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Wayward Season 1 - Mae Martin and Brandon Jay McLaren
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Babygirl - Harris Dickinson Clip
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Anemone - Sean Bean as Jem Stoker
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One Foot in the Past

One Foot in the Past (1993-2000) - Season 3 Episodes and Ratings

Season 3 Episodes

1. Episode 1

July 13th, 1995

The controversial restoration of Westminster Abbey is due to be unveiled by the Queen this year but some critics feel it is a reconstruction rather than just redecoration. Architect Donald Buttress defends his radical approach. Series presenter Kirsty Wark goes in search of the few remaining blue police boxes and actor Neil Pearson visits his old school, Woolverstone Hall in Suffolk.

2. Episode 2

July 20th, 1995

The programme uncovering Britain's heritage. Presenter Kirsty Wark asks just how did King Henry VIII go to the lavatory? At Hampton Court Palace Simon Thurley reveals an underground network of tunnels dealing with Tudor waste and sewage, and lifts the lid on an ancient royal convenience. The programme recreates the lost Great House of Easement - Hampton Court's 28-seater communal lavatory. Liz Dawn , Coronation Street's Vera Duckworth , time travels to Temple Newsam House, just outside Leeds, for an 18th century-style "make-over". Plus there's an exploration of that surreal form of gardening, the art of hedge-cutting ortopiary.

3. Episode 3

July 27th, 1995

This week, Lucinda Lambton visits Brodsworth House in Yorkshire, a mid- 1 9th century house packed with crumbling Victoriana which has been gradually decaying as years of rot and damp took theirtoll. English Heritage has managed to rescue the house and arrest the decay, but this is no ordinary restoration programme. Spike Milligan , meanwhile, embarks on a second campaign to save the Elfin Oak, the burned-out trunk of a huge oak tree in London's Kensington Gardens whose twisted contours were carved into an intricate scene of pixies and goblins at the turn of the century by woodcarver Ivor Innes. In the sixties, Milligan led a campaign to save the oak from rotting away, but can he save it a second time? Presenter Kirsty Wark takes the West Highland line sleeper service to Fort William, Britain's most awe-inspiring railway journey and the focus of protests in the face of efforts to close the service.

4. Episode 4

August 3rd, 1995

Food writer Jennifer Paterson visits the town of Bakewell in Derbyshire to investigate a feud between three rival makers of a celebrated tart, the historic Bakewell pudding; the programme goes in search of Italian-style water cascades, a fashionable but expensive accessory in 17th-century mansion house gardens; and Kirsty Wark reveals the threat hanging over a brilliant neo-classical temple, the Countess of Bridgewater's Chapel of Ease at Dodington in Shropshire.

5. Episode 5

August 17th, 1995

The programme looking at Britain's heritage and history makes a visit to London's Barts Hospital with Lucinda Lambton, and follows Lady Barbara Castle on a trip up the River Thames to Kelmscott Manor in Gloucestershire. Presented by Kirsty Wark.

6. Episode 6

August 24th, 1995

This week, Penelope Keith visits Folly Farm in Berkshire, which represents two different phases in the working partnership of architect Sir Edwin Lutyens and garden designer Gertrude Jekyll. In 1906, the duo created the Elizabethan look, with two cottage courtyard gardens. But by 1912 they were exploring larger-scale formality in the sunken rose garden. Also, do ordinary people's views count for anything when it comes to listing a building? Nuneaton might not be the heritage capital of the country but, as Kirsty Wark reports, local people were determined to save the biggest structure on their horizon when it came under threat. Plus a visit to the Walpole Bay Hotel in Cliftonville, Kent, a building which embodies the heyday of the British seaside holiday.

7. In Ruins

August 28th, 1995

Up and down the country, sad but heroic ruins dot the landscape. Kirsty Wark guides us through some of Britain's forgotten buildings.

8. The Baedeker Blitz

August 31st, 1995

This special edition reports on an important heritage battle of the Second World War. In spring 1942, the Nazis declared war on Britain's historic cities, decreeing that any building marked with three stars in the popular Baedeker guide books was earmarked for destruction by bombing. Dan Cruickshank tells the story of how Britain's treasured buildings came into the firing line, and how our ancient towns still bear the scars today.

9. Episode 9

September 7th, 1995

This week, Patrick Moore from the BBC's Sky at Night visits the now redundant Equatorial Telescopes Buildings at Herstmonceux in Sussex. Built by a designer known for creating ship's interiors, the complex owes more to navigational design than to the modern era. Sheffield's Parkhill estate will be the biggest structure ever listed in Britain, but should English Heritage be proposing such a move for the 1960s estate, which is regarded as run down even by its own residents? Architect Carolyn Steele investigates. Plus a look at topiary, the art of hedge sculpture, including a giant chess set fashioned in Oxfordshire.

10. Episode 10

September 14th, 1995

Kirsty Wark introduces the last in the series of programmes celebrating classic buildings. Britain's greatest railway monument, the Euston Arch, is set to be reclaimed from its resting place on a riverbed in east London and rebuilt at Euston Station. Will the Heritage Lottery Fund help to finance this? This year marks the centenary of the birth of architect Wintemute Wells Coates. Elain Harwood visits three of his stylish buildings in London and Brighton, memories of a designer who was decades ahead of his time. Plus, jazz trumpeter Humphrey Lyttelton recalls his fond feelings for Birmingham's Town Hall.

All Seasons

Season 8

Season 8

Apr 15, 2000
Season 7

Season 7

Apr 17, 1999
Season 6

Season 6

Apr 28, 1998
Season 5

Season 5

Jul 9, 1997
Season 4

Season 4

May 30, 1996
Season 3

Season 3

Jul 13, 1995
Season 2

Season 2

Jun 7, 1994
Season 1

Season 1

Jun 4, 1993
Specials

Specials

Apr 3, 1994