By LEONARD H. WARNER
Relayed from St. Botolph's, Bishopsgate
THIS third broadcast completes the treatment in this series of the British Isles ; next week Mr. Williamson and Mr. Ernest Young will go on to deal with the West Indies. This afternoon's talks will be devoted to the Industrial Revolution of the eighteenth century, and its geographical counterpart-the rise of the North and centre of Britain from being a comparatively barren and impoverished wilderness to their present position as the concentration area of the country's large-scale industry.
3.25 Musical Interlude
: Duets on Harp and Flute by Sidonie Goossens and Frank Almgill. ' Wobblejuice,' a Simple Story foe Children and Grown-Ups, by Archibald Marshall. 'Central Heating in the Tyrol,' by Cecil Lewis
HAYDN PIANO SONATAS
MOST people have very little idea of what a film scenario really is and what relation
—if any-it bears to the completed film. In this talk Mr. Anthony Asquith will explain the exact function of the scenario in the making of a picture, what a scenario looks like, and how various types differ from one another.
(See details below)