(to 12.00)
Hilda Hincks concludes her present series of dressmaking lessons
Mary Malcolm shows some moderately priced clothes selected by Bettie Spurling
A film showing the progress of the cinema from the first early attempts at 'animation' (without film) to the final development of the motion picture camera as we know it today.
(to 16.10 app.)
Men of Action: 4: The Tanner
Introduced by Harold Glover, with a film showing a tanner at work followed by questions from children in the studio.
(The film by courtesy of British Instructional Films, Ltd.)
5.30-5.50 Dancing Class
Today, and for one more Thursday, Phyllis Haylor and Victor Barrett show a schoolboy and girl, and viewers with them, enough simple steps of popular dances for them to enjoy dancing at their Christmas parties.
From the Empress Hall, London.
This evening the National Skating Association of Great Britain is competing in the first of its championship meetings of the winter season.
During this visit it is hoped to see some of the Free Skating events in the Figure-Skating Championship of Great Britain for ladies.
An opera in one act by Giacomo Puccini.
The action of this dramatic opera takes place on a river barge moored by Notre Dame on the Seine
Film sequences shot in Paris with the co-operation of the French Television Service
The music of Il Tabarro conjures up, in an almost uncanny way, the atmosphere of Paris at nightfall. At the opening there is a suggestion of the river flowing by, and from time to time we hear the hooting of tug-boats, a trumpet-call from a neighbouring barracks, and a cracked barrel-organ playing a popular waltz.
The story is a drama of jealousy enacted by the River Seine. Michele, the owner of a barge moored by the quayside, is married to Giorgetta, who is half his age. She is secretly in love with Luigi, one of the stevedores who work on the barge. After the other men have gone home, Luigi arranges with Giorgetta that when all is quiet she will strike a match as a signal for him to return. Michele, who suspects his wife, reminds her of their early days together when she used to shelter herself under his cloak. But she is not interested, she pretends to be tired, and goes off to the cabin. Michele, left alone, gazes moodily at the river and lights his pipe. Mistaking this for the agreed signal, Luigi appears and steps on to the barge..... The fate he meets with and the grim part the cloak plays in the drama, will be seen when the opera is televised. Minor characters are other stevedores and La Frugola, the wife of one of them, who longs for a cottage in the country. A street singer is heard at one point singing 'The Story of Mimi'; and here there is an allusion to La Boheme.
Il Tabarro is the first of the three one-act operas by Puccini (the other two being Suor Angelina and Gianni Schicchi, which were originally produced at the Metropolitan Opera House. New York, in 1918. Harold Rutland
Competition results
On May 6, examples of souvenirs for the 1951 Festival of Britain Exhibition were shown, and viewers were invited to send their own suggestions. Tonight, James Gardener, Co-ordinating Designer to the Festival of Britain, interviews the winners and shows their entries together with manufacturers' designs officially approved by the Festival of Britain Souvenirs Committee.
(sound only)
preceded by Test Match Review
(to 22.35)