode 2WED
Series of comedy sketches by Emily Watson Howes set in aWED
ladies' public toilet, featuring various female charactersWED
as they come and go.WED
An unattended bag left by the sinks causes panic andWED
confusion, and Lisa tries to deal with her pushy mother.WED
With Emily Watson Howes, Kate Donmall, Fran Moulds.WED
A Hat Trick production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
23:15 All Bar Luke b00d75p4 (Listen)WED
Series 3, The DateWED
Poignant comedy drama series by Tim Key.WED
Luke tries to move on from Hayley by going on a dinnerWED
date with an older woman.WED
An Angel Eye Media production for BBC Radio 4.WED
WED
23:30 Today in Parliament b00ny6zs (Listen)WED
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentWED
with David Wilby.WED
WED
THU
THURSDAY 26 NOVEMBER 2009THU
THU
00:00 Midnight News b00nx951 (Listen)THU
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU
4. Followed by Weather.THU
THU
00:30 Book of the Week b00p298q (Listen)THU
Family Britain, God Save Our QueenTHU
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andTHU
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theTHU
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryTHU
people.THU
While the country is spellbound by the Coronation of 1953,THU
another royal soap opera is about to unfold.THU
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.THU
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nx96z (Listen)THU
The latest shipping forecast.THU
THU
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nx9pb (Listen)THU
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.THU
THU
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nx991 (Listen)THU
The latest shipping forecast.THU
THU
05:30 News Briefing b00nx9qw (Listen)THU
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nxcj6 (Listen)THU
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Peter Baker.THU
THU
05:45 Farming Today b00nxclp (Listen)THU
News and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.THU
THU
06:00 Today b00nxcs3 (Listen)THU
With James Naughtie and Sarah Montague. Including SportsTHU
Desk; Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday inTHU
Parliament.THU
THU
09:00 In Our Time b00nyxvr (Listen)THU
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManTHU
Melvyn Bragg and guests Roy Foster, Jeri Johnson andTHU
Declan Kiberd discuss A Portrait of the Artist as a YoungTHU
Man, James Joyce's groundbreaking 1916 novel about growingTHU
up in Catholic Ireland.THU
THU
09:45 Book of the Week b00p298s (Listen)THU
Family Britain, Brisk Buying and SellingTHU
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andTHU
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theTHU
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryTHU
people.THU
A new era of affluence is fuelled by a boom in advertisingTHU
and the arrival of commercial television.THU
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.THU
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nxd3q (Listen)THU
With Jenni Murray. Including drama: Our Mutual Friend.THU
THU
11:00 Crossing Continents b00nyxvt (Listen)THU
A Small Town in MississippiTHU
In 1995, four people were murdered in Winona, Mississippi.THU
The black man charged with their murders is now facing hisTHU
sixth trial. Racial tensions helped lead to threeTHU
convictions being overturned and two trials wereTHU
deadlocked by hung juries. Tom Mangold visits the DeepTHU
South to investigate and to speak to those most closelyTHU
involved. What he discovers says much about whether theTHU
high hopes of an increasingly race-neutral America areTHU
still justified at the close of the first year of BarackTHU
Obama's presidency.THU
THU
11:30 It Was A Dark and Stormy Night b00nyxvw (Listen)THU
Ian Peacock reveals the dark and gothic life of theTHU
Victorian writer Edward Bulwer-Lytton, who coined theTHU
archetypally gothic opening line, 'It was a dark andTHU
stormy night'.THU
We may no longer be familiar with his novels, nor with hisTHU
scientific theories, but thanks largely to the SnoopyTHU
cartoons, The Goon Show and sundry other borrowers andTHU
mockers, everyone can quote part of Bulwer-Lytton's famousTHU
opening sentence: 'It was a dark and stormy night; theTHU
rain fell in torrents - except at occasional intervals,THU
when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which sweptTHU
up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies),THU
rattling along the housetops, and fiercely agitating theTHU
scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against theTHU
darkness'.THU
San Jose University in California now run a very popularTHU
Dark and Stormy Night competition - the winner is chargedTHU
with writing the opening sentence to the worst of allTHU
possible novels.THU
But Ian Peacock has a sneaking suspicion that there isTHU
more to Bulwer-Lytton than being simply the patron saintTHU
of Victorian gothic kitsch. He was hugely popular in hisTHU
lifetime; Dickens and Mary Shelley were both fans, as wasTHU
Wagner, who used one of Lytton's novels as the basis forTHU
his early opera Rienzi.THU
Works like Pelham and The Last Days of Pompeii madeTHU
Bulwer-Lytton a literary star. And he was fascinated byTHU
scientific discovery, as well as the spookier side of lifeTHU
- his novel The Coming Race is still popular among theTHU
science fiction community. It was in this book that heTHU
created Vril, electro-magnetic energy which fuels flyingTHU
machines and automata and even makes telepathy possible.THU
Add Vril to bovine and you end up with the popularTHU
beef-tea energy drink Bovril - another Bulwer-LyttonTHU
legacy.THU
He also coined the phrases 'the great unwashed' and 'theTHU
almighty dollar'. And as if that wasn't enough for oneTHU
life, Bulwer-Lytton became an outrageous dandy, served asTHU
an MP, dabbled in the occult and had a wife who publiclyTHU
heckled and libelled him for decades.THU
Ian explores the writer's stormy life, his work and hisTHU
popularity among his contemporaries. He visits KnebworthTHU
Hall, Lytton's home for many years and the source of someTHU
of his darker writing, and talks to Professor JohnTHU
Sutherland to judge Lytton's literary merits. SutherlandTHU
describes him as, among other things, 'the father of theTHU
English detective novel, science fiction, the fantasyTHU
novel and the thriller'.THU
THU
12:00 You and Yours b00nxd7l (Listen)THU
Consumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.THU
THU
12:57 Weather b00nxd9z (Listen)THU
The latest weather forecast.THU
THU
13:00 World at One b00nxg9z (Listen)THU
National and international news with Shaun Ley.THU
THU
13:30 Off the Page b00ny8fz (Listen)THU
Last OrdersTHU
With pubs all over Britain closing at a rate of 52 perTHU
week, the role of the public house is called in toTHU
question by three writers who have spent many hoursTHU
propping up the bar. Ian Marchant went on a nationwide pubTHU
crawl and wrote a book about his adventures, SimonTHU
Fanshawe remembers winding up the locals in 1970sTHU
Brighton, and Melissa Cole, who is also a professionalTHU
beer taster, deconstructs one of the key phrases inTHU
drinking culture: 'fancy a pint?' Presented by DominicTHU
Arkwright.THU
THU
14:00 The Archers b00nxgd7 (Listen)THU
Lynda has some lessons in parenting.THU
THU
14:15 Afternoon Play b00b4jd0 (Listen)THU
Far NorthTHU
By Louis Nowra.THU
A boy and his young mother take to the road acrossTHU
Australia in search of the freedom and love she craves.THU
Directed by Jane Ulman.THU
A Corporation for Independent Media production for BBCTHU
Radio 4.THU
THU
15:00 Open Country b00nwvx2 (Listen)THU
The Hanbury CraterTHU
In the Staffordshire countryside, just a few miles fromTHU
Burton-on-Trent, a wire fence surrounds a deep craterTHU
measuring over half a mile wide. Nearby signs warn passersTHU
by of the sudden drop and that the land containsTHU
unexploded bombs which, in the event of an explosion,THU
could cause injury or death. This is where what is widelyTHU
believed to be the UK's largest explosion occurred onTHU
November 27th 1944 when an underground ammunition store atTHU
nearby Fauld blew up detonating 3-4,000 tons of explosivesTHU
and devastating acres of countryside, killing 70 people,THU
hundreds of sheep and cattle and completely obliterating aTHU
nearby farm. The Cock Inn in Hanbury was so badly damagedTHU
that it had to beTHU
On the 65th anniversary of the explosion, Helen MarkTHU
visits Hanbury, the scene of this wartime tragedy, andTHU
talks to local people and survivors about their memoriesTHU
of that day and how the explosion changed their lives andTHU
the landscape around them forever. For over 40 years,THU
nothing would grow in what became known to locals as theTHU
'bomb hole' until slowly nature began to reclaim theTHU
Hanbury Crater. Helen is joined by the Time Team'sTHU
Professor Mick Aston and together they visit the craterTHU
and go underground at Fauld Gypsum Mine, which dates backTHU
to Roman times. The mine was connected to the ill-fatedTHU
ammunitions store by the reservoir supplying the steam toTHU
operate a nearby plastic factory. The greTHU
THU
15:27 Radio 4 Appeal b00nx156 (Listen)THU
Children in NeedTHU
Terry Wogan appeals on behalf of Children in Need.THU
Donations: BBC Children in Need Appeal, PO Box 1000,THU
London W12 7WJ, or you can give online atTHU
bbc.co.uk/pudsey, or call 0345 733 2233 (Calls to 03THU
numbers are charged at no more than UK geographic ratesTHU
(as for 01 and 02 numbers) and will be included as part ofTHU
any inclusive minutes. This applies to calls from anyTHU
network including mobiles.THU
THU
15:30 Afternoon Reading b00p27dv (Listen)THU
An Important Passenger, Death By ElocutionTHU
Series of three crime stories celebrating and inspired byTHU
the 75th anniversary of the publication of AgathaTHU
Christie's Murder on the Orient Express.THU
By Malcolm Pryce, read by Sandra Duncan.THU
A strangely familiar collection of characters - LauraTHU
Jesson and Dr Harvey from Brief Encounter, Noel Coward, aTHU
soldier and a parson - find themselves on a train journey.THU
Their conversation is interrupted by a hideous voice -THU
then there's a scream.THU
A Heavy Entertainment production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
15:45 A Very Scottish Homecoming b00nz9x2 (Listen)THU
AncestryTHU
To celebrate Scotland's year of Homecoming, Aasmah MirTHU
explores five themes that have been chosen to encapsulateTHU
the Scottish contribution to the world.THU
Scottish immigrants have had an impact all over the world;THU
now, more and more of their descendents are returning toTHU
rediscover their roots - especially in this special yearTHU
of Homecoming. Aasmah talks to those visiting for theTHU
celebrations to find out if their image of Scotland isTHU
realistic or one clouded by myth and romance.THU
THU
16:00 Open Book b00nx8k6 (Listen)THU
Mariella's guests include the novelist James Meek, whoTHU
talks about his passion for Tolstoy. As a new translationTHU
of some of the Russian master's shorter fiction isTHU
published, Meek explains how a man best known for writingTHU
epic works including War and Peace was also one of theTHU
supreme geniuses of the short story.THU
Novelists often dedicate their work to friends, relativesTHU
or lovers. Marlene Wagman-Geller, the author of a new bookTHU
which uncovers some of the surprising stories behind theseTHU
dedications, and Peter Kemp, fiction editor of the SundayTHU
Times, reveal some of the secrets hidden by writers inTHU
their inscriptions.THU
Five years before the coup which brought him to power inTHU
France, Napoleon Bonaparte penned a romantic novella. AsTHU
the full text is published in English for the first time,THU
Michele Roberts joins Mariella to discuss what thisTHU
unexpected piece of fiction reveals about the sometimeTHU
Emperor of the French.THU
And Mariella talks to the author of one of the year's mostTHU
unusual books, a novel masquerading as an auctionTHU
catalogue. Its author Leanne Shapton explains why sheTHU
decided to tell the story of a relationship through theTHU
medium of photographs of the couple's possessions.THU
THU
16:30 Material World b00nyy8q (Listen)THU
Quentin Cooper dissects the week's science.THU
THU
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nxhxl (Listen)THU
26th November 1989THU
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20THU
years ago.THU
Czechoslovakia's prime minister has his first meeting withTHU
the country's leading dissident, Vaclav Havel; LadyTHU
Mosley, Sir Oswald's wife, talks to Sue Lawley on DesertTHU
Island Discs.THU
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.THU
THU
17:00 PM b00ny447 (Listen)THU
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieTHU
Mair. Plus Weather.THU
THU
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00ny475 (Listen)THU
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU
4.THU
THU
18:30 Bleak Expectations b00nyy8s (Listen)THU
Series 3, An Evil Life Sort of ExplainedTHU
Comedy Victorian adventure by Mark Evans.THU
Pip Bin, Harry Biscuit and Gently Benevolent findTHU
themselves trapped in the vast emptiness of space. AsTHU
their doom looks increasingly inevitable, Mr BenevolentTHU
finally explains just why it is that he is so very veryTHU
evil.THU
Sir Philip ...... Richard JohnsonTHU
Young Pip Bin ...... Tom AllenTHU
Gently Benevolent ...... Anthony HeadTHU
Lovely Benevolent ...... Jane AsherTHU
Harry Biscuit ...... James BachmanTHU
Hardthrasher/Sternbeater/Wackwallop ...... GeoffreyTHU
WhiteheadTHU
Miss Christmasham ...... Sarah HadlandTHU
Miss Sweetly Delightful ...... Raquel Cassidy.THU
THU
19:00 The Archers b00nxgd9 (Listen)THU
Helen's insecurities come to the fore.THU
THU
19:15 Front Row b00ny48n (Listen)THU
Arts news and reviews with John Wilson.THU
THU
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00ny5nr (Listen)THU
Our Mutual Friend, Episode 14THU
Adaptation by Mike Walker of Charles Dickens' classicTHU
novel.THU
Lizzie Hexam and Bella Wilfer meet at last, at a funeralTHU
in a country churchyard.THU
Charles Dickens ...... Alex JenningsTHU
John Rokesmith ...... Carl PrekoppTHU
Bella Wilfer ...... Daisy HaggardTHU
Lizzie Hexam ...... Lizzy WattsTHU
Mr Boffin ...... Jason WatkinsTHU
Betty Higden ...... Lynn FarleighTHU
Sloppy ...... Benjamin AskewTHU
Eugene Wrayburn ...... Patrick KennedyTHU
Mortimer Lightwood ...... Matt AddisTHU
Silas Wegg ...... Lee RossTHU
Aenus Venus ...... Stephen HoganTHU
Pleasant Riderhood ...... Annabelle DowlerTHU
Rogue Riderhood ...... Jamie ForemanTHU
Bradley Headstone ...... Neil StukeTHU
Abbey Potterson ...... Janice AcquahTHU
Pa Wilfer ...... Philip FoxTHU
Ma Wilfer ...... Annabelle DowlerTHU
Jenny Wren ...... Nicola Miles-WildinTHU
Jenny's Father ...... Paul RiderTHU
Solomon Riah ...... Jonathan TaflerTHU
Organ Grinder ...... Malcolm TierneyTHU
Music by Roger GoulaTHU
Directed by Jessica Dromgoole and Jeremy MortimerTHU
This episode is available until 7.45pm on 11th December asTHU
part of the Series Catch-up Trial.THU
THU
20:00 The Report b00nyz7j (Listen)THU
Current affairs series which combines original insightsTHU
into major news stories with topical investigations.THU
THU
20:30 In Business b00nz005 (Listen)THU
Unlimited CompanyTHU
In a world where banks and conventional companies haveTHU
taken a big battering in the recession, perhaps there areTHU
better ways of running an business. Peter Day listens toTHU
some people who are trying to do things completelyTHU
differently.THU
THU
21:00 Leading Edge b00nyz7n (Listen)THU
Geoff Watts examines the impact of Darwin's On The OriginTHU
of Species on science, society and religion, then and now,THU
on the 150th anniversary of its publication.THU
He visits an international conference in Egypt that bringsTHU
together scientists and religious thinkers from east andTHU
west to discuss how ideas about evolution have informedTHU
biological science, but also have been hijacked to supportTHU
prejudice. He also looks into some of the big questionsTHU
being asked of evolution today.THU
THU
21:30 In Our Time b00nyxvr (Listen)THU
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young ManTHU
Melvyn Bragg and guests Roy Foster, Jeri Johnson andTHU
Declan Kiberd discuss A Portrait of the Artist as a YoungTHU
Man, James Joyce's groundbreaking 1916 novel about growingTHU
up in Catholic Ireland.THU
THU
21:58 Weather b00ny61q (Listen)THU
The latest weather forecast.THU
THU
22:00 The World Tonight b00ny64b (Listen)THU
National and international news and analysis with RobinTHU
Lustig.THU
THU
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00nzwsn (Listen)THU
Notwithstanding: Stories from an English Village, RabbitTHU
Hugh Bonneville reads from Louis de Bernieres' new book ofTHU
linked stories which cast an affectionate but acute eye onTHU
the vanishing charms and eccentric characters of theTHU
fictional Surrey village of Notwithstanding.THU
The major, his wife and Leafy Barkwell have aTHU
heartbreaking encounter on an evening walk.THU
Abridged by Sara Davies.THU
THU
23:00 Bespoken Word b00n56sw (Listen)THU
Special edition of Radio 4's performance poetry show fromTHU
Cardiff University. Featuring Brit School graduate LauraTHU
Dockrill, who regularly gigs with Kate Nash and has justTHU
published her second book, Ugly Shy Girl, which looks atTHU
the experiences of the sixth-form loner girl, the kind whoTHU
feels 'like a tiny speck of dust that the Hoover hasTHU
forgotten to suck up'. Plus the winner of the Radio 4THU
Poetry Slam competition Dizraeli, who makes you listen toTHU
rap with new ears, and Siadwell from the TV comedy seriesTHU
Naked Video.THU
THU
23:30 Today in Parliament b00ny6zv (Listen)THU
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentTHU
with Sean Curran.THU
THU
FRI
FRIDAY 27 NOVEMBER 2009FRI
FRI
00:00 Midnight News b00nx953 (Listen)FRI
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI
4. Followed by Weather.FRI
FRI
00:30 Book of the Week b00p298s (Listen)FRI
Family Britain, Brisk Buying and SellingFRI
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andFRI
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theFRI
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryFRI
people.FRI
A new era of affluence is fuelled by a boom in advertisingFRI
and the arrival of commercial television.FRI
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.FRI
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
00:48 Shipping Forecast b00nx971 (Listen)FRI
The latest shipping forecast.FRI
FRI
01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00nx9pd (Listen)FRI
BBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.FRI
FRI
05:20 Shipping Forecast b00nx993 (Listen)FRI
The latest shipping forecast.FRI
FRI
05:30 News Briefing b00nx9qy (Listen)FRI
The latest news from BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
05:43 Prayer for the Day b00nxcj8 (Listen)FRI
Daily prayer and reflection with Rev Peter Baker.FRI
FRI
05:45 Farming Today b00nxclr (Listen)FRI
News and issues in rural Britain with Charlotte Smith.FRI
FRI
06:00 Today b00nxcs5 (Listen)FRI
With James Naughtie and Evan Davis. Including Sports Desk;FRI
Weather; Thought for the Day; Yesterday in Parliament.FRI
FRI
09:00 Food and Farming Awards b00nz1bf (Listen)FRI
Announcing the 2009 winners of Radio 4's annualFRI
competition.FRI
FRI
09:45 Book of the Week b00p298v (Listen)FRI
Family Britain, A Pretty MessFRI
Dominic West reads from David Kynaston's vivid andFRI
intimate history of Britain in the 1950s, drawing on theFRI
letters, diaries and memories of well-known and ordinaryFRI
people.FRI
An increasingly affluent and confident Britain is rockedFRI
by the Suez crisis.FRI
Abridged by Jane Greenwood.FRI
A Loftus Audio production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
10:00 Woman's Hour b00nxd3s (Listen)FRI
With Jenni Murray. Including drama: Our Mutual Friend.FRI
FRI
11:00 Lives in a Landscape b00nz1bh (Listen)FRI
Series 5, The Maryfield WritersFRI
Alan Dein goes to Northern Ireland to talk to former RoyalFRI
Ulster Constabulary officers who have formed a writingFRI
group. The Maryfield Writers meet once a month to shareFRI
and discuss their work. Alan spends time with three ofFRI
them to understand why they write about their chosenFRI
subjects and finds that each of them deals with the pastFRI
in different ways.FRI
Bob has made a clean break with his police past. He servedFRI
for 22 years, was shot at, had bombs placed under his carFRI
and was forced to move house a number of times. He choosesFRI
to write children's stories about fantasy and escape andFRI
has had a number of books published. Keith is working onFRI
screenplays which fall into the police-procedural genreFRI
but avoid autobiographical references. Not entirely atFRI
ease with modern Northern Ireland, Keith spends a lot ofFRI
time at home, writing. Teresa spent 20 years in JuvenileFRI
Liaisons and, as a Catholic, was in a minority in the RUC.FRI
Her poetry has allowed her some catharsis as years ofFRI
difficult experiences during the Troubles have now found aFRI
creative outlet.FRI
They each reflect on their motivations for joining theFRI
police and the importance of their new lives as writers inFRI
post-Troubles Northern Ireland.FRI
FRI
11:30 The Richest Man In Britain b00nz1bk (Listen)FRI
Episode 4FRI
Sitcom by Nick Hornby and Giles Smith about an ageing rockFRI
star and his search for fulfilment.FRI
Trillionnaire rocker Dave Mabbutt contemplates theFRI
purchase of an African village to complement hisFRI
afternoons-only radio station.FRI
Dave Mabbutt ...... Mark WilliamsFRI
Dom ...... Russell ToveyFRI
Naomi, the Charity Worker ...... Ayesha AntoineFRI
Dave's Mum ...... Lynda BellinghamFRI
Ken, the Maintenance Man ...... Phil Cornwell.FRI
FRI
12:00 You and Yours b00nxd7n (Listen)FRI
Consumer news and issues with Winifred Robinson.FRI
FRI
12:57 Weather b00nxdb1 (Listen)FRI
The latest weather forecast.FRI
FRI
13:00 World at One b00nxgb1 (Listen)FRI
National and international news.FRI
FRI
13:30 Feedback b00nz1bm (Listen)FRI
Roger Bolton airs listeners' views on BBC radio programmesFRI
and policy.FRI
FRI
14:00 The Archers b00nxgd9 (Listen)FRI
Helen's insecurities come to the fore.FRI
FRI
14:15 Afternoon Play b00nz2n9 (Listen)FRI
Number 10, The Visigoths Are Coming...FRI
Series of plays by Jonathan Myerson depicting life insideFRI
Downing Street.FRI
The Angolan Navy have occupied the British territory of StFRI
Helena. After six days, the PM and the Angolan AmbassadorFRI
are locked in talks to try to prevent a declaration ofFRI
war. But who has prompted this seemingly mad act ofFRI
aggression?FRI
Adam ...... Antony SherFRI
Steve ...... Stephen ManganFRI
Genoveva ...... Adjoa AndohFRI
Angolan Ambassador/Virgilio, Angolan Military AttacheFRI
...... Ray FearonFRI
Paul, US Deputy Secretary of State ...... Colin StintonFRI
Simon Laity ...... Damian LewisFRI
Merlin Helicopter Pilot ...... Theo FraserFRI
Command HQ ...... Scott CherryFRI
Directed by Clive BrillFRI
A Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
15:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00nz93r (Listen)FRI
Eric Robson chairs the popular horticultural forum.FRI
Bob Flowerdew, Anne Swithinbank and Matt Gibbs answerFRI
questions posed by gardeners in Mayfield, East Sussex.FRI
With Christmas just around the corner, the team give theirFRI
top tips for which new books to buy, and Bunny GuinnessFRI
checks out some new gadgets and gizmos that might beFRI
making an appearance in your garden some time soon.FRI
Including Gardening weather forecast.FRI
FRI
15:45 A Very Scottish Homecoming b00nz9x4 (Listen)FRI
Robert BurnsFRI
To celebrate Scotland's year of Homecoming, Aasmah MirFRI
explores five themes that have been chosen to encapsulateFRI
the Scottish contribution to the world.FRI
Scotland's year of Homecoming has been inspired by theFRI
250th anniversary of Robert Burns' birth. Aasmah asks whatFRI
Burns' real legacy is - his body of work or the socialFRI
principles he celebrated?FRI
FRI
16:00 Last Word b00nz93v (Listen)FRI
Matthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingFRI
and celebrating the life stories of people who haveFRI
recently died. The programme reflects on people ofFRI
distinction and interest from many walks of life, someFRI
famous and some less well known.FRI
FRI
16:30 The Film Programme b00nz93y (Listen)FRI
Francine Stock talks to Ken Russell about his adventuresFRI
in motion pictures.FRI
FRI
16:56 1989: Day by Day b00nxhxn (Listen)FRI
27th November 1989FRI
Sir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20FRI
years ago.FRI
Margaret Thatcher defends her record on the BBC's PanoramaFRI
and Michael Buerk reports from Ethiopia, where millionsFRI
are facing starvation.FRI
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.FRI
FRI
17:00 PM b00ny449 (Listen)FRI
Full coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynFRI
Quinn. Plus Weather.FRI
FRI
18:00 Six O'Clock News b00ny477 (Listen)FRI
The latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI
4.FRI
FRI
18:30 The Now Show b00nz940 (Listen)FRI
Series 29, Episode 1FRI
Steve Punt and Hugh Dennis present a satirical review ofFRI
the week's news, with help from Mitch Benn, Laura Shavin,FRI
Jon Holmes and Shazia Mirza.FRI
FRI
19:00 The Archers b00nxgdc (Listen)FRI
A new guest books in at Ambridge Hall.FRI
FRI
19:15 Front Row b00ny48q (Listen)FRI
Arts news and reviews with Kirsty Lang. Including theFRI
announcement of the contenders for the BBC National ShortFRI
Story Award.FRI
FRI
19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00ny5nt (Listen)FRI
Our Mutual Friend, Episode 15FRI
Adaptation by Mike Walker of Charles Dickens' classicFRI
novel.FRI
Impetuous and headstrong Bella Wilfer finally takes aFRI
stand.FRI
Charles Dickens ...... Alex JenningsFRI
John Rokesmith ...... Carl PrekoppFRI
Bella Wilfer ...... Daisy HaggardFRI
Lizzie Hexam ...... Lizzy WattsFRI
Mr Boffin ...... Jason WatkinsFRI
Betty Higden ...... Lynn FarleighFRI
Sloppy ...... Benjamin AskewFRI
Eugene Wrayburn ...... Patrick KennedyFRI
Mortimer Lightwood ...... Matt AddisFRI
Silas Wegg ...... Lee RossFRI
Aenus Venus ...... Stephen HoganFRI
Pleasant Riderhood ...... Annabelle DowlerFRI
Rogue Riderhood ...... Jamie ForemanFRI
Bradley Headstone ...... Neil StukeFRI
Abbey Potterson ...... Janice AcquahFRI
Pa Wilfer ...... Philip FoxFRI
Ma Wilfer ...... Annabelle DowlerFRI
Jenny Wren ...... Nicola Miles-WildinFRI
Jenny's Father ...... Paul RiderFRI
Solomon Riah ...... Jonathan TaflerFRI
Organ Grinder ...... Malcolm TierneyFRI
Music by Roger GoulaFRI
Directed by Jessica Dromgoole and Jeremy MortimerFRI
This episode is available until 7.45pm on 11th December asFRI
part of the Series Catch-up Trial.FRI
FRI
20:00 Any Questions? b00nz942 (Listen)FRI
Jonathan Dimbleby chairs the topical debate from TidworthFRI
in Wiltshire. The panellists include Timothy Garton Ash,FRI
Professor of European Studies at Oxford University.FRI
FRI
20:50 A Point of View b00nz944 (Listen)FRI
A weekly reflection on a topical issue from Clive James.FRI
FRI
21:00 Friday Play b00nz946 (Listen)FRI
ShirleymanderFRI
Tragic comedy by Gregory Evans depicting the principalFRI
events of Shirley Porter's time as leader of WestminsterFRI
city council in the 1980s.FRI
Leader ...... Tracy-Ann ObermanFRI
Wet ...... Maggie SteedFRI
Senior Council Official ...... Joseph Cohen-ColeFRI
Exec Director ...... Piers WehnerFRI
Deputy ...... Stephen HoganFRI
The Doctor ...... Sagar AryaFRI
District Auditor ...... Bruce AlexanderFRI
QC/Father ...... Ewan HooperFRI
Chairman, Tesco ...... Philip FoxFRI
Labour Councillor ...... John BigginsFRI
Female interviewer ...... Tessa NicholsonFRI
Directed by Marc Beeby.FRI
FRI
21:58 Weather b00ny61s (Listen)FRI
The latest weather forecast.FRI
FRI
22:00 The World Tonight b00ny64d (Listen)FRI
National and international news and analysis with RobinFRI
Lustig.FRI
FRI
22:45 Book at Bedtime b00nzwsq (Listen)FRI
Notwithstanding: Stories from an English Village, TheFRI
Broken HeartFRI
Hugh Bonneville reads from Louis de Bernieres' new book ofFRI
linked stories which cast an affectionate but acute eye onFRI
the vanishing charms and eccentric characters of theFRI
fictional Surrey village of Notwithstanding.FRI
When Obadiah Oak sells up and moves away fromFRI
Notwithstanding, he leaves his heart behind.FRI
Abridged by Sara Davies.FRI
FRI
23:00 A Good Read b00nycc0 (Listen)FRI
Sue MacGregor talks to poet Kate Clanchy and zoologist andFRI
director of the Natural History Museum Michael Dixon aboutFRI
their favourite books, featuring an acclaimed poetryFRI
anthology and the novel Salmon Fishing in the Yemen byFRI
Paul Torday.FRI
FRI
23:30 Today in Parliament b00ny6zx (Listen)FRI
News, views and features on today's stories in ParliamentFRI
with Mark D'Arcy.FRI
FRI
FRI
20 November, 2009
Radio 4 Listings for 21/11/2009 - 27/11/2009
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