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SATSATURDAY 19 DECEMBER 2009SATSAT00:00 Midnight News b00pb8fq (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4. Followed by Weather.SATSAT00:30 Book of the Week b00pgm7r (Listen)SATDear Granny Smith, Episode 5SATA letter from your postman written by Roy Mayall andSATdelivered by Philip Jackson; a heartfelt musing on theSATpast, present and future role of one of the oldest BritishSATinstitutions, the Postie.SATThe tale of Tom and Jerry and the big grey boxes.SATA Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.SATSAT00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pb8k8 (Listen)SATThe latest shipping forecast.SATSAT01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pb8kb (Listen)SATBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service. BBC Radio 4SATresumes at 5.20am.SATSAT05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pb8kd (Listen)SATThe latest shipping forecast.SATSAT05:30 News Briefing b00pb8kg (Listen)SATThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.SATSAT05:43 Prayer for the Day b00pb8kj (Listen)SATDaily prayer and reflection with Bishop Alan Abernethy.SATSAT05:45 Running Away b00f678q (Listen)SATHugh DennisSATTim Samuels joins five famous guests as they put theSATdemands of their hectic daily lives on hold and escape forSATa few hours.SATHugh Dennis escapes his punishing schedule on the comedySATcircuit and takes one of his favourite walks - throughSATglorious countryside near his home on the Sussex Downs -SATto the oldest woods in the land.SATSAT06:00 News and Papers b00pb8kl (Listen)SATThe latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SATSAT06:04 Weather b00pb8kn (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT06:07 Open Country b00pb8kq (Listen)SATGrowing Tents Not Crops on GowerSATWhat does it mean for the future of agriculture whenSATfarmers find that tents are more profitable than crops?SATHelen Mark visits the Gower Peninsula in south-west Wales,SATone of the UK's most popular holiday locations, to exploreSATthe long-term impact of tourism on farming.SATSAT06:30 Farming Today b00pb8ks (Listen)SATFarming Today This WeekSATCharlotte Smith visits Melton Mowbray's farmers market toSATfind out if the recession is making a dent in sales thisSATyear.SATAccording to the Centre for Retail Research, peopleSATbelieve they will spend an average of 168 pounds on foodSATand drink for Christmas. This is 14 pounds more than lastSATyear. The regions most likely to increase their spendingSATare London and the south east. Farming Today This WeekSATinvestigates if this prediction is a reality by askingSATturkey, sprout, parsnip and dairy farmers across theSATcountry if they are seeing an increase in sales thisSATChristmas.SATSAT06:57 Weather b00pb8kv (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT07:00 Today b00pb8kx (Listen)SATWith Evan Davis and John Humphrys. Including Sports Desk;SATWeather; Thought for the Day.SATSAT09:00 Saturday Live b00pb8kz (Listen)SATReal life stories in which listeners talk about the issuesSATthat matter to them. Fi Glover is joined top jock andSATsports supremo Garry Richardson. With poetry from SusanSATRichardson.SATSTUDIO GUEST: GARRY RICHARDSONSATGarry Richardson has been Radio 4’s voice of sport for 28SATyears and also hosts Sportsweek on Radio 5 Live.SATGarry RichardsonSATSATURDAY LIFE: DAVE SPIKEYSATComedian Dave Spikey takes us to London’s BloomsburySATTheatre to find out how he usually spends his SaturdaysSATDave SpikeySATTHE GOOD LIFE: REBECCA WILLIAMSSATIn the 1970s Rebecca Williams’ father moved his familySATfrom the city to the countryside to live out an idyllicSATexistence tending his own land and providing for hisSATfamily. That was the dream but the reality was a littleSATdifferent.SATTV TALENT SHOW WINNER: JIMMY TAMLEYSATComedy Ventriloquist Jimmy Tamley won New Faces back inSATthe 1980s.SATJimmy TamleySATINHERITANCE TRACKS: JULIETTE LEWISSATActress and singer Juliette Lewis chose 'Peg' by SteelySATDan and 'Voodoo Child/Slight Return' by Jimi Hendrix.SATPOET: SUSAN RICHARDSONSATSusan Richardson is a poet, performer and educator basedSATin Cardiff. She regularly performs at literary festivalsSATand environmental events up & down the countrySATSusan RichardsonSATTHE 12 INHERITANCE TRACKS OF CHRISTMASSATThis is our Christmas gift to you, 12 of our favouriteSATInheritance Tracks.SATThe 12 Inheritance Tracks of ChristmasSATSAT10:00 Excess Baggage b00pb8l1 (Listen)SATSandi Toksvig meets David Winpenny, who has toured theSATBritish Isles looking at the surprising number of pyramidsSATthere are scattered around - from gravestones andSATmemorials to follies, works of art and functionalSATbuildings. The pyramid is not only one of the most ancientSATof structural designs but one of the most modern, and allSATover the country people are proud of their local pyramidsSATand welcome those who have travelled to see them.SATRuth Breckman's tour in search of buildings took her toSATfive continents to see opera houses. Again these vary fromSATthe old, like the famous 18th-century La Scala in Milan,SATto the modern Marion Oliver McCaw Hall in Seattle. SheSATexplains why the opera house can tell the visitor so muchSATabout the history and culture of a city.SATAn object that travels all over the globe, often unnoticedSATbut vital to the way the world works, is the shippingSATcontainer. Jeremy Hiller explains how BBC News bought andSATtracked an individual container for a year, logging itsSATtravels, cargo and the crews who navigated its voyage. TheSATjourney tells us a lot about globalisation and gives aSATtelling insight into the current state of the world'sSATeconomy.SATSAT10:30 Here We Come b00pb8l3 (Listen)SATRadio 4 presenter John Waite's personal take on the storySATof The Monkees, the wildly successful 1960s pop group andSATTV stars.SATIn 1970, as a 19-year-old student, John was hitch-hikingSAThis way up the coast of California when he was spotted bySATDavy Jones, the British member of The Monkees, who invitedSAThim to stay at his Hollywood home. In this programme, JohnSATtells the fascinating story of the world's firstSATmanufactured pop group and catches up with Jones, 40 yearsSATon.SATSAT11:00 Week in Westminster b00pb8l5 (Listen)SATPeter Riddell, Steve Richards, Ben Brogan, Jackie AshleySATand Peter Oborne reflect on an extraordinary year inSATpolitics.SATSAT11:30 From Our Own Correspondent b00pb8l7 (Listen)SATKate Adie introduces BBC foreign correspondents with theSATstories behind the headlines.SATThere are fears that north and south Sudan could beSATsliding back towards conflict. A civil war between theSATcountry's two halves only ended five years ago. But nowSATreports from the region are increasingly disturbing. MoreSATthan two thousand people have died there this year inSATbattles between various ethnic factions. And there areSATclaims that the tensions in the largely Christian southSATare being stoked by the sending of arms shipments from theSATmainly-Muslim north. This comes against a backdrop of aSATreferendum in the south, in a year's time, in which peopleSATwill vote on whether to break away and declareSATindependence. Will Ross has been to a town at the centreSATof this divided region.SATFor months, all across Eastern Europe people have beenSATmarking the 20th anniversary of the fall of communism. AndSATnow, last in line, it's Romania's turn. Days of violentSATrevolution in 1989 ended with the execution of theSATdictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena. GraduallySATthe country began to emerge from their shadow, and todaySATit's a member of the European Union. But in some ofSATRomania's darker corners little has changed, and ChrisSATRogers has been finding out that the nation continues toSATfail some of its most vulnerable citizens:SATThe South Pacific island nation of Tonga is the lastSATPolynesian monarchy. At a coronation ceremony last year aSATcrown was placed on the head of King Gorge Tupou theSATFifth. And in his silk knee breeches and maroon cape, heSATrose from his golden throne as the country's absoluteSATruler. But there have been years of pressure for politicalSATreform, and some serious resentment of royal rule. TheSATKing now knows that his power may quite soon ebb away.SATWith his blessing Tonga is on course to become aSATdemocracy, although the monarch will stay on as head ofSATstate. John Pickford first visited the country more thanSAT30 years ago, and he's just been back to see how it isSATcoping with the tensions between tradition and modernity.SATChristmas is a big season for the port wine industry. TheSATfortified wine is used to wash down mince pies and StiltonSATcheese. Visiting heads of state are offered it at royalSATbanquets and cobwebbed bottles lie in the cellars ofSATgentlemen's clubs in London. But how is this ancient drinkSATstanding up to these times of recession? Humphrey HawksleySAThas travelled to the banks of the Douro River in PortugalSATwhere port wine has been made for hundreds of years. HeSATasks whether the traditions surrounding the tipple areSATstill relevant today and visits a wine bar to see whatSATtoday's young drinkers make of it.SATAnd from Ireland there's a tale of mad sportingSATdetermination in the teeth of an Atlantic storm. As all ofSATthe world surely knows, Tiger Woods has been engulfed bySATscandal. He has decided to take a break from golf, andSATsuddenly the sport has lost its guiding star. Woods was bySATfar its most inspiring figure; at his best a study inSATconcentration, power, precision and grace under pressure.SATAt the other end of the world of golf, our correspondentSATKieran Cooke also likes to swing a club. But he and hisSATfriends play a form of the game in the wilds of IrelandSATthat Tiger Woods would barely recognise.SATSAT12:00 Money Box b00pb8l9 (Listen)SATPaul Lewis with the latest news from the world of personalSATfinance.SATSAT12:30 The Now Show b00p99n5 (Listen)SATSeries 29, Episode 4SATTonight Steve Punt and Hugh Dennis explore pointlessSATprotests and Great British sentimentality; Mitch BennSATsings an ode to Simon Cowell; Marcus Brigstocke seesSATCopenhagen through the eyes of Dr Seuss and Jon HolmesSATtries to wriggle past bank security.SATSAT12:57 Weather b00pb8lc (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT13:00 News b00pb8vy (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4.SATSAT13:10 Any Questions? b00p99n7 (Listen)SATMartha Kearney chairs the topical debate from Masham,SATNorth Yorkshire. The panellists are Labour peer RoySATHattersley, science writer and broadcaster Dr GabrielleSATWalker, Conservative prospective parliamentary candidateSATand former diplomat Rory Stewart, and Nick Clegg's chiefSATof staff, Danny Alexander.SATTHIS WEEK'S PANELSATLORD HATTERSLEY was Deputy Leader of the Labour Party forSATnine years until 1992. Writing about the expenses scandalSATearlier this year he said the “crisis of confidence inSATpolitics and politicians” is not the result of politiciansSATclaiming parliamentary expenses for cleaning out a moat.SAT“It is the product of politicians failing to debate theSATmerits of a society in which one family lives in a moatedSATgrange while another survives in a bed and breakfastSAThostel.” A critic of Tony Blair’s New Labour, he has sinceSATdeclared himself a supporter of Gordon Brown. His ownSATpolitical career in the House of Commons spanned thirtySATthree years before he stood down as MP for BirminghamSATSparkbrook in 1997. The same year he was created a lifeSATpeer. He served in the governments of two Labour PrimeSATMinisters: as a minister under Harold Wilson and in theSATCabinet of James Callaghan. After the party’s defeat inSAT1979, he became its chief opposition spokesman. In 1983 heSATbecame deputy to party leader Neil Kinnock. His prolificSATwriting includes newspaper columns, novels, politicalSATmemoirs and biography.SATRORY STEWART is the prospective Conservative parliamentarySATcandidate for Penrith and the Border in Cumbria. Born inSATHong Kong, he grew up in Malaysia and served briefly as anSATofficer in the British Army, studied history and politicsSATat Oxford University and then joined the BritishSATDiplomatic Service. He worked in the British Embassy inSATIndonesia and then, in the wake of the Kosovo campaign, asSATthe British Representative in Montenegro. In 2000 he tookSATtwo years off and began walking from Turkey to Bangladesh.SATHe covered 6000 miles on foot alone across Afghanistan,SATPakistan, India and Nepal - a journey described in hisSATbook The Places in Between. In 2003, he became theSATcoalition Deputy Governor of Maysan and Dhi Qar, twoSATprovinces in the Marsh Arab region of Southern Iraq, andSATlater wrote a book about the experience called The PrinceSATof the Marshes and Other Occupational Hazards of a Year inSATIraq. In 2004, he was awarded the Order of the BritishSATEmpire. He lived in Kabul from 2006-2008 and founded theSATTurquoise Mountain Foundation, which is investing in theSATregeneration of the historic commercial centre of Kabul.SATHe was appointed to a professorial chair at HarvardSATUniversity as the Ryan Family Professor of Human Rights atSATthe beginning of 2009 and became Director of the CarrSATCenter for Human Rights Policy at the Harvard KennedySATSchool. He was elected as the Conservative ParliamentarySATcandidate by an open-primary meeting (open to allSATregistered voters, regardless of party) in October 2009.SATDANNY ALEXANDER MP is chief of staff to Liberal DemocratSATleader Nick Clegg. In 2007, he was also appointed asSATco-ordinator of the party’s election manifesto. Seen asSATone the Lib Dems' fastest-rising stars, he has made swiftSATprogress since his election to the Westminster parliamentSATin 2005 when he won the newly-created seat of Inverness,SATNairn, Badenoch and Strathspey. Labour - which had heldSATthe old seat of Inverness East – was beaten into secondSATplace. In response to the prospect of a minoritySATgovernment after the next election, he has said the LibSATDems were now having to look very closely and seriouslySATat what would happen if they became the ‘kingmakers’ in aSAThung parliament. He is former party spokesman on Work andSATPensions. One time press officer with the Scottish LiberalSATDemocrats, he was also PR chief for the CairngormsSATNational Park. He spent six years as head ofSATcommunications for the European Movement and theSATcampaigning group, Britain in Europe.SATDR GABRIELLE WALKER is a freelance writer, broadcaster andSATspeaker specialising in energy and climate change. She hasSATa PhD in Chemistry from Cambridge University and has beenSATClimate Change editor at Nature and Features Editor of NewSATScientist, for whom she now acts as consultant. She is aSATconsultant to the UK Government's Chief Scientific AdviserSATand to the Government Office of Science, as well as beingSATa visiting Professor at Princeton University. SheSATpresented the BBC Radio 4 series on climate change, PlanetSATEarth Under Threat, another series called Oceans: WhatSATLies Beneath and appears regularly on TV and radio. HerSATbooks include Snowball Earth (2003); An Ocean of AirSAT(2008); and with Sir David King, The Hot Topic: How toSATTackle Global Warming and Still Keep the Lights On (2008),SATwhich Al Gore described as “a beacon of clarity in a worldSATof misinformation”.SATSAT14:00 Any Answers? b00pb8wz (Listen)SATMartha Kearney takes listeners' calls and emails inSATresponse to this week's edition of Any Questions?SATSAT14:30 Saturday Play b00pb8x1 (Listen)SATThe Wonderful Wizard of OzSATDramatisation by Linda Marshall of L Frank Baum'sSATchildren's classic.SATWhen a tornado strikes her farmhouse in Kansas, youngSATDorothy is lifted to the magical world of Oz, where sheSATembarks upon a perilous journey to find her way back home.SATDorothy ...... Amelia ClarksonSATWizard of Oz/Kalidah/Uncle Henry ...... Jonathan KeebleSATScarecrow ...... Kevin EldonSATTinman ...... Burn GormanSATLion ...... Zubin VarlaSATWitch of the North/South/West/Aunt Em .......Emma FieldingSATKing Monkey/Miner ...... Andrew WestfieldSATMunchkin/Gatekeeper ...... Graeme HawleySATWith Original Music by Olly Fox.SATDirected by Nadia Molinari.SATPart of the BBC Christmas 2009 season.SATSAT15:30 Tales from the Stave b00p8c19 (Listen)SATSeries 5, Holst: The PlanetsSATFrances Fyfield tracks down the stories behind the scoresSATof well-known pieces of music.SATHolst apparently hated the popularity of The Planets. HeSATsat down to compose it in 1914 and it had its firstSATperformance in 1918. Given that English audiences wereSATused to Elgar, this massive 'modern' orchestral work cameSATas a huge surprise to concert goers, and they loved it.SATFrom the opening 5/4 tempo of the first movement of Mars,SATthis could be considered one of the first great pieces ofSAT20th-century English music.SATHolst had recently heard the revolutionary compositions ofSATSchoenberg and Stravinsky and in The Planets, he mixesSATharmonies and rhythms in the most dramatic way. Not all ofSATthe score is in his own hand, as he suffered fromSATneuritis, so he sometimes used copyists to help with hisSATcomposition.SATFrances' guests select their favourite movements from theSATscore, which is held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford,SATand they are joined by the curator Martin Holmes, whoSATlooks after the precious manuscripts there.SATThe seven movements don't include Pluto; that was onlySATdiscovered in 1930, four years before his death. TheSATsuccess of The Planets overshadowed Holst's otherSATcompositions, which are quite different in style from hisSATastrological depictions. While the piece is still popularSATin concert halls around the UK, its also familiar to filmSATfans as it is frequently used in movies. What would HolstSAThave made of its enduring popularity, 75 years after hisSATdeath, and what would he have made of its use in computerSATgames?SATSAT16:00 Woman's Hour b00pb8x3 (Listen)SATWeekend Woman's HourSATHighlights of this week's Woman's Hour programmes withSATJane Garvey.SATSigourney Weaver talks about Avatar and life beyond theSATscreen; what the noughties have done for women; James MaySATon why it's okay for men to not have a feminine side; theSATworking life of Britain's Consul-General in Iraq; theatreSATteenagers when they're too old for panto; what is theSATright level of compensation for women who donate theirSATeggs?SATSAT16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pb8x5 (Listen)SAT19th December 1989SATSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SATyears ago.SATSerious unrest is reported in Romania, with hundredsSATmassacred.SATA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SATSAT17:00 PM b00pb8x7 (Listen)SATSaturday PMSATFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with CarolynSATQuinn, plus the sports headlines.SATSAT17:30 iPM b00pb8x9 (Listen)SATThe weekly interactive current affairs magazine featuringSATonline conversation and debate.SATSAT17:54 Shipping Forecast b00pb8xc (Listen)SATThe latest shipping forecast.SATSAT17:57 Weather b00pb8xf (Listen)SATThe latest weather forecast.SATSAT18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pb8xh (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4.SATSAT18:15 Loose Ends b00pb8xk (Listen)SATPeter Curran and guests with an eclectic mix ofSATconversation, music and comedy.SATHe is joined by eighties pop sensation Boy George, theSATactor Michael Fassbender and the playwright Mark Ravenhill.SATAllegra McEvedy talks to almanac compiler Ben Schott.SATWith comedy from performance poet John Hegley, and musicSATfit for the festive season from Thea Gilmore.SATBoy GeorgeSATPeter Curran is joined by former Culture Club frontman BoySATGeorge, who along with his single, ‘White Xmas’ plays aSATten night residency. ‘Boy George in Concert Up Close andSATPersonal’ is at the Leicester Square Theatre, London fromSATSunday 20 December.SATMichael FassbenderSATHaving starred to great acclaim in ‘Fishtank’ and in SteveSATMcQueens ‘Hunger’, Michael Fassbender talks about his roleSATas the suave bilingual Brit in Quentin Tarantino’s WorldSATWar 2 epic 'Inglourious Basterds' out now on DVD. 'FishSATTank' is released on DVD on Monday 25 January.SATMark RavenhillSATMark Ravenhill talks about his latest collaboration withSATTerry Pratchett as he's adapted the Discworld authorsSATnovel 'Nation' for the National Theatre, London.SATNation – National TheatreSATBen SchottSATAnd it wouldn’t be Christmas without a compilation of theSATyear’s trivia in tables and informative titbits… BenSATSchott is happy to oblige as he talks to Allegra McEvedySATabout 'Schott's Almanac 2010' published by BloomsburySATJohn HegleySATMore festive cheer comes from the ever-popular performanceSATpoet John Hegley. He's at the London’s Battersea ArtsSATCentres ‘Christmas at the Batterseaside’ from Monday 21 toSATWednesday 23 December. And his Bloomsbury Theatre show‘SAT'Moniseur Robinet at the Bloomsbury’, is on Saturday 9SATJanuary 2010.SATThea GilmoreSATAnd fresh from her UK tour there’s music fromSATsinger-songwriter Thea Gilmore, playing her current singleSAT'That'll Be Christmas' and 'The St Stephens Day Murders'SATfrom her album ‘Strange Communion’. She finishes her tourSATat Fareham on Saturday 19 and Chester on Monday 21SATDecember.SATSAT19:00 From Fact to Fiction b00pb8xm (Listen)SATSeries 7, The Guilt SeasonSATWith matters of climate change under internationalSATscrutiny, novelist Liz Jensen brings together threeSATcharacters with wildly differing views in her comicSATmonologue, The Guilt Season.SATSAT19:15 Saturday Review b00pb8xy (Listen)SATTom Sutcliffe is joined by Richard Coles, Jude Kelly andSATAmanda Vickery to discuss the cultural highlights of theSATweek, including Keira Knightley's debut stage appearanceSATin The Misanthrope. Starring alongside Damien Lewis inSATMartin Crimp's translation of Moliere's classic 17thSATcentury French comedy, directed by Thea Sharrock, the playSATexplores the very contemporary issue of celebrity.SATSam Taylor Wood's feature film debut tells the story ofSATJohn Lennon's troubled adolescence in Liverpool, tornSATbetween his strict, domineering Aunt Mimi, played bySATKristin Scott Thomas, and his inconstant but loving motherSATJulia, played by Anne Marie Duff. Yearning for a normalSATfamily, Lennon (Aaron Johnson) escapes into the new andSATexciting world of rock n' roll, where his fledgling geniusSATfinds a kindred spirit in the teenage Paul McCartneySAT(Thomas Brodie Sangster).SATColum McCann's novel Let The Whole World Spin won theSATprestigious National Book Award in America. It is set inSAT1974 against the backdrop of Philippe Petit's celebratedSAThigh wire walk between the Twin Towers, a pivotal momentSATloosely drawing together a rich cast of New YorkSATresidents. From two immigrant Irish brothers to an uptownSATmother grieving for her son lost in Vietnam, from theSATrealities of life in the Bronx for a streetwalker to theSATcocaine adventures of two trendy young painters. McCann'sSATis a vividly-drawn portrait of 1970s Manhattan.SATPlus a review of the highlights on television overSATChristmas, featuring the Cranford Christmas Special,SATstarring Judi Dench and Imelda Staunton, a new adaptationSATof Henry James's The Turn of The Screw, John HurtSATreprising his role of Quentin Crisp in An Englisman in NewSATYork, and Andrew Davis's adaptation of Joanna Briscoe'sSATerotic thriller Sleep With Me.SATChristmas TVSATThe Turn of the Screw is on December 30th at 9pm.SATSleep With Me is on ITV1 on New Year’s Eve at 9pm.SATAn Englishman in New York is on ITV1 on December 28th.SATCranford begins on Sunday December 20th on BBC1 at 9pm,SATwith the second episode the following Sunday.SATSAT20:00 Archive on 4 b00pb8y0 (Listen)SATA Dog's LifeSATTo mark the 75th anniversary of the foundation of theSATGuide Dogs for the Blind Association, BBC DisabilitySATAffairs Correspondent Peter White examines the changingSATrole of the working dog, from the early 1900s to theirSATrole in today's society, using extensive and sometimesSATpreviously unbroadcast archive.SATPerennially 'man's best friend', dogs are also now man'sSATbest colleague. From guide dogs to guard dogs, hearingSATdogs to healing dogs, Peter examines the ways in which weSAThave become so dependent on canines. Over the years weSAThave progressed from guide dogs to dual purpose dogs, toSATdogs that can detect imminent epileptic fits, smuggledSATdrugs and explosive devices - even dogs that can do yourSATwashing.SATThe programme features a mix of historical material, newSATinterviews and previously untransmitted archive of theSATtrainers, the owners and those that place their lives inSATthe paws of their dogs.SATSAT21:00 Classic Serial b00p7kyd (Listen)SATThe Complete Smiley - The Karla Trilogy, Tinker, Tailor,SATSoldier, Spy, Part 3SATDramatisation by Shaun McKenna of John le Carre's classicSATnovel.SATGeorge Smiley, called back from retirement, is reachingSATthe end of his hunt to find the mole he believes isSATtearing the British Secret Intelligence Service apart.SATGeorge Smiley ...... Simon Russell BealeSATAnn Smiley ...... Anna ChancellorSATControl ...... John RoweSATPeter Guillam ...... Ewan BaileySATJim Prideaux ...... Anthony CalfSATMendel ...... Kenneth CranhamSATMagyar ...... Peter MajerSATRicki Tarr ...... Jamie ForemanSATToby Esterhase ...... Sam DaleSATBill Haydon ...... Michael FeastSATKarla ...... Philip FoxSATPolyakov ...... Stephen GreifSATSteve Mackelvore ...... Piers WehnerSATMrs McCraig ...... Kate LaydenSATBill Roach ...... Ryan WatsonSATThis episode is available until 3.00pm on 20th December asSATpart of the Series Catch-up Trial.SATSAT22:00 News and Weather b00pb8y2 (Listen)SATThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSAT4, followed by weather.SATSAT22:15 Unreliable Evidence b00p91qf (Listen)SATEuropean Law: After LisbonSATClive Anderson presents the series analysing the legalSATissues of the day.SATEuropean law has been described as an incoming tide whichSATcannot be held back. Will the coming into force of theSATLisbon Treaty generate a legal tsunami which willSAToverwhelm British sovereignty? Are we governed by our ownSATlaws or the law of Europe?SATSAT23:00 Brain of Britain b00p87r2 (Listen)SATRussell Davies chairs the tenth, heat of the perennialSATgeneral knowledge contest, with four contestants fromSATWales.SATContestantsSATJason Bray from PontypoolSATDavid Clark from Port TalbotSATStuart Davies from SwanseaSATDave Roberts from CardiffSATSAT23:30 Adventures in Poetry b00p7m9j (Listen)SATSeries 10, On First Looking into Chapman's HomerSATPeggy Reynolds explores the background, effect and lastingSATappeal of some well-loved poems.SAT'Much have I travelled in the realms of gold...' Keats'SATsonnet - his first great poem - begins. Keats couldn'tSATread Greek and the poem records him touching the ancientSATworld through translation and his already fecundSATimagination. Peggy explores the stories behind itsSATcreation and its enduring appeal.SATSATSUNSUNDAY 20 DECEMBER 2009SUNSUN00:00 Midnight News b00pb8z9 (Listen)SUNThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN4. Followed by Weather.SUNSUN00:30 Afternoon Reading b009fpl7 (Listen)SUNPier Shorts, Love Lessons from CephalopodsSUNStories by new writers, inspired by Brighton's Palace Pier.SUNBy Kay Sexton, read by Susannah Harker.SUNA marine scientist challenges a Russian gangmaster to aSUNswimming contest.SUNA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pb8zc (Listen)SUNThe latest shipping forecast.SUNSUN01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pb8zf (Listen)SUNBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.SUNSUN05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pb8zh (Listen)SUNThe latest shipping forecast.SUNSUN05:30 News Briefing b00pb8zk (Listen)SUNThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN05:43 Bells on Sunday b00pb8zm (Listen)SUNThe sound of bells from St John the Baptist, Loughton.SUNSUN05:45 The Watchdog and the Feral Beast b00p2z8p (Listen)SUNEpisode 1SUNSir Christopher Meyer, press watchdog until this year asSUNchairman of the Press Complaints Commission and formerSUNpress secretary at Number 10, discusses the role of theSUNpress today. Is the press today freedom's guardian or isSUNit a 'feral beast', as Tony Blair described the media atSUNthe end of his premiership?SUNSir Christopher draws on his personal experience as pressSUNwatchdog and government spokesman. In his six yearsSUNchairing the PCC, where he dealt with complaints againstSUNnewspapers and magazines, he championed a free press andSUNself-regulation, but had to contend with controversiesSUNthat sometimes strained people's trust in the press.SUNHis health check on the press comes at a time when opinionSUNis polarised. Is the press out of control, or is it moreSUNconstrained than ever before by the law? Is the pressSUNdestroying trust in our democracy, or are politiciansSUNgiving the press undue importance by courting editors andSUNjournalists? Is the press too powerful, or is itSUNvulnerable because of competition from the internet, muchSUNof it free and unregulated?SUNAnd now that the printed word and audio-visual contentSUNappear together on the same website, what is the futureSUNfor self-regulation by the press?SUNSUN06:00 News Headlines b00pb8zp (Listen)SUNThe latest national and international news.SUNSUN06:05 Something Understood b00pb8zr (Listen)SUNThe Festive SpiritSUNSince time immemorial special occasions have been markedSUNwith a festival in which communities joined together inSUNcelebration. Journalist Madeleine Bunting explores thisSUNdesire to create festivals.SUNThe readers are Liza Sadovy, James Goode and FrankSUNStirling.SUNA Unique production for BBC Radio 4.SUNMusicSUNMusic 1: ‘Wassail Carol’ set by William Mathias. PerformedSUNby the New College Choir. Available on the album CarolsSUNfrom New College. Released by CRD Records.SUNMusic 2: ‘Dinuy-ya’ performed by Fiesta Filipina.SUNAvailable on the album Music from the Philipines: FiestaSUNFilipina, released by Arc records.SUNMusic 3: ‘Caracunde’ performed by Susana Baca. AvailableSUNon the album Espiritu Vivo, released by Luaka Bop.SUNMusic 4: ‘Variations on Carnival of Venice’, composed bySUNFrancisco Tarrega, performed by Rafael Aguirre Minarro.SUNAvailable on the album Guitar Recital, released by Naxos.SUNMusic 5: ‘Woodstock’ written and performed by JoniSUNMitchell, available on Joni Mitchell: Hits, published bySUNSiquomb Publishing Group.SUNMusic 6: ‘L’Hiver’ composed by Alexander Glazunov,SUNperformed by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra, theSUNconductor was Evgeni Mravinsky. Available on the albumSUNMravinsky Live, released on Russian Disc.SUNMusic 7: ‘Wolcum Yule’ composed by Benjamin Britten,SUNperformed by the Choir of King’s College Cambridge.SUNAvailable on the album A Ceremony of Carols, published bySUNArgo.SUNMusic 8: ‘Ebetlehema Yiyo Lenkosi’ composed by JSUNShabalala, performed by Ladysmith Black Mambazo. AvailableSUNon the album Ultimate, published by Universal Music.SUNReadingsSUNReading 1: ‘Make We Marry’ (anonymous) from Middle EnglishSUNLyrics, selected and edited by Maxwell S Luria and RichardSUNL Hoffman. Published by WW Norton & Co.SUNReading 2: ‘Things Fall Apart’ by Chinua Achebe. PublishedSUNby Heinemann.SUNReading 3: ‘April Carnival, St Thomas’ written by TramSUNCombs, available in the book Pilgrim’s Terrace, publishedSUNby Editorial La Nueva Salamanca San Germai, Puerto Rico.SUNReading 4: ‘The Count of Monte Cristo’ written bySUNAlexander Dumas. Published by Project Gutenberg.SUNReading 5: ‘Bonfire Night in Lewes’ from Gunpowder Plots,SUNwritten by Mike Jay, published by Allen Lane.SUNReading 6: ‘On the Feast of Stephen’ by Barry Butson fromSUNthe Poetry Review Vol 87, No.3.SUNReading 7: ‘My Father as I Recall Him’ by Mamie Dickens,SUNfrom The Ladies Home Journal 1892, included in TheSUNVictorian Christmas by Anna Selby, published by Pen andSUNSword Books.SUNReading 8: ‘In the House of the Father’ edited by JeniSUNCouzyn from Christmas in Africa, from The Bloodaxe Book ofSUNContemporary Women Poets. Published by Bloodaxe.SUNSUN06:35 On Your Farm b00pb8zt (Listen)SUNAdam Henson visits Hunmanby Grange Farm on the YorkshireSUNWolds, a 600-acre arable farm with 2,000 hens producingSUNfreedom foods accredited eggs.SUNIn 2002, owners Tom and Gill Mellor decided that, with theSUNdrop in cereal prices, the farm wouldn't survive as aSUNfamily business without diversification. Using water fromSUNtheir own bore-hole and barley from the farm, they startedSUNa brewery which now produces up to 13,000 award-winningSUNpints of ale a year sold throughout the region.SUNIt is a story about seeing the writing on the wall andSUNthen doing something unique to their location to surviveSUNand prosper. Both the hen farming and brewery employ localSUNpeople, as does the farm. The programme highlights theSUNchoices many farmers face today to ensure the survival andSUNfuture prosperity of a family farm.SUNSUN06:57 Weather b00pb8zw (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN07:00 News and Papers b00pb8zy (Listen)SUNThe latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUNSUN07:10 Sunday b00pb900 (Listen)SUNRoger Bolton discusses the religious and ethical news ofSUNthe week. Moral arguments and perspectives on stories,SUNboth familiar and unfamiliar.SUNSUN07:55 Radio 4 Appeal b00pb902 (Listen)SUNBuild AfricaSUNDame Diana Rigg appeals on behalf of Build Africa.SUNDonations to Build Africa should be sent to FREEPOST BBCSUNRadio 4 Appeal, please mark the back of your envelopeSUNBuild Africa. Credit cards: Freephone 0800 404 8144. IfSUNyou are a UK tax payer, please provide Build Africa withSUNyour full name and address so they can claim the Gift AidSUNon your donation. The online and phone donation facilitiesSUNare not currently available to listeners without a UKSUNpostcode.SUNRegistered Charity Number 298316.SUNRelated LinksSUN* Build Africa (www.build-africa.org.uk)SUNSUN07:58 Weather b00pb904 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN08:00 News and Papers b00pb906 (Listen)SUNThe latest news headlines. Including a look at the papers.SUNSUN08:10 Sunday Worship b00pb908 (Listen)SUNA Spotless RoseSUNOn the fourth Sunday of Advent, the story of the angelSUNGabriel's visit to Mary is explored in a service from StSUNJohn's College, Durham.SUNThe preacher is Rev Dr David Wilkinson.SUNMusic director: George Richford.SUNSUN08:50 A Point of View b00p99nb (Listen)SUNClive James vents his frustration at automated customerSUNsystems and finds them a poor substitute for dealing withSUNreal people.SUNSUN09:00 Broadcasting House b00pb90b (Listen)SUNNews and conversation about the big stories of the weekSUNwith Paddy O'Connell.SUNSUN10:00 The Archers Omnibus b00pbltx (Listen)SUNThe week's events in Ambridge.SUNSUN11:15 Desert Island Discs b00pbltz (Listen)SUNSir Michael CaineSUNKirsty Young's castaway this Christmas is Sir MichaelSUNCaine.SUNIn a film career that has spanned more than four decadesSUNhe has won two Oscars; his credits include Alfie, TheSUNItalian Job, Hannah and Her Sisters and Educating Rita.SUNAs well as discussing his remarkable life in films, heSUNdescribes how the Queen used to cut through his backSUNgarden on her way to the horse races, discusses theSUNsecrets of a happy marriage and reveals the tricks forSUNcooking perfect roast potatoes this Christmas.SUNSUN12:00 I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue b00p885p (Listen)SUNSeries 52, Episode 5SUNThe perennial antidote to panel games pays a visit to theSUNFuturist Theatre in Scarborough, with Jack Dee taking theSUNchairman's role.SUNRegulars Barry Cryer and Tim Brooke-Taylor are joined bySUNJo Brand and Jeremy Hardy.SUNWith Colin Sell at the piano.SUNSUN12:32 Food Programme b00pblv1 (Listen)SUNSpiritsSUNSheila Dillon tastes her way through the long tradition ofSUNturning fruit into alcohol. She hears from eau de vieSUNproducers in the Alsace region of France and from ciderSUNbrandy distillers in Somerset.SUNThe technique of distillation was first devised by ArabsSUNand then embraced by Europeans more 700 years ago. It hasSUNgiven us whiskies, cognacs, Armagnac, and countless otherSUNdrinks but behind them all lies eau de vie, 'the water ofSUNlife', the clear spirit that emerges from the tool of theSUNdistillers' trade, the still.SUNThe most prized eau de vies are those produced fromSUNnothing but fermented fruits such as pears, raspberries,SUNquinces or bilberries. Few drinks are so dependent onSUNlandscape, tradition and craft. Often, local wild fruitsSUNare gathered, fermented and then heated in a family ownedSUNstill.SUNSheila Dillon looks at this centuries-old practice ofSUNproducing eau de vies. It is a tradition now in sharpSUNdecline across Europe, but Sheila discovers a brave, loneSUNeffort is underway in Somerset to revive a British form ofSUNthis drink.SUNTo help tell the story Sheila is joined by food historianSUNIvan Day and drinks buyer Sarah Knowles. Sheila also hearsSUNfrom C Anne Wilson, author of Water of Life: A History ofSUNWine Distilling and Spirits.SUNRelated LinksSUN* Eaux-de-Vie Museum, 68650 Lapoutroie. Open daily allSUNyear 0033 3 8947 50 26 (translate.google.co.uk)SUN* Massenez Distillery – 67220 VilléSUN(www.eaux-de-vie.com)SUN* Julian Temperley (www.ciderbrandy.co.uk)SUNWater of Life,Book - A History of Wine Distilling AndSUNSpirits 500BC to AD 2000SUNWater of Life, A History of Wine Distilling And SpiritsSUN500BC to AD 2000 by C. Anne Wilson, published by ProspectSUNBooks ISBN-10: 1903018463, ISBN-13: 978-1903018460SUNSUN12:57 Weather b00pblv3 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN13:00 The World This Weekend b00pblv5 (Listen)SUNA look at events around the world with Shaun Ley.SUNSUN13:30 Over The Rainbow With Yip Harburg b00n0xfq (Listen)SUNSUN14:00 Gardeners' Question Time b00p959x (Listen)SUNPeter Gibbs chairs the popular horticultural forum.SUNAnne Swithinbank, Chris Beardshaw and John Cushnie answerSUNquestions from gardeners in Cuffley, Hertfordshire.SUNAuthors Beth Chatto and Christine Walkden join MatthewSUNWilson to discuss contemporary garden literature.SUNIncluding gardening weather forecast.SUNSUN14:45 Joan Armatrading's Favourite Choirs b00bbxp7 (Listen)SUNLondon Bulgarian ChoirSUNJoan Armatrading visits choral assemblies across theSUNcountry.SUNJoan tunes into the musical traditions of Bulgaria withSUNDessislava Stefanova and the London Bulgarian Choir. SheSUNlearns about the group's distinctive singing techniquesSUNand the difficulty the British have with learning to singSUNless politely.SUNSUN15:00 Classic Serial b00pbm1x (Listen)SUNMatilda, Episode 1SUNDramatisation by Charlotte Jones of Roald Dahl's modernSUNchildren's classic about a cool, calm, pint-sizeSUNfive-year-old genius.SUNNarrator ...... Lenny HenrySUNMatilda ...... Lauren MoteSUNMiss Trunchbull ......Nichola McAuliffeSUNMrs Wormwood ...... Claire RushbrookSUNMr Wormwood ...... John BigginsSUNMiss Honey ...... Emerald O'HanrahanSUNMrs Phelps ...... Kate LaydenSUNMichael ...... Ryan WatsonSUNBruce Bogtrotter ...... Joshua SwinneySUNNobby ...... Rhys JenningsSUNLavender ...... Sinead MichaelSUNHortensia ...... Lizzy WattsSUNDirected by Claire Grove.SUNPart of the BBC Christmas 2009 season.SUNSUN16:00 Open Book b00pbm1z (Listen)SUNMariella Frostrup talks to the crime writer MarkSUNBillingham about one of his inspirations. As a newSUNbig-screen adaptation of Sherlock Holmes reaches ourSUNcinemas, he and the crime writing expert Barry ForshawSUNdiscuss Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's enduring creation and hisSUNimpact on every crime writer since.SUNThere's advice for a listener eager to read fiction set inSUNthe Middle Ages from the novelist Kevin Crossley-Holland.SUNAnd Melissa Katsoulis and Suzi Feary look back at anSUNeventful decade in the world of books and pick out someSUNpublishing highlights in the year to come.SUNBOOK LISTSUNSir Arthur Conan Doyle The Complete Sherlock HolmesSUN(various publishers)SUNEdward Hogan: BlackmoorSUNPublisher: Simon and SchusterSUNDarryl Samaraweera: Vicky Had One Eye OpenSUNPublisher: Burning HouseSUNKEVIN CROSSLEY-HOLLAND'SSUNREADING CLINIC RECOMMENDATIONSSUNUmberto Eco: The Name of the RoseSUNPublisher: VintageSUNUmberto Eco: BaudolinoSUNPublisher: VintageSUNJane Smiley: The GreenlandersSUNPublisher: Fawcett BooksSUNGeorge Mackay Brown: MagnusSUNPublisher: PolygonSUNHelen Waddell: Peter AbelardSUNPublisher: ConstableSUNLilli Thal (trans. John Brownjon)SUNPublisher: Allen & UnwinSUNKevin Crossley-Holland: The Seeing StoneSUNPublisher: Orion Children’sSUNSUN16:30 Thomas Lynch's Season of Innocence b00pbm21 (Listen)SUNIrish-American poet and essayist Thomas Lynch introduces aSUNpoignant and insightful programme on poetry that has beenSUNinspired by children, with contributions from Carol AnnSUNDuffy, Matthew Sweeney, Frieda Hughes and Robin Robertson.SUNA Just Radio production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pbm7m (Listen)SUN20th December 1989SUNSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20SUNyears ago.SUNUS forces looking for General Noriega invade Panama.SUNA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN17:00 The New Art of Diplomacy b00p8dz6 (Listen)SUNEpisode 1SUNJames Naughtie asks if British diplomacy is still fit forSUNpurpose.SUNA century ago, much of the map of the world was colouredSUNwith the pink of the British Empire. Britain's diplomatsSUNreigned supreme, with the reassurance of a gunboat toSUNsupport them. Much has changed since that time, andSUNcontinues to change. As Britain faces new threats and newSUNpriorities across the globe, how are the foreign officeSUNand its diplomats changing?SUNSUN17:40 From Fact to Fiction b00pb8xm (Listen)SUN[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Saturday.]SUNSUN17:54 Shipping Forecast b00pbmdv (Listen)SUNThe latest shipping forecast.SUNSUN17:57 Weather b00pbmj1 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pbmj3 (Listen)SUNThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioSUN4.SUNSUN18:15 Pick of the Week b00pbmj5 (Listen)SUNVal McDermid introduces her selection of highlights fromSUNthe past week on BBC radio.SUNSUN19:00 The Archers b00pbmlw (Listen)SUNLower Loxley gets into the festive spirit.SUNSUN19:15 Americana b00pbmly (Listen)SUNMatt Frei presents an insider guide to the people and theSUNstories shaping America today. Combining location reportsSUNwith lively discussion and exclusive interviews, the showSUNprovides new and surprising insights into contemporarySUNAmerica.SUNMatt is joined by Joe Scarborough, the host of Morning JoeSUNon MSNBC, for a round-up of the week's news in the weekSUNbefore Christmas. We will likely talk about former VPSUNcandidate Joe Lieberman, now wielding power in shaping theSUNUS healthcare reform debate, Time magazine's Man of theSUNYear Ben Bernanke and lobbyists in American politics -SUNfrom the days when President Ulysses Grant used to hangSUNout in the lobby of the Willard Hotel in Washington, DC.SUNThen we go to Houston - power base of ConservativeSUNstandard-bearers such as Tom DeLay, Dick Cheney and theSUNBush family - for an interview with Annise Parker, electedSUNto be the city's first gay mayor.SUNGarrison Keillor explains the fate of a toxic holiday foodSUNthat is often given, rarely eaten: the fruitcake.SUNNot many alligator handbags under the Christmas tree inSUNAmerica this year - bad news for Louisanna's alligatorSUNfarmers. We head to the swamp to meet one of them.SUNSUN19:45 Afternoon Reading b0080dyx (Listen)SUNSputnik, The First King of MarsSUNA selection of stories specially commissioned to celebrateSUNthe Russian satellite which started the space race.SUNBy Nick Walker, read by Peter Capaldi.SUNThere is plenty of time to think during the long journeySUNto Mars. And the new colony will need governance.SUNA Sweet Talk production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN20:00 More or Less b00p94fp (Listen)SUNTim Harford and the More or Less team find out who reallySUNpays most tax and why Christmas shopping is, to oneSUNeconomist, an orgy of 'value destruction'.SUNAn Open University co production for BBC Radio 4.SUNMore or Less Christmas quiz 2009SUNHave you been a loyal listener to the programme or aSUNfickle follower? Have a go at our quiz.SUNTest your knowledgeSUNSUN20:30 Last Word b00p99n1 (Listen)SUNMatthew Bannister presents the obituary series, analysingSUNand celebrating the life stories of people who haveSUNrecently died. The programme reflects on people ofSUNdistinction and interest from many walks of life, someSUNfamous and some less well known.SUNMarking the lives of Paul Samuelson, Yegor Gaidar, BobbySUNJaye, Sir John Quicke and Ken Wlaschin.SUNPAUL SAMUELSONSUNUS Economist who has died aged 94SUNPaul Samuelson is described by many as the mostSUNinfluential American economist of the twentieth century.SUNHe was the author of the most celebrated economicsSUNtextbook of modern times, Economics: An IntroductorySUNAnalysis which has sold millions of copies and brought theSUNideas of JM Keynes to generations of students, and policySUNmakers, around the world. He is credited with turningSUNeconomics from a scattered selection of ideas into aSUNsocial science and raising the economics department at theSUNMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) into a worldSUNclass research centre. He advised successive AmericanSUNgovernments on economic policy, including President JFSUNKennedy and was awarded the 1970 Nobel Prize in economics.SUNMatthew speaks to Professor James Poterba, friend andSUNformer head of the MIT Economics department and toSUNStephanie Flanders, the BBC’s Economics Editor.SUNPaul Samuelson was born on May 15, 1915 and died DecemberSUN13, 2009SUNYEGOR GAIDARSUNRussian politician and economic reformer who has died agedSUN53SUNYegor Gaidar was the controversial architect of Russia’sSUNpainful transition to a market economy after the collapseSUNof the Soviet Union in 1991. He was appointed acting PrimeSUNMinister by Boris Yeltsin in 1992 when he was still onlySUNin his mid thirties, but was confronted with a mountain ofSUNforeign debt, severe food shortages and the looming threatSUNof riots. Gaidar’s solution, described by some as “shockSUNtherapy”, was to abolish state control of prices andSUNunleash market forces. Whilst his supporters credit himSUNwith saving Russia from hunger and civil war, millions ofSUNordinary Russians blamed him for soaring prices.SUNMatthew speaks to the British economist Professor LordSUNLayard of the London School of Economics, and to theSUNformer Editor of the BBC’s Russian Service, Andrei OstalskiSUNYegor Timurovich Gaidar was born 19 March 1956 and died 16SUNDecember 2009SUNBOBBY JAYESUNBBC executive who has died aged 84SUNBobby Jaye was responsible for some of the most successfulSUNcomedy programmes on BBC Radio 4 and Radio 2. As Head ofSUNBBC Radio Light Entertainment in the 1980s, he nurturedSUNsitcoms like “After Henry” and Radio Active. He alsoSUNtransferred many of television’s most successful comediesSUNto the radio, including “Steptoe and Son”, “Yes Minister”SUNand even Morecambe and Wise. One of his first jobs at theSUNBBC was as a studio manager on the Goon Show. Promoted toSUNproducer, he presided over some of BBC Radio’s best lovedSUNpanel games, including “Twenty Questions”, “My Word” andSUN“My Music”.SUNMatthew talks to Bobby’s daughter Amanda Breach, theSUNwriter and former BBC light entertainment producer SimonSUNBrett and his friends Sandy Chalmers and Barry Cryer.SUNSIR JOHN QUICKESUNFarmer and cheese maker who has died aged 87SUNJohn Quicke was a West Country farmer and cheese maker whoSUNcreated the award-winning Quicke's Traditional Cheddar. HeSUNwas a keen surfer with an interest in spirituality, rareSUNdrive and business acumen. Sir John Quicke began his lifeSUNat Eton and Oxford before fighting in Burma during theSUNSecond World War. He then studied agriculture beforeSUNreturning to the struggling family farm in Devon,SUNdetermined to make it a success.SUNLast Word hears from his daughter Mary and his friend andSUNfellow farmer, Lord CameronSUNSir John Quicke, CBE, was born on April 20, 1922 and diedSUNon November 16, 2009SUNKEN WLASCHINSUNFilm festival director, author and cinema historian whoSUNhas died aged 75SUNFrom the late sixties until the early eighties, KenSUNWlaschin brought the best of world cinema to London. AsSUNprogramme director at the National Film Theatre and theSUNLondon Film Festival, he moved away from programmesSUNdominated by the US and the UK to include pioneeringSUNcinema from all over the world. He was a film buff all hisSUNlife and wrote many books on the subject, including “TheSUNIllustrated Encyclopaedia of the World’s Great Movie StarsSUNand Their Films” and “Bluff Your Way in the Cinema.” HeSUNwas awarded an MBE by the Prince of Wales in 1981.SUNMatthew speaks to the former controller of the BritishSUNFilm Institute, Leslie Hardcastle and to Professor IanSUNChristie of Birkbeck College, University of London.SUNKenneth Wlaschin was born 12 July 1934 and died 10SUNNovember 2009.SUNSUN21:00 Money Box b00pb8l9 (Listen)SUN[Repeat of broadcast at 12:00 on Saturday.]SUNSUN21:26 Radio 4 Appeal b00pb902 (Listen)SUN[Repeat of broadcast at 07:55 today.]SUNSUN21:30 In Business b00p944k (Listen)SUNLet Me Entertain YouSUNWhat can business leaders learn from rock musicians andSUNimprovisational comedians? Peter Day finds out.SUNRelated LinksSUN* Improv Your Biz (improvyourbiz.com)SUN* Academy of Rock (www.academy-of-rock.co.uk)SUNContributors to this programme:SUNNeil MullarkeySUNComedy Store PlayersSUNPeter CookSUNAcademy of Rock, in partnership with Imperial CollegeSUNLondonSUNHow can improvised comedy help people in business?SUNComedian Neil Mullarkey and guests at the Comedy StoreSUNplay improvisation games. Neil argues that the skillsSUNneeded for these games would also benefit businesses.SUNSUN21:58 Weather b00pbmm0 (Listen)SUNThe latest weather forecast.SUNSUN22:00 Westminster Hour b00pbmm2 (Listen)SUNReports from behind the scenes at Westminster. IncludingSUNThe Watchdog and the Feral Beast.SUNSUN23:00 1989: Day by Day Omnibus b00pbmn5 (Listen)SUNWeek ending 19th December November 1989SUNA look back at the events making the news 20 years ago,SUNwith Sir John Tusa.SUNPresident FW de Klerk meets with Nelson Mandela, ChileSUNelects a civilian president to replace Augusto Pinochet,SUNand East Germany discusses what do to after dismantlingSUNthe Stasi.SUNA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.SUNSUN23:30 Something Understood b00pb8zr (Listen)SUN[Repeat of broadcast at 06:05 today.]SUNSUNMONMONDAY 21 DECEMBER 2009MONMON00:00 Midnight News b00pbncv (Listen)MONThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON4. Followed by Weather.MONMON00:15 Thinking Allowed b00p912j (Listen)MONLaurie Taylor explores the history of clothing behind bars.MONFrom broad arrows on prisoners suits in the 19th centuryMONto the orange jumpsuits worn by inmates of the GuantanamoMONBay detention camp, the uniform prisoners wear reflectsMONthe regime they are being punished by. Laurie is joined byMONJuliet Ash from the Royal Collge of Art and ElizabethMONWilson from the London College of Fashion to undress theMONhistory of prison clothing and discuss what it revealsMONabout the social cultural and political context of theMONtime.MONAlso in the programme, Paul Sparks from Sussex UniversityMONdiscusses the importance of the local pub and the power ofMONthe boycott.MONMON00:45 Bells on Sunday b00pb8zm (Listen)MON[Repeat of broadcast at 05:43 on Sunday.]MONMON00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pbng1 (Listen)MONThe latest shipping forecast.MONMON01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pbnhg (Listen)MONBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.MONMON05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pbnh0 (Listen)MONThe latest shipping forecast.MONMON05:30 News Briefing b00pbntr (Listen)MONThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.MONMON05:43 Prayer for the Day b00pbnwm (Listen)MONDaily prayer and reflection with Bishop Alan Abernethy.MONGood Morning.MONJourneys are something many people will be making over theMONnext week as many families and friends travel to spendMONtime together over the Christmas period. Indeed our twoMONchildren, who are now adults, will be travelling home fromMONuniversity and it will be great to spend time together.MONWhen our children were younger the excitement especiallyMONof summer holidays was always special. We would go campingMONin France and travel by car and ferry. The journey beganMONfrom the moment we left the driveway of our home. TheMONfirst stage of this adventure was a 260 mile car journey.MONThere was an inevitable moment usually after 5 or 6 milesMONwhen from the back seat one of our two children wouldMONutter the words, “are we nearly there yet?” Hence theMONanswer was generally not yet but we have to stop for ourMONpicnic on the way.MONLong journeys are difficult as travelling is exhausting.MONIt also needs to be planned so that there is enough foodMONand fluids to keep you going. Being able to pack the carMONwith all kinds of extras was a great help. The sweets andMONjuices, the pillows and blankets, the music and storyMONtapes to help while away some of the hours of tediousMONdriving were a wonderful help to keep the sprits up andMONparents patience in tact.MONI don’t miss those long car journeys and rough ferryMONcrossings while trying to keep children entertainedMONalthough I would willingly go through it all again. But IMONstill find travelling exhausting no matter what mode ofMONtransport I use.MONThe Christmas event started with a difficult journey andMONaccording to the story it was a journey that had to beMONmade. The fact that Mary was heavily pregnant didn’t makeMONit any easier and the dust and the heat would have takenMONits toll on the energy and spirit.MONLord as we celebrate the Christmas journey of Mary andMONJoseph keep safe, we pray, all who travel this ChristmasMONand may we all find the joy and peace of the Christ child,MONwherever we journey to. Amen.MONMON05:45 Farming Today b00pbnzg (Listen)MONThe government launches a campaign warning people aboutMONbuying Micro-pigs as Christmas presents. Charlotte SmithMONhears from a micro-pig breeder, and from a pig expert whoMONsays people who buy these animals usually end up with moreMONpig than they expected.MONMON05:57 Weather b00pbw1l (Listen)MONThe latest weather forecast for farmers.MONMON06:00 Today b00pbnzs (Listen)MONWith James Naughtie and Justin Webb. Including SportsMONDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day.MONMON09:00 Start the Week b00pbw1n (Listen)MONAndrew Marr sets the week's cultural agenda with a richMONand electic mix of guests.MONHe discusses what it means to be Welsh in the 21st centuryMONwith Rhodri Morgan, on his retirement as the first FirstMONMinister for Wales. Times columnist Ann Treneman reflectsMONon the nature of political satire in the post-expensesMONscandal world in her new book Annus Horribilis: The WorstMONYear in British Politics. Are there any jokes left to beMONmade and what role can satire play in the run up to theMONnext election? Mark Mazower examines the origins of the UNMONand what they tell us about international cooperation now.MONIs it a role model for global understanding or a rushedMONcompromise that creaks increasingly under the weight ofMONinternal contradictions? And at the start of the week ofMONtraditional feasting, Roger Scruton talks about theMONphilosophy of wine and his thesis I Drink, Therefore I Am.MONMON09:45 Book of the Week b00pbpcc (Listen)MONPaw Tracks in the Moonlight, Episode 1MONKevin Whately reads from Denis O'Connor's memoir.MONOne snowy night in the wilds of Northumberland, O'ConnorMONis settling in for a night in front of the fire when heMONhears a cry of pain from the woods outside.MONAbridged by Jane Marshall.MONA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON10:00 Woman's Hour b00pbprm (Listen)MONPenelope Cruz talks to Jane Garvey about her latest film,MONNine, a musical extravaganza with a star studded cast inMONwhich Penelope sings and shows off her ballet skills - sheMONtrained in classical ballet from the age of four. PenelopeMONdescribes how much she enjoyed the experience ofMONrehearsing intensively with the other stars on the film.MONShe also discusses her successful working relationshipMONwith acclaimed Spanish director Pedro Almodovar, with whomMONshe has made four internationally-acclaimed films. And sheMONreveals how she keeps to her Spanish timetable - eatingMONlate at night - whether in LA, London or Madrid.MONLast week many schools up and down the country marked theMONseasonal festivities with a celebration of one sort orMONanother. But are they celebrating the Christmas story, theMONwinter festivals or just a national holiday? The NativityMONis no longer part of every school's winter activities, andMONwith the commercial pressures of this time of year, how doMONwe go about teaching children the meaning of Christmas?MONJane is joined by author and former editor of the CatholicMONHerald Cristina Odone and writer Ariane Sherine, editor ofMONThe Atheist's Guide to Christmas.MONWe've always been interested in reading stories aboutMONother people's lives. But when these tales are based onMONsomeone's real life experience they can hold particularMONintrigue for the reader. A new competition being held byMONthe BBC is hoping to tap into the appetite forMONreality-based literature by inviting the public to send inMONtheir own extraordinary stories. The best five will beMONturned into books and published in the New Year. Jane andMONher guests discuss fact and fiction.MONAnd Christmas can put an extra strain on the finances ofMONmost families, and it's usually women who take on theMONresponsibility of buying presents and managing theMONhousehold budget. Many are tempted to overspend on creditMONand store cards, forgetting about the true cost until theMONbills arrive in January. So what can be done to help womenMONin debt? We hear from some women who have formed aMONself-help group called United Maidens to tackle personalMONdebt problems and discuss what can be done to help.MONMON11:00 Policing Britain b00pbw1q (Listen)MONThe Justice We DeserveMONAndy Hayman, former assistant commissioner of theMONMetropolitan Police, examines the challenges facingMONpolicing in Britain today.MONWhen Andy Hayman left the Metropolitan Police in 2008 heMONwas assistant commissioner, Special Operations, in overallMONcharge of counter-terrorism. He had to deal with theMONsuicide bomb attacks on London and the tragedy of the deMONMenezes shooting. Andy's 30-year career started straightMONout of school with the police in Essex and took him to theMONposition of chief constable of Norfolk. In this series heMONtakes a critical look at the challenges facing the policeMONservice in Britain today. He goes back on the beat andMONtalks to former colleagues and those who work with theMONpolice at every level to ask the question, 'Do we have theMONpolicing we need in Britain today?'MONA Perfectly Normal production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON11:30 Giles Wemmbley-Hogg Goes Off b00pbx22 (Listen)MONSeries 4, Episode 2MONComedy series by Marcus Brigstocke and Jeremy Salsby.MONGiles Wemmbley Hogg returns, having set up his own travelMONcompany.MONGiles visits Iceland and buys some frozen food for hisMONtrip to Lapland. He also learns that, when hunting withMONshotguns, it's good to know the difference between an elkMONand an elf.MONGiles ...... Marcus BrigstockeMONBella ...... Catherine TateMONMrs Wells ...... Celia ImrieMONMr Timmis ...... Adrian ScarboroughMONCharlotte Wemmbley-Hogg ...... Catherine ShepherdMONSanta ...... Ewan Bailey.MONMON12:00 You and Yours b00pbq2q (Listen)MONConsumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.MONMON12:57 Weather b00pbq3y (Listen)MONThe latest weather forecast.MONMON13:00 World at One b00pbqbv (Listen)MONNational and international news with Martha Kearney.MONMON13:30 Brain of Britain b00pbx24 (Listen)MONRussell Davies chairs the eleventh heat of the perennialMONgeneral knowledge contest, featuring contestants from theMONsouth of England.MONContestantsMONMartin Boult from BasingstokeMONRosanna Day from NewburyMONNancy Dickmann from OxfordMONAndrew McNab from LondonMONMON14:00 The Archers b00pbmlw (Listen)MON[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Sunday.]MONMON14:15 Afternoon Play b00pbx26 (Listen)MONMcLevy - Series 6, A Bolt from the BlueMONSeries of stories about David Ashton's Victorian detectiveMONbased on real-life Edinburgh policeman Inspector JamesMONMcLevy.MONThe young gentlemen of the university's student clubs areMONcompeting to play the most audacious pranks onMONunsuspecting citizens. Just harmless youthful high spiritsMON- until a body is found floating in Leith docks.MONMcLevy ...... Brian CoxMONJean Brash ...... Siobhan RedmondMONMulholland ...... Michael Perceval-MaxwellMONRoach ...... David AshtonMONHannah ...... Colette O'NeilMONCarnegie ...... Ewen BremnerMONBenjamin ...... Sandy GriersonMONAlexander ...... Jim Webster-StewartMONJessica ...... Jenny HulseMONBoag ...... James BryceMONAgnes ...... Carol Ann CrawfordMONDirected by Patrick Rayner.MONMON15:00 Archive on 4 b00pb8y0 (Listen)MON[Repeat of broadcast at 20:00 on Saturday.]MONMON15:45 The Santa Tapes b00pbrs8 (Listen)MONSanta of the LighthousesMONAlan Dein unwraps the oral history of Santa Claus, hearingMONthe true stories of those who have donned the red andMONwhite costume, from war-torn Hungary to the icy wastes ofMONAlaska.MONOf course Santa flies, but this one arrives by helicopter.MONFor 80 years, the lighthouse and coastguard families ofMONNew England have been waiting for him to touch down.MONMON16:00 Food Programme b00pblv1 (Listen)MON[Repeat of broadcast at 12:32 on Sunday.]MONMON16:30 The Infinite Monkey Cage b00pbx28 (Listen)MONEpisode 4MONPhysicist Brian Cox and comedian Robin Ince take a witty,MONirreverent and unashamedly rational look at the worldMONaccoring to science.MONRobin and Brian are joined by Victor Stock, Dean ofMONGuildford Cathedral, and science journalist AdamMONRutherford for a special Christmas edition of theMONprogramme. Adam explains why religion really could be goodMONfor your health, and can Victor convert Robin and Brian inMONtime for the festive season?MONMON16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pbs0b (Listen)MON21st December 1989MONSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20MONyears ago.MONRomanian President Nicolae Ceausescu is booed in public.MONA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON17:00 PM b00pbs6b (Listen)MONFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieMONMair. Plus Weather.MONMON18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pbsgv (Listen)MONThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioMON4.MONMON18:30 I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue b00pcb3d (Listen)MONSeries 52, Episode 6MONThe perennial antidote to panel games comes from theMONFuturist Theatre in Scarborough, with Jack Dee taking theMONchairman's role.MONRegulars Barry Cryer and Tim Brooke-Taylor are joined byMONJo Brand and Jeremy Hardy.MONWith Colin Sell at the piano.MONMON19:00 The Archers b00pbqyz (Listen)MONVicky shows Joe her assertive side.MONMON19:15 Front Row b00pbsh3 (Listen)MONArts news and reviews with John Wilson. Including anMONinterview with Kenneth Branagh, as he returns to the roleMONof Swedish detective Kurt Wallander.MONMON19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00pbtjj (Listen)MONSomeone Like You, Man from the SouthMONDramatisation by Stephen Sheridan of five darkly comicMONtales by Roald Dahl.MONA young marine agrees to a bizarre wager with an elderlyMONSouth American.MONStoryteller ...... Charles DanceMONOld Man ...... Andrew SachsMONMarine ...... Danny MahoneyMONGirl ...... Donnla HughesMONSpanish Woman ...... Rachel AtkinsMONDirected by David BlountMONA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.MONPart of the BBC Christmas 2009 season.MONMON20:00 Things We Forgot to Remember b00pcb58 (Listen)MONSeries 5, The Hanseatic LeagueMONMichael Portillo presents a series revisiting the greatMONmoments of history to discover that they often concealMONother events of equal but forgotten importance.MONOne of Michael Portillo's earliest political memories isMONthe 1975 vote on whether or not Britain should stay in theMONCommon Market, the early name for what is now the EuropeanMONUnion. It felt like a uniquely 20th-century subject. ButMONin this programme, Michael travels to King's Lynn to findMONout why this town near the Norfolk coast was such anMONimportant part of a forgotten Northern EuropeanMONfree-trading area that stretched down as far as Cologne inMONGermany and included most of the Baltic coastline.MONThe Hanseatic League was centred in the German town ofMONLubbeck but English wool made it an important part of aMONsystem that allowed Hansas, or groups of tradesmen, toMONestablish a network of trading centres running alongsideMONthe nation states of the time. The League had money enoughMONto raise an army, had a substantial fleet and wasMONimportant for a number of sovereigns, not least Edward IVMONof England, when they were in need of a loan. So what wereMONthe ambitions of the hugely wealthy tradesmen running theMONleague? And have we forgotten to remember that as well asMONa story of nation states, European history has long been aMONstory of free trade, ultimately crushed by Queen ElizabethMONI in England's case. She wanted to control the wool exportMONmonopoly and the considerable wealth that came from it andMONso had the English Hanseatic centre, by then in London andMONknown as the Steelyards, closed down.MONMON20:30 Crossing Continents b00p91x8 (Listen)MONRio LawMONBrazil is booming economically and growing in confidenceMONon the world stage, but in the city of Rio de Janeiro lawMONand order have been turned upside down. Gangs run theMONprisons and ruthless militias - often made up of formerMONpolice officers - control many shanty towns, killing withMONimpunity. Lucy Ash asks if the authorities can end theMONrule of gangs, guns and greed.MONMON21:00 Frontiers b00pcb5b (Listen)MONFive years after the great Indian Ocean tsunami, a furtherMONtwo powerful earthquakes in September 2009 reminded usMONthat the region remains at risk. Roland Pease reports onMONscientists' attempts to evaluate the danger and prepareMONfor future emergencies in southeast Asia.MONMON21:30 Start the Week b00pbw1n (Listen)MON[Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today.]MONMON21:58 Weather b00pbtm7 (Listen)MONThe latest weather forecast.MONMON22:00 The World Tonight b00pbtmp (Listen)MONNational and international news and analysis.MONMON22:45 Book at Bedtime b00pbvpj (Listen)MONThe Ingoldsby Legends, The Spectre of Tapton, Part 1MONNicholas Murchie and Lucy Robinson read from a collectionMONof myths, legends, ghost stories and poetry supposedlyMONwritten by Thomas Ingoldsby of Tappington Manor, butMONactually penned by the Rev Richard Barham, first publishedMONin book form in 1840.MONThe strange tale of a trouser-stealing ghost. Why theMONunsatiable appetite for pantaloons, and where are theyMONbeing taken?MONAbriged by Robin Brooks.MONA Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.MONMON23:00 Word of Mouth b00p8dk8 (Listen)MONGeorge Orwell left us a set of rules for writing aboutMONpolitics and public affairs - do they still apply? MichaelMONRosen and a panel of critics offer an OrwellianMONperspective on just one day in the discourse of the nation.MONMON23:30 Take Two b00gd1t2 (Listen)MONSeries 2, Billie Holiday and Lester YoungMONRichard Coles presents a discussion series looking atMONcollaborations between two musicians.MONThe recordings that Billie Holiday made with saxophonistMONLester Young were lauded for the way in which both artistsMONcomplemented one another's sound. He called her Lady DayMONand she nicknamed him Prez because of his presidentialMONmastery of his instrument.MONBut away from the studio they also shared addictions toMONalcohol and drugs, which led to their early deaths.MONRichard is joined by jazz singer Clare Teal and saxophoneMONplayer and jazz writer Dave Gelly to explore theMONpersonalities of Young and Holiday and to investigateMONtheir musical legacy.MONMONTUETUESDAY 22 DECEMBER 2009TUETUE00:00 Midnight News b00pbnbt (Listen)TUEThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE4. Followed by Weather.TUETUE00:30 Book of the Week b00pbpcc (Listen)TUE[Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Monday.]TUETUE00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pbncx (Listen)TUEThe latest shipping forecast.TUETUE01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pbnh2 (Listen)TUEBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.TUETUE05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pbng3 (Listen)TUEThe latest shipping forecast.TUETUE05:30 News Briefing b00pbnrf (Listen)TUEThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.TUETUE05:43 Prayer for the Day b00pbntt (Listen)TUEDaily prayer and reflection with Bishop Alan Abernethy.TUEGood Morning.TUEI remember my first primary school nativity play and theTUEwoollen dressing gown with the cord belt tied around myTUEwaist and the tea towel both essential for me to play theTUEpart of a shepherd. I would really like to have been oneTUEof the wise men or kings but I was grateful I wasn’t anTUEangel as they had to sing and wear wings.TUEThe Christmas story is fantastic for the annual nativityTUEplay; there is a part for everyone and simple costumes forTUEall. I attended a nativity play last year in Belfast in anTUEestate on the outskirts of the city that endured much overTUEthe many years of violence. The children were hyper andTUEthe teachers had that anxious look wondering what mightTUEpossibly go wrong. There was not one but two innkeepersTUEwho were to not let the travellers in. The first one dulyTUEsaid no but as Joseph knocked on the imaginary door of theTUEsecond inn the young boy with an earring in each ear and aTUEvery short haircut shouted at the shocked couple to “getTUElost”. This was not in the script but he was getting intoTUEthe story and giving it a local interpretation. TheTUEaudience duly laughed and the teacher looked embarrassed.TUEThe boy was very pleased with himself and the story movedTUEon to the innkeeper with a stable to spare. The shepherdsTUEand the wise men made their entrance and the performanceTUEended with the song from the entire cast wishing us all aTUEvery merry Christmas.TUEIt was a morning that everyone enjoyed, parents andTUEgrandparents were all delighted that their child had beenTUEon stage. The teachers were thrilled that things had goneTUEso well and the children had had fun.TUELord we pray for all children this week and especiallyTUEthose who will have little to celebrate that they may knowTUEthe message of that first Christmas of peace on earth andTUEgoodwill to all. AmenTUETUE05:45 Farming Today b00pbnwp (Listen)TUENews and issues in rural Britain with Anna Hill.TUETUE06:00 Today b00pbnzj (Listen)TUEWith John Humphrys and James Naughtie. Including SportsTUEDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day.TUETUE09:00 Defining The Decade b00pcd3z (Listen)TUEThe Heat is OnTUEEdward Stourton tries to make sense of a decade in whichTUEhistory has been put on fast forward. There has been aTUErevolution in the way we communicate, widespread alarmTUEabout the planet's very survival and a challenge to theTUEworld order. What does it mean for the way we live as weTUEhead into 2010?TUEBack in the year 2000, the world's leaders didn't seem toTUEbe troubled by the notion of global warming, so what hasTUEchanged?TUETUE09:45 Book of the Week b00pbpcf (Listen)TUEPaw Tracks in the Moonlight, Episode 2TUEKevin Whately reads from Denis O'Connor's memoir.TUEHaving rescued a tiny kitten from a derelict barn,TUEO'Connor has to fight to keep it alive.TUEAbridged by Jane Marshall.TUEA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE10:00 Woman's Hour b00pchxv (Listen)TUEWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Someone Like You.TUETUE11:00 Towering Ambition b00pcd41 (Listen)TUEAdil Ray follows the inaugural Architecture for EveryoneTUEcampaign, launched in Stephen Lawrence's memory to correctTUEUK architecture's glaring ethnic imbalance.TUEStephen Lawrence wanted to be an architect, so when hisTUEmum Doreen discovered that only two per cent of the UK'sTUEpractising architects come from black and ethnicTUEbackgrounds she set up the inaugural Architecture forTUEEveryone scheme, with RMJM Architects, to readdress theTUEbalance.TUEThrough a series of workshops in Birmingham, Liverpool,TUEGlasgow and London, six young people were selected for aTUEscholarship to Harvard's School of Design. They are PaulaTUEMcDonald, 25, from Glasgow; Callum Gilbert, 21, fromTUELiverpool; Oni Hinton, 20 and Luke Henry-Powell, 18, fromTUELondon; and Yohanna Iyasu and Nick Ackers, both 19, fromTUEBirmingham.TUEThey all come from radically diverse backgrounds. Nick wasTUEadopted as a baby from a Romanian orphanage, Yohanna cameTUEto Britain by way of Eritrea and Holland, Luke rebelled atTUEschool and wanted to prove himself, Oni was escaping fromTUEa chaotic home life, Callum had been a young knife crimeTUEvictim, and Paula, the eldest of the six, had been madeTUEredundant and needed to boost her self-esteem. The commonTUEtheme among them was that this break had the potential toTUEchange everything.TUETUE11:30 Li Yuan-Chia b00pcf5j (Listen)TUEWhen Taiwan's first abstract artist settled in a CumbrianTUEfarmhouse, his life changed. Deriving inspiration fromTUElandscape and local people, he encouraged new BritishTUEartists and anticipated the success of contemporaryTUEChinese visual art.TUELi Yuan Chia was one of the first significant ChineseTUEabstract artists of the 20th century. This programme,TUEpresented by Sally Lai, the director of Manchester'sTUEChinese Arts Centre, examines his career from the place heTUEspent the last 28 years of his life: a stone farmhouse,TUEbuilt next to Hadrian's Wall in Cumbria.TUEBorn in China in 1929, Li was educated in Taiwan. HeTUEworked and exhibited in Italy before moving to London inTUE1963. Here, Li's reputation was established withTUEmonochrome paintings and scrolls marked with a tiny,TUEisolated dot.TUEBut Li came to dislike the fashionable metropolitan artTUEworld of the mid-1960s. In 1968 he met Cumbrian painterTUEWinifred Nicholson, who pursuaded Li to move away from theTUEbusy capital to a far more remote location, near her ownTUEhome. With his own hands Li then set about converting aTUEfarm building, the Banks, at Brampton, where he built aTUEgallery, library, theatre, printing press, children's artTUEroom and photographic darkroom, and opened it to theTUEpublic. It became a popular attraction for local people,TUEart afficianados and tourists walking Hadrian's Wall.TUEOver the next ten years over 300 artists exhibited at theTUEBanks, which was also the base from which Li'sTUEorganisation, the LYC Foundation, was able to commissionTUEwork by young British artists, some of whom became veryTUEsuccessful later, including sculptors and land artistsTUEAndy Goldsworthy, David Nash and Bill Woodrow.TUELi's own work moved into abstract sculpture, usingTUEmagnets, gold leaf, plastic discs suspended on plasticTUEthread and additional text. The landscape also affectedTUEhim, and he began to explore photography and environmentalTUEart. Always, he wrote poetry.TUEBut after Arts Council funding became increasinglyTUElimited, the LYC Foundation had to struggle to survive. LiTUEcontinued to produce art, which became increasinglyTUEcontemplative. He fell ill with cancer and died in 1994.TUEArt historians now acknowledge Li Yuan Chia as havingTUEpaved the way for the current expansion of ChineseTUEcontemporary art. But his former home in Cumbria isTUEderelict.TUETUE12:00 You and Yours b00pbq17 (Listen)TUEConsumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.TUETUE12:57 Weather b00pbq2s (Listen)TUEThe latest weather forecast.TUETUE13:00 World at One b00pbqbh (Listen)TUENational and international news with Martha Kearney.TUETUE13:30 Tales from the Stave b00pcjh2 (Listen)TUEChopin: BarcarolleTUEFrances Fyfield tracks down the stories behind the scoresTUEof well-known pieces of music.TUEFrances is joined by Chopin expert Adam Zamoyski andTUEpianist Stephen Hough at the British Library to look atTUEthe autographed score of Chopin's Barcarolle. The libraryTUEis holding a major exhibition in 2010 to mark the 200thTUEanniversary of his birth.TUEThe greater part of Chopin's professional career was spentTUEoutside his native Poland - most of it in Paris, where heTUEestablished himself as a fashionable teacher and performerTUEin the houses of the wealthy. With a background ofTUEVenetian gondoliers' songs combined with PolishTUEreferences, the Barcarolle for solo piano was completed inTUE1846 and meant so much to Chopin that he included it inTUEthe programme of a concert he gave in Paris in FebruaryTUE1848. It was to be his last public appearance in hisTUEbeloved adopted city. His body succumbed to lifelong illTUEhealth a year later at the age of 39.TUETUE14:00 The Archers b00pbqyz (Listen)TUE[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Monday.]TUETUE14:15 Afternoon Play b00pcjh4 (Listen)TUEThe Three KnotsTUEDrama about faith and the supernatural by Linda Cracknell,TUEset in 19th-century Scotland. Two men stranded on aTUEmountain on a stormy December night meet a mysterious oldTUEwoman who believes she can control the elements.TUEAngus ...... Finn den HertogTUEThomas ...... Robert JackTUEOld Woman ...... Gerda StevensonTUEElizabeth ...... Hannah DonaldsonTUEMinister ...... Jimmy ChisholmTUEDirected by Kirsty Williams.TUETUE15:00 Home Planet b00pcjh6 (Listen)TUEAbout 4.5 billion years ago the newly formed planet EarthTUEwas in collision with a planet the size of Mars, aTUEcataclysmic event that gave birth to the Moon. But theTUEimpact was so huge that it left one listener puzzled as toTUEwhy the Earth remained in place instead of spinning offTUEinto interstellar space. Listeners also want to know whatTUEthe Earth was like, much later, when it was a few degreesTUEwarmer than today and if that offers us any hints for theTUEfuture.TUEWhat, too, is the future of UK forestry; how do plants'TUEneed for oxygen balance out with their production of thisTUEcrucial gas and how is it possible for astronomers toTUEdetect the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation?TUEWe also want your help in finding out how the New YearTUEfestivities affect roosting birds. Do you have a nestboxTUEcamera which shows black-and-white pictures using infraredTUElighting? If you do, Graham Appleton from the BTO, one ofTUEour regular panelists, would like to know if you haveTUEbirds roosting in your nest box. We'd like you to turn onTUEyour camera on New Year's Eve to see how much disturbanceTUEfireworks cause. Graham will be with us on 4 January toTUEdiscuss your responses. Remember, this needs to be anTUEinfrared camera. You don't want to wake up birds byTUEturning on a normal light.TUEOn the panel are astronomer Dr Carolin Crawford ofTUECambridge University, plant geneticist Professor DenisTUEMurphy of the University of Glamorgan, and forestry expertTUEDr Nick Brown of Oxford University.TUEIf you have any comments on the topics discussed or anyTUEquestions you might want to put to future programmes,TUEplease do let us know.TUETUE15:30 Afternoon Reading b008vv5m (Listen)TUEScene of the Crime, From the River's MouthTUEStories by leading crime writers.TUEBy Stella Duffy.TUEThe malign and sultry River Thames exacts a watery revenge.TUERead on location by Samantha Bond in the Greenwich FootTUETunnel.TUETUE15:45 The Santa Tapes b00pfm8n (Listen)TUEWhite BeardTUEAlan Dein unwraps the oral history of Santa Claus, hearingTUEthe true stories of those who have donned the red andTUEwhite costume, from war-torn Hungary to the icy wastes ofTUEAlaska.TUEPlaying Santa is often the last job in a lifetime of work.TUEDonning the red and white costume is often a way toTUEreconnect with a new generation in the age of want, asTUEAlan Dein discovers.TUETUE16:00 Word of Mouth b00pck26 (Listen)TUEMichael Rosen takes apart some jokes to try to find outTUEwhy they're funny. After he puts them back together, theyTUEdon't seem to work very well.TUETUE16:30 Great Lives b00pcklz (Listen)TUESeries 20, Vivian StanshallTUEMatthew Parris presents the biographical series in whichTUEhis guests choose someone who has inspired their lives.TUEMusician and performer Neil Innes discusses the life ofTUEhis Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band colleague and friend VivianTUEStanshall. Neil recalls the moment he met Vivian StanshallTUEin London: he was wearing Billy Bunter trousers, aTUEVictorian frock coat and horrible purple pince-nez glassesTUEand carrying a euphonium. So began a friendship and aTUEmusical partnership that exploded into life with The BonzoTUEDog Doo Dah Band, culminating in tours and TV series.TUEVivian's second wife, Ki Longfellow, joins the discussionTUEto help explore the man behind the colourful publicTUEpersona.TUETUE16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pbrxw (Listen)TUE22nd December 1989TUESir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20TUEyears ago.TUERomanian President Ceausescu is caught as he tries toTUEescape.TUEA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE17:00 PM b00pbs0d (Listen)TUEFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieTUEMair. Plus Weather.TUETUE18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pbs6d (Listen)TUEThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTUE4.TUETUE18:30 Sneakiepeeks b00pckm1 (Listen)TUETrustTUEComedy by Harry Venning and Neil Brand about a team ofTUEinept, backstabbing surveillance operatives.TUEBeagle Team undertake a top secret Category G surveillanceTUEoperation.TUEBill ...... Richard LumsdenTUESharla ...... Nina ContiTUEMark ...... Daniel KaluuyaTUEMrs A ......Kate LaydenTUEMr A ...... Ewan HooperTUEJustine ...... Tessa NicholsonTUEDavid ...... Ewan BaileyTUEDelphine ...... Kate Layden.TUETUE19:00 The Archers b00pbqxh (Listen)TUERobert and Lynda have an early Christmas.TUETUE19:15 Front Row b00pbsgx (Listen)TUEArts news and reviews with John Wilson, including aTUEselection of radio programmes to listen out for overTUEChristmas.TUETUE19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00pbt9d (Listen)TUESomeone Like You, SkinTUEDramatisation by Stephen Sheridan of five darkly comicTUEtales by Roald Dahl.TUEAn astonishing work of art is created on a drunken nightTUEin Paris.TUEStoryteller ...... Charles DanceTUEOld Drioli ...... John EvittsTUEYoung Drioli ...... Tom BevanTUESoutine ...... Rob HeapsTUEJosie ...... Donnla HughesTUEArt Collector ...... David CollingsTUEGallery Owner ...... Ian MastersTUEDirected by David BlountTUEA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE20:00 The New Art of Diplomacy b00pckm3 (Listen)TUEEpisode 2TUEJames Naughtie asks if British diplomacy is still fit forTUEpurpose.TUEA century ago, much of the map of the world was colouredTUEwith the pink of the British Empire. Britain's diplomatsTUEreigned supreme, with the reassurance of a gunboat toTUEsupport them. Much has changed since that time, andTUEcontinues to change. As Britain faces new threats and newTUEpriorities across the globe, how are the foreign officeTUEand its diplomats changing?TUETUE20:40 In Touch b00pckm5 (Listen)TUEPeter White with news and information for the blind andTUEpartially sighted.TUETUE21:00 All in the Mind b00pckm7 (Listen)TUEAlois Alzheimer, Hans Asperger, Sergei Korsakoff all lentTUEtheir names to the disease, syndrome or autistic disorderTUEthat they first identified. Claudia Hammond talks toTUEProfessor Douwe Draaisma about the personal background ofTUEthese brain researchers as well as the individual patientsTUEon which such scientific breakthroughs were made.TUETUE21:30 Defining The Decade b00pcd3z (Listen)TUE[Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today.]TUETUE21:58 Weather b00pbtjl (Listen)TUEThe latest weather forecast.TUETUE22:00 The World Tonight b00pbtm9 (Listen)TUENational and international news and analysis with RogerTUEHearing.TUETUE22:45 Book at Bedtime b00pbvnt (Listen)TUEThe Ingoldsby Legends, The Spectre of Tapton, Part 2TUENicholas Murchie and Lucy Robinson read from a collectionTUEof myths, legends, ghost stories and poetry supposedlyTUEwritten by Thomas Ingoldsby of Tappington Manor, butTUEactually penned by the Rev Richard Barham, first publishedTUEin book form in 1840.TUEThe strange tale of a trouser-stealing ghost continued.TUEWhy the unsatiable appetite for pantaloons, and where areTUEthey being taken?TUEAbriged by Robin Brooks.TUEA Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.TUETUE23:00 Vent b00pckm9 (Listen)TUESeries 3, When Was The Last Time You Saw Your Godfather?TUEComedy series by Nigel Smith about a man in a coma,TUEtravelling through the distinctly odd landscape of his ownTUEunconscious mind.TUEBen is invited to be godfather to an ex-girlfriend's baby.TUEMary isn't impressed and there's a showdown on theTUEstairlift. Meanwhile St Paul gives Ben tips onTUEresponsibility and where to get the best olives.TUEBen ...... Neil PearsonTUEMary ...... Fiona AllenTUEMum ...... Josie LawrenceTUEBlitz ...... Leslie AshTUENurse ...... Jo MartinTUEDerek ...... Stephen FrostTUEMarley ...... Spencer BrownTUEBea ...... Scarlett Milburn-SmithTUEKarl ...... Matthew KellyTUESophie ...... Abigail BurdessTUEPriest/St Paul ...... Richard JohnsonTUEDirected by Nigel Smith.TUETUE23:30 Take Two b00grgkd (Listen)TUESeries 2, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Walter LeggeTUERichard Coles presents a discussion series looking atTUEcollaborations between two musicians.TUERichard examines the musical and domestic partnership ofTUEsinger Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and record producer WalterTUELegge. In conversation with the pianist Graham Johnson andTUETUEWEDWEDNESDAY 23 DECEMBER 2009WEDWED00:00 Midnight News b00pbnbw (Listen)WEDThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED4. Followed by Weather.WEDWED00:30 Book of the Week b00pbpcf (Listen)WED[Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Tuesday.]WEDWED00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pbncz (Listen)WEDThe latest shipping forecast.WEDWED01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pbnh4 (Listen)WEDBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.WEDWED05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pbng5 (Listen)WEDThe latest shipping forecast.WEDWED05:30 News Briefing b00pbnrh (Listen)WEDThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.WEDWED05:43 Prayer for the Day b00pbntw (Listen)WEDDaily prayer and reflection with Bishop Alan Abernethy.WEDGood Morning.WEDIt is still an uncomfortable memory; the emotions areWEDstill clear in my mind. It was a sibling rivalry moment.WEDMy older brother and I were having a disagreement well itWEDwas actually an argument which led to a physical fight. IWEDcertainly got my strike in first and it hurt, it wasWEDobvious from his reaction that I had caused serious pain.WEDHe then moved to retaliation and I was truly sorry. HeWEDgrabbed me and pushed me into the cloakroom. This smallWEDplace was a cupboard in our living room that was under theWEDstairs and it sloped in such a way that even at the age ofWED10 I couldn’t stand up. I kicked and screamed as I was nowWEDin a small and confined space and it was very dark. ItWEDseemed as if I was in there for a long time but apparentlyWEDhe was concerned by my reaction that he opened the doorWEDfairly quickly. My memory is one of terror; I was rigidWEDwith fear and was exhausted and relieved when the doorWEDopened.WEDI have experienced fear since; and it still numbs andWEDcauses panic. It is difficult to deal with fear as it canWEDoften be irrational. However there are times it isWEDappropriate, when my car is about to collide with anotherWEDand my whole life flashes in front of me or as a parentWEDwhen I for a split second cannot find my child in theWEDcrowd.WEDThe fear of the shepherds is one of the things that strikeWEDme as I read the Christmas story. In fact we are told theyWEDwere terrified. They couldn’t make sense of what theyWEDwitnessed or the message they were given and yet theyWEDmoved beyond their fear and found the babe lying in theWEDmanger.WEDLord we pray for those who are fearful of the future orWEDfearful for a loved one that at this Christmas time, theyWEDmay find peace. Amen.WEDWED05:45 Farming Today b00pbnwr (Listen)WEDNews and issues in rural Britain with Kate Williams.WEDWED06:00 Today b00pbnzl (Listen)WEDWith John Humphrys and James Naughtie. Including SportsWEDDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day.WEDWED09:00 Midweek b00pcl7d (Listen)WEDLively and diverse conversation with Libby Purves andWEDguests including composer Howard Goodhall.WEDWED09:45 Book of the Week b00pbpch (Listen)WEDPaw Tracks in the Moonlight, Episode 3WEDKevin Whately reads from Denis O'Connor's memoir.WEDHaving hand-reared the tiny kitten he rescued from theWEDsnow, O'Connor and Toby Jug settle in to life together.WEDAll is going swimmingly until they have problems withWEDtomatoes and a swarm of bees.WEDAbridged by Jane Marshall.WEDA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED10:00 Woman's Hour b00pchxn (Listen)WEDWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Someone Like You.WEDWED11:00 In Living Memory b00pcl7g (Listen)WEDSeries 11, Sunday TradingWEDContemporary history series.WEDOn the 28th August 1994, shops legally opened their doorsWEDon the Sabbath for the first time in over 40 years. ChrisWEDLedgard asks if the greater freedom to shop came at tooWEDhigh a price: the loss of the Great British Sunday.WEDWED11:30 Ballylenon b00pcl7j (Listen)WEDSeries 7, Episode 5WEDComedy drama series by Christopher Fitz-Simon, set in theWED1950s in a Donegal town.WEDBernard Gallagher has resigned from the police force toWEDtake up a singing career and, while lodging with theWEDMaconchy sisters at the post office, makes a devastatingWEDdiscovery.WEDMuriel Maconchy ...... Margaret D'ArcyWEDVera Maconchy ...... Stella McCuskerWEDPhonsie Doherty ...... Gerard MurphyWEDVivienne Hawthorne ...... Annie McCartneyWEDStumpy Bonner ...... Gerard McSorleyWEDGuard Gallagher ...... Frankie McCaffertyWEDPianist: Michael HarrisonWEDDirected by Eoin O'CallaghanWEDThis episode is available until 11.30am on 6th JanuaryWED2010 as part of the Series Catch-up Trial.WEDWED12:00 You and Yours b00pbq19 (Listen)WEDConsumer news and issues with Peter White.WEDWED12:57 Weather b00pbq2v (Listen)WEDThe latest weather forecast.WEDWED13:00 World at One b00pbqbk (Listen)WEDNational and international news with Martha Kearney.WEDWED13:30 The Media Show b00pcl7l (Listen)WEDSteve Hewlett presents a topical programme about theWEDfast-changing media world.WEDWED14:00 The Archers b00pbqxh (Listen)WED[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Tuesday.]WEDWED14:15 Afternoon Play b00pcl7n (Listen)WEDBlack Hearts in Battersea, Episode 1WEDDramatisation by Lin Coghlan of Joan Aiken's classicWEDchildren's adventure. Young Simon comes to 18th-centuryWEDLondon to study painting and finds himself caught up inWEDwicked Hanoverian plots to overthrow the King.WEDDuke ...... John RoweWEDDuchess ...... Sheila ReidWEDDido ...... Nicola Miles-WildinWEDSimon ...... Joe DempsieWEDCobbe/Nobby/Soldier ...... Ben CroweWEDMrs C ...... Annabelle DowlerWEDJustin ...... Sam PamphilonWEDBuckle/Bloke ...... Nigel HastingsWEDDr F/Man ...... Bruce AlexanderWEDGus/Nose ...... Joseph Cohen ColeWEDJabwing/Fothers ...... Piers WehnerWEDMr T/Hawker ...... Rhys JenningsWEDMrs T/Woman 2 ...... Tessa NicholsonWEDSophie ...... Emerald O'HanrahanWEDWoman ...... Kate LaydenWEDPart of the BBC Christmas 2009 season.WEDWED15:00 Money Box Live b00pclfg (Listen)WEDPaul Lewis and a panel of guests answer calls onWEDcharitable giving.WEDGuests:WEDJohn Low, chief executive, Charities Aid FoundationWEDClive Cutbill, consultant, WithersworldWEDLes Hems, director, Guidestar.WEDWED15:27 Radio 4 Appeal b00pb902 (Listen)WED[Repeat of broadcast at 07:55 on Sunday.]WEDWED15:30 Afternoon Reading b008vv5r (Listen)WEDScene of the Crime, Blackfriars BridgeWEDStories by leading crime writers.WEDBy Anthony Horowitz.WEDThis humorous retelling of the detailed planning of theWEDperfect crime is set against the sounds of one of London'sWEDbest-known bridges.WEDRead by Robert Bathurst.WEDWED15:45 The Santa Tapes b00pfm8d (Listen)WEDShop Store SantaWEDAlan Dein unwraps the oral history of Santa Claus, hearingWEDthe true stories of those who have donned the red andWEDwhite costume, from war-torn Hungary to the icy wastes ofWEDAlaska.WEDIn Liverpool, in one of Britain's oldest grottos, SantaWEDfinds Christmas present very different to his ChristmasWEDpast.WEDWED16:00 Thinking Allowed b00pclfj (Listen)WEDThe new bourgeoisie played an enormously important role inWEDthe history of industrial and imperial Britain. The extentWEDto which cousin marriage proliferated in the 19th centuryWEDrelates to the central question as to which people wereWEDgoing to lead Industrial England.WEDClose-knit families in Victorian England deliveredWEDenormous advantages. They shaped vocations, generatedWEDpatronage, yielded vital commercial information and gaveWEDaccess to capital; no wonder that marriage within theWEDfamily, between cousins or between in-laws, was aWEDcharacteristic strategy of this new bourgeoisie.WEDLaurie Taylor discusses private life in 19th-centuryWEDEngland with Adam Kuper, the author of Incest andWEDInfluence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England, andWEDCatherine Hall, professor of modern British social andWEDcultural history at University College, London.WEDWED16:30 All in the Mind b00pckm7 (Listen)WED[Repeat of broadcast at 21:00 on Tuesday.]WEDWED16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pbrxy (Listen)WED23rd December 1989WEDSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20WEDyears ago.WEDIntense fighting continues in Romania.WEDA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED17:00 PM b00pbs0g (Listen)WEDFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with EddieWEDMair. Plus Weather.WEDWED18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pbs6g (Listen)WEDThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioWED4.WEDWED18:30 Laura Solon: Talking and Not Talking b00pcllf (Listen)WEDSeries 3, Episode 6WEDPerrier Award-winning comedian Laura Solon presents aWEDseries of sketches, monologues and one-liners.WEDDomestic goddess Sue Morgan offers her own take on theWEDperfect Christmas, call centre demon Gwyneth finally facesWEDjudgement, and we gain access to the Institute for UselessWEDScientific Research.WEDWith Ben Moor, Rosie Cavaliero and Ben Willbond.WEDWED19:00 The Archers b00pbqxk (Listen)WEDCupid's arrow misses the mark at The Bull.WEDWED19:15 Front Row b00pbsgz (Listen)WEDArts news and reviews. Mark Lawson talks to the namesWEDbehind the arts headlines of the year, including JoannaWEDLumley, Dizzee Rascal and Carol Ann Duffy, who became PoetWEDLaureate.WEDWED19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00pbt9g (Listen)WEDSomeone Like You, Lamb to the SlaughterWEDDramatisation by Stephen Sheridan of five darkly comicWEDtales by Roald Dahl.WEDAn unfaithful husband is killed with an unusual weapon.WEDStoryteller ...... Charles DanceWEDMary Maloney ...... Lorelei KingWEDPatrick/Sam/Noonan ...... Kerry ShaleWEDO'Malley ...... Tom BevanWEDDirected by David BlountWEDA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED20:00 Unreliable Evidence b00pcm4l (Listen)WEDToo Much InformationWEDClive Anderson presents the series analysing the legalWEDissues of the day.WEDA major study has claimed that a quarter of governmentWEDdatabases are illegal and lead to vulnerable people beingWEDvictimised. Just how much information about us is inWEDcirculation and what are our rights to access, control andWEDerase it?WEDWED20:45 The Watchdog and the Feral Beast b00p6820 (Listen)WEDEpisode 2WEDSir Christopher Meyer, press watchdog until this year asWEDchairman of the Press Complaints Commission and formerWEDpress secretary at Number 10, discusses the role of theWEDpress today. Is the press today freedom's guardian or isWEDit a 'feral beast', as Tony Blair described the media atWEDthe end of his premiership?WEDSir Christopher draws on his personal experience as pressWEDwatchdog and government spokesman. In his six yearsWEDchairing the PCC, where he dealt with complaints againstWEDnewspapers and magazines, he championed a free press andWEDself-regulation, but had to contend with controversiesWEDthat sometimes strained people's trust in the press.WEDHis health check on the press comes at a time when opinionWEDis polarised. Is the press out of control, or is it moreWEDconstrained than ever before by the law? Is the pressWEDdestroying trust in our democracy, or are politiciansWEDgiving the press undue importance by courting editors andWEDjournalists? Is the press too powerful, or is itWEDvulnerable because of competition from the internet, muchWEDof it free and unregulated?WEDAnd now that the printed word and audio-visual contentWEDappear together on the same website, what is the futureWEDfor self-regulation by the press?WEDWED21:00 The Infinite Monkey Cage b00pbx28 (Listen)WED[Repeat of broadcast at 16:30 on Monday.]WEDWED21:30 Midweek b00pcl7d (Listen)WED[Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today.]WEDWED21:58 Weather b00pbtjn (Listen)WEDThe latest weather forecast.WEDWED22:00 The World Tonight b00pbtmc (Listen)WEDNational and international news and analysis with RobinWEDLustig.WEDWED22:45 Book at Bedtime b00pbvnw (Listen)WEDThe Ingoldsby Legends, Nell CookWEDNicholas Murchie and Lucy Robinson read from a collectionWEDof myths, legends, ghost stories and poetry supposedlyWEDwritten by Thomas Ingoldsby of Tappington Manor, butWEDactually penned by the Rev Richard Barham, first publishedWEDin book form in 1840.WEDA part-comic, part-terrifying poetic portrayal of bakedWEDmeat and bloody murder, as a housekeeper takes a certainWEDdislike of her master's houseguest.WEDAbriged by Robin Brooks.WEDA Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED23:00 Bespoken Word b00lbsh0 (Listen)WEDPerformance poetry series. Featuring a reading by AdrianWEDMitchell, who died in 2008, of an updated version of hisWEDpoem To Whom It May Concern, recorded in the last year ofWEDhis life. Plus an appearance by performance poet MisterWEDGee.WEDWED23:15 All Bar Luke b00dp2nh (Listen)WEDSeries 3, The WeddingWEDPoignant comedy drama series by Tim Key.WEDThe love of Luke's life, Hayley, finally marries hisWEDbrother. In an explosive climax, Luke is forced to standWEDin for Lee at the wedding reception.WEDAn Angel Eye Media production for BBC Radio 4.WEDWED23:30 Take Two b00h30yr (Listen)WEDSeries 2, Walter Becker and Donald FagenWEDRichard Coles presents a discussion series looking atWEDcollaborations between two musicians.WEDRichard analyses the partnership between Walter Becker andWEDDonald Fagen, who formed the band Steely Dan in 1971. HeWEDis joined by author Brian Sweet and music journalist DavidWEDHepworth to analyse how the collaboration between BeckerWEDand Fagen developed and what effect it had on the popularWEDmusic of the time. The programme also features extracts ofWEDsome of the band's music and archives of interviews givenWEDby the band members over the years.WEDWEDTHUTHURSDAY 24 DECEMBER 2009THUTHU00:00 Midnight News b00pbnby (Listen)THUThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU4. Followed by Weather.THUTHU00:30 Book of the Week b00pbpch (Listen)THU[Repeat of broadcast at 09:45 on Wednesday.]THUTHU00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pbnd1 (Listen)THUThe latest shipping forecast.THUTHU01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pbnh6 (Listen)THUBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.THUTHU05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pbng7 (Listen)THUThe latest shipping forecast.THUTHU05:30 News Briefing b00pbnrk (Listen)THUThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.THUTHU05:43 Prayer for the Day b00pbnty (Listen)THUDaily prayer and reflection with Bishop Alan Abernethy.THUGood Morning.THUI live in Belfast and the River Lagan runs through theTHUheart of the city. There is a cycle and pedestrian towpathTHUthat runs along the river and stretches for miles. I oftenTHUcycle along this path and the sounds are amazing; theTHUlapping of the river and the endless bird song. It isTHUwonderful that in the heart of the city there is thisTHUoasis of peace and quiet. Although I do find it strangeTHUthat so many people who walk, jog or cycle along this pathTHUare attached to their earphones and music. There are soTHUmany public places that are filled with background noiseTHUand music.THUSilence is increasingly difficult to find with theTHUconstant whirring of machines and the need to be availableTHUat the end of a mobile phone. The technological worldTHUmeans instant communication and nowhere to just be stillTHUand quiet. One of the joys of deep friendship is that giftTHUof being able to be with somebody and not having to sayTHUanything. Silence is something that refreshes and givesTHUtime and space for reflection. On this Christmas Eve I amTHUconscious of the silence of the Bethlehem moment. If theTHUNativity were to take place today the world’s media wouldTHUbe present, there would be various public relationsTHUcompanies giving advice and the noise would drown out theTHUmystery. But then there were only a few shepherds, a fewTHUstrangers from the East in a town that was far from beingTHUthe hub of the universe.THU“How silently, how silently,THUThe wondrous gift is given,THUWhen God imparts to human heartsTHUThe blessings of His heaven.”THULord in the noise that surrounds Christmas, help us thisTHUChristmas Eve to hear you in the silence of Bethlehem.THUAmen.THUTHU05:45 Farming Today b00pbnwt (Listen)THUNews and issues in rural Britain with Kate Williams.THUTHU06:00 Today b00pbnzn (Listen)THUWith John Humphrys and James Naughtie. Including SportsTHUDesk; Weather; Thought for the Day.THUTHU09:00 In Our Time b00pcm9f (Listen)THUThe SamuraiTHUMelvyn Bragg and guests discuss the rise, fall and legacyTHUof the Samurai.THUTHU09:45 Book of the Week b00pbpck (Listen)THUPaw Tracks in the Moonlight, Episode 4THUKevin Whately reads from Denis O'Connor's memoir.THUO'Connor has been asked to look after a colleague's horseTHUover the summer holidays and decides to go trekking in theTHUCheviot Hills, accompanied by his Maine Coon kitten, TobyTHUJug.THUAbridged by Jane Marshall.THUA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU10:00 Woman's Hour b00pchxq (Listen)THUWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Someone Like You.THUTHU11:00 Crossing Continents b00pcn0y (Listen)THUSwedenTHUWriter Andrew Brown tries to find out if the rural heartTHUof Sweden still lives on in the modern age. In anTHUentertaining and unpredictable journey he goes in searchTHUof wolves, egg-tossing merrymakers and the ideal of theTHUSwedish summer.THUTHU11:30 The Frost Collection b00pcn10 (Listen)THUSeries 2, Episode 1THUSir David Frost and guests look back at some of the mostTHUmemorable interviews of his long career. With Sir TimTHURice, Imogen Stubbs and Anne Atkins.THUTHU12:00 You and Yours b00pbq1c (Listen)THUConsumer news and issues with Julian Worricker.THUTHU12:57 Weather b00pbq2x (Listen)THUThe latest weather forecast.THUTHU13:00 World at One b00pbqbm (Listen)THUNational and international news with Shaun Ley.THUTHU13:30 Questions, Questions b00pd150 (Listen)THUStewart Henderson answers those intriguing questions fromTHUeveryday life.THUA Whistledown production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU14:00 The Archers b00pbqxk (Listen)THU[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Wednesday.]THUTHU14:15 Afternoon Play b00pd18h (Listen)THUBlack Hearts in Battersea, Episode 2THUDramatisation by Lin Coghlan of Joan Aiken's classicTHUchildren's adventure.THUTo save the King from Hanoverian plotters, Simon andTHUSophie must first suffer shipwreck, attacks by wolves andTHUa narrow escape from an exploding hot air balloon.THUDuke ...... John RoweTHUDuchess ...... Sheila ReidTHUDido ...... Nicola Miles-WildinTHUSimon ...... Joe DempsieTHUCobbe/Captain M ...... Ben CroweTHUMrs C ...... Annabelle DowlerTHUJustin ...... Sam PamphilonTHUBuckle ...... Nigel HastingsTHUDr F/King J ...... Bruce AlexanderTHUGus/Stall Holder ...... Joseph Cohen ColeTHUJabwing ...... Piers WehnerTHUMr T/Bird ...... Rhys JenningsTHUMrs T ...... Tessa NicholsonTHUSophie ...... Emerald O'HanrahanTHUCoachman/Mogg ...... John BigginsTHUField ...... Ewan HooperTHUMrs B ...... Kate Layden.THUTHU15:00 Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols b00pd1bb (Listen)THUStephen Cleobury directs the choir for the annual FestivalTHUof Nine Lessons and Carols live from the Chapel of King'sTHUCollege, Cambridge.THUThe pattern of the Festival, based around nine BibleTHUreadings interspersed with carols, has remained the sameTHUfor over 90 years. It unfolds the great mystery of how GodTHUcame into the world in human form, and for millions acrossTHUthe globe it heralds the beginning of Christmas.THUTHU16:30 Material World b00pd293 (Listen)THUQuentin Cooper and guests take part in a question andTHUanswer edition of the programme.THUTHU16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pbry0 (Listen)THU24th December 1989THUSir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20THUyears ago.THUGeneral Noriega is surrounded as he seeks refuge in Panama.THUA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU17:00 PM b00pbs0j (Listen)THUFull coverage and analysis of the day's news with RitulaTHUShah. Plus Weather.THUTHU18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pbs6j (Listen)THUThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioTHU4.THUTHU18:15 The News At Bedtime b00nvyj4 (Listen)THUEpisode 1THUTwin presenters John Tweedledum and Jim Tweedledee presentTHUin-depth news analysis covering the latest storiesTHUhappening this 'once upon a time'.THUThe scandal of Jack and his genetically-modified beanstalk.THUWith Jack Dee, Peter Capaldi, Chris Addison, LewisTHUMacLeod, Lucy Montgomery, Vicki Pepperdine, Dan Tetsell.THUWritten by Ian Hislop and Nick Newman.THUTHU18:30 Andy Zaltzman's History of the Third Millennium,THUSeries 1 of b00pd295 (Listen)THUBritainTHUPolitical comedian Andy Zaltzman presents aTHUdecade-by-decade comic analysis of the third millennium,THUcovering the 2000-2009 period of what is already shapingTHUup to be a troubled thousand years.THUAndy looks at the things that make Britain truly British,THUby means of in-depth analysis, extensive research and timeTHUtravel.THUWith Rory Bremner, Bridget Christie, Lucy Montgomery andTHUKim Wall.THUTHU19:00 The Archers b00pbqxm (Listen)THUBridge Farm relives an old tradition.THUTHU19:15 Front Row b00pbsh1 (Listen)THUArts news and reviews. Mark Lawson talks to more of theTHUnames behind the year's arts headlines, including BookerTHUPrize winner Hilary Mantel.THUTHU19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00pbt9k (Listen)THUSomeone Like You, Dip in the PoolTHUDramatisation by Stephen Sheridan of five darkly comicTHUtales by Roald Dahl.THUA passenger on an ocean liner takes a desperate gamble.THUStoryteller ...... Charles DanceTHUMr Botibol ...... John BaddeleyTHUMrs Renshaw/Maggie ...... Rachel AtkinsTHUPurser ...... Nicholas BoultonTHUAuctioneer ...... Chris StantonTHUOld Woman ...... Jean TrendTHUDirected by David BlountTHUA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU20:00 That Reminds Me b00769ss (Listen)THUThe late Ludovic Kennedy reminisces about his life. HeTHUremembers a very Eton schoolboy prank involving hiring aTHUplane, and shares memories of his favourite intervieweesTHUfrom his 25 years as a TV broadcaster.THUTHU20:30 In Business b00pd297 (Listen)THUOrganising SalvationTHUManagement guru Peter Drucker called the Salvation ArmyTHUthe most 'effective organisation in America'. Peter DayTHUasks if that is true in Britain and finds out how the ArmyTHUis bringing innovation to salvation.THUTHU21:00 What Scientists Believe b00pd299 (Listen)THUEpisode 3THUPhilosopher Stephen Webster investigates the links betweenTHUscientists' personal beliefs and their scientific work. HeTHUwants to know how an individual scientist's personal,THUpsychological and intellectual qualities map onto theirTHUchosen area of science. How much of a scientist'sTHUpersonality is reflected in their work? Should subjectiveTHUprivate beliefs be a part of objective scientificTHUoutcomes? What happens if tensions develop between aTHUscientist's beliefs and the formal demands of science? IfTHUtensions arise, how can they be resolved?THUIn this programme, Stephen meets zoologist Andrew Gosler.THUFor more than 25 years, Andrew has been studying the GreatTHUTit population in Wytham Wood near Oxford. Andrew greatlyTHUrespects the animals he studies and the environment theyTHUinhabit. He finds inspiration working so closely withTHUnature, and that inspiration motivates his scientificTHUenquiries. But Andrew accepts that scientific descriptionTHUcan only ever provide a partial description of reality.THUScience will never encapsulate Andrew's own, private andTHUunique relationship with the world he studies.THUTHU21:30 In Our Time b00pcm9f (Listen)THU[Repeat of broadcast at 09:00 today.]THUTHU21:58 Weather b00pbtjq (Listen)THUThe latest weather forecast.THUTHU22:00 The World Tonight b00pbtmf (Listen)THUNational and international news and analysis with RobinTHULustig.THUTHU22:45 Book at Bedtime b00pbvny (Listen)THUThe Ingoldsby Legends, A Singular Passage, Part 1THUNicholas Murchie and Lucy Robinson read from a collectionTHUof myths, legends, ghost stories and poetry supposedlyTHUwritten by Thomas Ingoldsby of Tappington Manor, butTHUactually penned by the Rev Richard Barham, first publishedTHUin book form in 1840.THUA tale of black magic set in the depths of Romney Marsh,THUas a young woman is tormented by two men bent on exploringTHUthe dark arts.THUAbriged by Robin Brooks.THUA Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.THUTHU23:00 Chain Reaction b0093z9z (Listen)THUSeries 4, Arabella Weir interviews Paul WhitehouseTHUChat show in which one week's interviewee becomes the nextTHUweek's interviewer. Arabella Weir talks to Paul WhitehouseTHUabout The Fast Show, Down the Line and his career inTHUcomedy.THUTHU23:30 Midnight Mass b00pd29c (Listen)THUThe first Mass of Christmas is celebrated from St Anne'sTHUCathedral in Leeds.THUThe celebrant and preacher is the Right Rev Arthur Roche,THUBishop of Leeds.THUThe choir of Leeds Cathedral, directed by BenjaminTHUSaunders, sings a wealth of carols old and new; theTHUsetting is Mozart's joyful Missa Brevis in C (KV 259).THUOrganist: Christopher McElroy.THUTHUFRIFRIDAY 25 DECEMBER 2009FRIFRI00:48 Shipping Forecast b00pbnd3 (Listen)FRIThe latest shipping forecast.FRIFRI01:00 Selection of BBC World Service Programmes b00pbnh8 (Listen)FRIBBC Radio 4 joins the BBC World Service.FRIFRI05:20 Shipping Forecast b00pbng9 (Listen)FRIThe latest shipping forecast.FRIFRI05:30 News Briefing b00pbnrm (Listen)FRIThe latest news from BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI05:43 Prayer for the Day b00pbnv0 (Listen)FRIDaily prayer and reflection with Bishop Alan Abernethy.FRIGood Morning.FRIThe sight, sounds and smells of Christmas bombard myFRImemory. This is a time of year that has such a rich storeFRIof things that make me smile. I can see my granny in herFRIsmall kitchen making the stuffing for the turkey. I canFRIremember helping my mum fill bottle after bottle with herFRIhome made ginger wine. It certainly helped warm the innersFRIon a cold winter evening and this was a non alcoholicFRIwine. On Christmas morning early, at 5:30 our youth groupFRIwould meet and walk around the neighbourhood singingFRIcarols outside the homes of the elderly and infirm. ThisFRIwas followed by a real breakfast, an Ulster fry. There wasFRIthe fun of Christmas morning and the excitement ofFRIpresents, the one I remember best is the Northern IrelandFRIfootball shirt and unfortunately it is the closest I everFRIcame to wearing one.FRIOur family gathered in my auntie’s house on Christmas DayFRIand my granny insisted we were not allowed to open ourFRIpresents until after the Queen’s speech on television. IFRIremember feeling very envious of my grandfather who hadFRIthe patience to watch the joy of others as they openedFRItheir presents and when all were opened he would slowlyFRIand deliberately open his and say thank you to each donorFRIin person. Inevitably dinner would follow when we all ateFRItoo much and the adults would fall asleep and my uncleFRIIvor would be heard to say only 365 days to Christmas, andFRIthen he would disappear and do the dishes.FRIThis Christmas Day these memories still make me smile forFRIthey are about, family, friendship, giving and thinking ofFRIothers. The babe lying in a manger was announced by aFRIheavenly host declaring good news of peace on earth andFRIgoodwill among all people. And there is something aboutFRIthis time of year and particularly this day of parties andFRIgifts that helps me capture the spirit of that goodwill.FRILord may we share the goodwill of Christmas with othersFRIall year round and help those whose memories bring lonelyFRIpain to find comfort. AMEN.FRIFRI05:45 Farming Today b00pbnww (Listen)FRITurkey is still the traditionalists' favourite for theFRIChristmas table, so Charlotte Smith discovers how to makeFRIthe best of your bird.FRIFRI06:00 Archive on 4 b00kc071 (Listen)FRIA Laureate's Legacy - The Poetry ArchiveFRIAndrew Motion explores and tells the story of the proudestFRIlegacy of his time as Poet Laureate, The Poetry Archive -FRIhundreds of poems, read by their authors and all availableFRIonline, free to everyone.FRIMotion's stint as Poet Laureate ended with predictableFRIdiscussions about his successor and what he did or didn'tFRIdo. But the lasting legacy of his laureateship and theFRIgreat achievement of his tenure is his creation, withFRIsound producer Richard Carrington, of the remarkableFRIonline Poetry Archive, begun in 1999 and growing. ItFRIincludes contemporary poets reading their work, includingFRISeamus Heaney, UA Fanthorpe and Jackie Kay and historicFRIrecordings by poets including Hilaire Belloc, SiegfriedFRISassoon, WB Yeats and even Tennyson and Browning. As wellFRIas the poems there are sections for children and teachers,FRIinterviews with poets, poets in residence and usefulFRIinformation about genres, forms and metres. If you want toFRIknow what an anapaest is, or a pantoum, the Poetry ArchiveFRIcan help.FRIMotion and Carrington talk about why they created theFRIarchive, and state that there is more to it than simplyFRIpreserving poets reading their work. Motion develops hisFRItheme that poetry is primarily an aural art, and what thisFRIreveals. The poet's voice is fundamental: the windsweptFRImoor is in the voice of Ted Hughes; Charles Causley'sFRICornish accent and dialect are important. The sound of aFRIpoem is an aspect of its meaning. At the recording sessionFRIwhen Carol Ann Duffy reads her book Rapture for theFRIarchive, Richard Carrington speaks about his role: not toFRIcoax a performance so much as to help the poets to beFRIthemselves.FRIAndrew Motion and Richard Carrington lead us around theFRIarchive, playing gems that we might otherwise have missed.FRIThey talk, too, about what is missing, and appeal toFRIpeople who might have recordings. For example, they do notFRIknow how Thomas Hardy, AE Housman and DH Lawrence soundedFRIbecause as far as we know they never made recordings. ButFRIthey might have, and one day they might turn up.FRIRelated LinksFRI* The Poetry Archive (www.poetryarchive.org)FRIFRI07:00 Bryn Terfel Masters Wine b00m83p0 (Listen)FRIOpera singer Bryn Terfel explores his love of wine andFRIattempts to become a master sommelier. Taking a break fromFRIthe stage, Bryn meets some of the world's finest wineFRIexperts and finds out what the role of sommelier involves,FRIfrom tasting to service to food matching.FRIFeaturing contributions from wine writer Sarah Ahmed,FRIchief examiner for The Court of Master Sommeliers BrianFRIJulyan, managing director of Cullen Wines Vanya Cullen,FRIsommelier at Gidleigh Park Restaurant Edouard Oger,FRIrestaurant manager at High Timber Restaurant NeleenFRIStrauss and Master of Wine at Berry Bros Alun Griffiths.FRIFRI07:30 The Museum of Curiosity b00ksvt5 (Listen)FRISeries 2, Episode 6FRIJohn Lloyd and Sean Lock host a panel show in which threeFRIguests donate fascinating exhibits to a vast imaginaryFRImuseum. With Clive James, Tim Minchin and Philip Pullman.FRIFRI08:00 Desert Island Discs b00pbltz (Listen)FRI[Repeat of broadcast at 11:15 on Sunday.]FRIFRI08:45 The Santa Tapes b00pfm97 (Listen)FRISanta's EverywhereFRIAlan Dein unwraps the oral history of Santa Claus, hearingFRIthe true stories of those who have donned the red andFRIwhite costume, from war-torn Hungary to the icy wastes ofFRIAlaska.FRIFRI09:00 Christmas Service b00pd3fd (Listen)FRIA service with carols old and new from All Souls Church,FRILangham Place in London's West End. Preacher: Rev HughFRIPalmer. With the All Souls Choir, directed by NoelFRITredinnick.FRIFRI09:45 Book of the Week b00pbpcm (Listen)FRIPaw Tracks in the Moonlight, Episode 5FRIKevin Whately reads from Denis O'Connor's memoir.FRIIt's Christmas Day and Denis O'Connor reflects on how muchFRIbetter his life has become since he rescued the kitten,FRIToby Jug.FRIAbridged by Jane Marshall.FRIA Jane Marshall production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI10:00 Woman's Hour b00pkxzp (Listen)FRIWith Jane Garvey. Including drama: Someone Like You.FRIFRI11:00 A Funny Sort of Sound b00l92sr (Listen)FRIJulian Clary pays tribute to the wit and ingenuity ofFRIcomedy musical acts. He considers the appeal of acts likeFRITV's Mr Muscle, Tony Holland, who won Opportunity KnocksFRIsix times in a row by flexing his biceps to the tune ofFRIWheels Cha Cha, and Bob - AKA Tray - Blackman, whose actFRIconsisted of bashing a tea tray on his head while singingFRIMule Train.FRIJulian also considers how the genre has evolved from theFRIheyday of music hall theatre, and talks to Ken Dodd andFRIJim Tavare.FRIA Whistledown production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI11:30 Count Arthur Strong's Radio Show! b00pd5n7 (Listen)FRISeries 5, Murder Most Fouled UpFRISpoof reminiscences of a former variety star. Count ArthurFRIStrong is an expert in everything from the world ofFRIentertainment to the origins of the species, all falseFRIstarts and nervous fumbling, poorly concealed by aFRIdelicate sheen of bravado and self-assurance.FRIArthur steps in at short notice to play a prominent roleFRIin a Murder Mystery evening for Lord and Lady Preston, hisFRInew 'best friends'. Who committed the heinous murder? CanFRICount Arthur solve the case? Did he do it? Was it theFRIbutler?FRIWith Steve Delaney, Mel Giedroyc, David Mounfield andFRIAlastair Kerr.FRIA Komedia Entertainment/Smooth Operations production forFRIBBC Radio 4.FRIFRI12:00 News b00pd5nr (Listen)FRIThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI4.FRIFRI12:04 Loose Ends b00pd5r6 (Listen)FRIClive Anderson reflects on the gloriously eclectic musicalFRIheritage that Loose Ends endowed to a grateful nation inFRI2009.FRIFeaturing Andy Williams, Elvis Costello, Mary Wilson, RayFRIDavies, Stewart Copeland, Jarvis Cocker, Jamie Cullum,FRICharles Hazlewood, Brett Anderson, Sharon Shannon, TheFRIKenyan Boys Choir and Mercury Prize winner Speech Debelle.FRIFRI13:00 With Great Pleasure b00pd5r8 (Listen)FRIWith Great Pleasure at ChristmasFRIPolitical journalist and Today programme presenter JamesFRINaughtie shares some of the pieces of prose and verseFRIwhich have entertained and inspired him over the years.FRIThe readers include Alison Steadman and Bill Paterson.FRIFRI14:00 The Archers b00pbqxm (Listen)FRI[Repeat of broadcast at 19:00 on Thursday.]FRIFRI14:15 Afternoon Play b00p93sy (Listen)FRINo. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, Tea Time for theFRITraditionally BuiltFRIWritten and dramatised by Alexander McCall Smith, from hisFRIhugely popular series of books set in Botswana.FRIPrecious Ramotswe, owner of The No 1 Ladies' DetectiveFRIAgency, is about to get in over her head. She's got anFRIimportant new client from the incomprehensible world ofFRIfootball, but she's on her own as her loyal assistant MmaFRIMakutsi is distracted by the return of a troublesomeFRIfigure from her past.FRIMma Ramotswe ...... Claire BenedictFRIMma Makutsi ...... Nadine MarshallFRIMr JLB Matekoni ...... Ben OnwukweFRIMma Potokwani ...... Janice AcquahFRIMr Molofololo ...... Mo SesayFRIPhuti Raduphuti ...... Nyasha HatendiFRIPuso/Boy ...... Kedar Williams-StirlingFRIRops Thobega ...... Emmanuel IghodaroFRIViolet Sepotho ...... Anna BengoFRIDirected by Eilidh McCreadie.FRIFRI15:00 HM The Queen b00pd5xr (Listen)FRIThe Queen's Christmas message to the Commonwealth and theFRInation, followed by the national anthem.FRIFRI15:07 News b00pjkn9 (Listen)FRIThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI4.FRIFRI15:15 Afternoon Play b00p94r2 (Listen)FRINo. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, The Seller of BedsFRIWritten and dramatised by Alexander McCall Smith, from hisFRIhugely popular series of books set in Botswana.FRIThe detectives are embroiled in the murky world of theFRIfootball cheat as they investigate the recent bad form ofFRIthe Kalahari Swoopers. But Mma Ramotswe's problems don'tFRIend there - she must confront an issue which has beenFRIavoided for too long. Could it be the end of the road forFRIthe tiny white van?FRIMma Ramotswe ...... Claire BenedictFRIMma Makutsi ...... Nadine MarshallFRIMr JLB Matekoni ...... Ben OnwukweFRIMr Molofololo ...... Mo SesayFRIMma Tafa ...... Gbemisola IkumeloFRIFanwell ...... Beru TessemaFRIGrandmother ...... Albie ParsonsFRIPuso Boy ...... Kedar Williams-StirlingFRIOteng Boleleng ...... Emmanuel IghodaroFRICharlie ...... Tyrone LewisFRIViolet Sepotho ...... Anna BengoFRIPhuti Raduphuti ...... Nyasha HatendiFRIDirected by Eilidh McCreadie.FRIFRI16:00 Frequently Asked Questions b00lszh8 (Listen)FRIIan Samson traces the relationship between authors andFRItheir readers through the changing nature of theFRIcorrespondence between them. He asks his fellow writersFRIwhether festivals, promotional tours and the advent of theFRIinternet have altered their role.FRIFRI16:30 The Film Programme b00pd5xt (Listen)FRIIn a special Christmas Day edition, Francine Stock talksFRIto veteran British actress Googie Withers about workingFRIwith Alfred Hitchcock and Michael Powell.FRIFRI16:56 1989: Day by Day b00pbry2 (Listen)FRI25th December 1989FRISir John Tusa looks back at the events making the news 20FRIyears ago.FRICeausescu and his wife are executed in Romania.FRIA Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI17:00 Pick of the Year b00pd69k (Listen)FRIRob Brydon unwraps the best of the year's offerings fromFRIacross BBC radio.FRIPart of the BBC Christmas 2009 season.FRIFRI17:54 Shipping Forecast b00pd69m (Listen)FRIThe latest shipping forecast.FRIFRI17:57 Weather b00pd6bb (Listen)FRIThe latest weather forecast.FRIFRI18:00 Six O'Clock News b00pbs6l (Listen)FRIThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI4.FRIFRI18:15 The News At Bedtime b00pft4y (Listen)FRIEpisode 2FRITwin presenters John Tweedledum and Jim Tweedledee presentFRIin-depth news analysis covering the latest storiesFRIhappening this 'once upon a time'.FRIA festive hamper of treats including the Queen of Hearts'FRItraditional Christmas message.FRIWith Jack Dee, Peter Capaldi, Lewis MacLeod, AlexFRIMacQueen, Lucy Montgomery, Vicki Pepperdine.FRIWritten by Ian Hislop and Nick Newman.FRIFRI18:30 The Now Show b00pd6hr (Listen)FRISeries 29, Episode 5FRISteve Punt and Hugh Dennis present a satirical review ofFRIthe week's news, with help from Mitch Benn, Laura Shavin,FRIJon Holmes and Marcus Brigstocke.FRIFRI19:00 The Archers b00pbqxp (Listen)FRIThere's a Christmas crisis at Grange Farm.FRIFRI19:15 Front Row b00pd6ht (Listen)FRIArts news and reviews. Alan Bennett discusses his stageFRIplays, his wide-ranging work for television and the ideaFRIof Englishness, in conversation with Mark Lawson.FRIFRI19:45 Woman's Hour Drama b00pbt9m (Listen)FRISomeone Like You, Nunc DimittisFRIDramatisation by Stephen Sheridan of five darkly comicFRItales by Roald Dahl.FRIA slighted lover plots an elaborate revenge.FRIStoryteller ...... Charles DanceFRIGladys Ponsonby ...... Sarah BadelFRIJohn Roydon ...... Jonathan KeebleFRIJanet de Pelagia ...... Katie ScarfeFRIDirected by David BlountFRIA Pier production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI20:00 Archive on 4 b00n6wgf (Listen)FRIThe Anniversary AnniversaryFRIDominic Sandbrook explores the compelling appeal of theFRIanniversary. How often on the radio, on television or inFRIprint is our attention enticed by the simple fact that anFRIevent, a birth or a death happened a year, or five or ten,FRIfifty, even several hundred years ago?FRIThere is a huge category of archive material dedicated toFRIparticular happenings or personalities which would neverFRIhave been produced without the prompt of an anniversary.FRIRemembering war predates broadcasting, but in the past theFRIremembering was cast in stone, unchanging even as theFRImemories of those involved frayed and faded. InFRIFRI20:50 A Point of View b00pd6n4 (Listen)FRIClive James reflects on the human condition and the needFRIfor liberal democracy to spread to allow futureFRIgenerations to enjoy the fruits of progress.FRIFRI21:00 Friday Play b00ph66p (Listen)FRIThe Late Mr ShakespeareFRIBy Robert Nye, dramatised by Jonathan Broadbent.FRIAs a boy actor, Pickleherring played Viola, Juliet andFRICleopatra; he was Shakespeare's favourite. Now, in hisFRIeighties, he finally discovers what it means to fall inFRIlove.FRIPickleherring ...... Jim BroadbentFRIBoy ...... George LongworthFRIPolly ...... Jill CardoFRIPompey Bum ...... Dan StarkeyFRIDirected by Jeremy Mortimer.FRIFRI21:58 Weather b00pbtjs (Listen)FRIThe latest weather forecast.FRIFRI22:00 News b00pd6n6 (Listen)FRIThe latest national and international news from BBC RadioFRI4.FRIFRI22:15 We Three Kings b00g1rmq (Listen)FRIIan Hislop examines the myths and realities surroundingFRIthe Three Kings of the Christmas story.FRIThey merit only a small mention in the Bible but they haveFRIhad a huge impact on our understanding of Christ's birthFRIstory, so much so that they even have their own feast day.FRIIan examines 2,000 years of the telling of their story toFRIsee how history has shaped the legend of the Kings. AlongFRIthe way he meets theologians, historians, the ArchbishopFRIof Canterbury and, curiously, a lot of people fromFRIColchester.FRIFRI22:45 Book at Bedtime b00pbvp0 (Listen)FRIThe Ingoldsby Legends, A Singular Passage, Part 2FRINicholas Murchie and Lucy Robinson read from a collectionFRIof myths, legends, ghost stories and poetry supposedlyFRIwritten by Thomas Ingoldsby of Tappington Manor, butFRIactually penned by the Rev Richard Barham, first publishedFRIin book form in 1840.FRIContinuing a tale of black magic set in the depths ofFRIRomney Marsh, as a young woman is tormented by two menFRIbent on exploring the dark arts.FRIAbriged by Robin Brooks.FRIA Pacificus production for BBC Radio 4.FRIFRI23:00 Great Lives b00pcklz (Listen)FRI[Repeat of broadcast at 16:30 on Tuesday.]FRIFRI23:30 The Music Group b00js8d3 (Listen)FRISeries 3, Episode 2FRIComedian, broadcaster and GP Dr Phil Hammond asks each ofFRIthree guests to play the track of their choice for theFRIdelight or disdain of the others.FRIHis guests include actor Don Warrington, music writerFRILaura Barton and Professor Martyn Poliakoff, a pioneer inFRIthe field of green chemistry, who reveals a liking for TomFRILehrer.FRIA Testbed production for BBC Radio 4.FRIRelated LinksFRI* Watch Martyn in action (www.periodicvideos.com)FRI* More about Martyn (www.test-tube.org.uk)FRI* The additional verses about the new elementsFRI(www.wellesley.edu)FRIThis week’s guests: Don Warrington, Laura Barton andFRIProfessor Martyn Poliakoff.FRIReal chemistry in this week’s show as pioneering greenFRIchemist and YouTube star, Professor Martyn PoliakoffFRIchallenges actor Don Warrington and music journalist LauraFRIBarton about the modernity of their chosen songs. There’sFRItalk of the modern world, modern love and an out-of-dateFRIlist of the chemical elements. His choice pre-dates bothFRIof theirs but can he substantiate his theory?FRIThe Music Group’s choices this weekFRIRoadrunner (Thrice) – Jonathan Richman & The Modern LoversFRIfrom LauraFRIThe Elements – Tom Lehrer chosen by MartynFRIDry Your Eyes – The Streets chosen by DonFRIAgua de Beber – Frances Butt chosen by PhilFRIFRIFRI
18 December, 2009
Radio 4 Listings for 19/12/2009 - 25/12/2009
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