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Chorus of The Scala, Milan:
Chorus of Cigarette Girls (Act I)
Gabriella Besanzoni (mezzo-soprano) : Habanera.
Gabriella Besanzoni (mezzo-soprano), Nerina Ferrari (soprano), Tamara Beltacchi (soprano): All'udir del sistro il suono (Act 2)
Gabriella Besanzoni (mezzo-soprano), Ernesto Besanzoni (baritone), Nerina Ferrari (soprano), Tamara Beltacchi (soprano), The Scala, Milan, Chorus: Toreador's Song (Act 2)
Alessandro Valente (tenor): II
Fior Che avevi a me tu dato, Act 2.
Maria Carbone (soprano) : Io dico, no, non son paurosa (Act 3)
Gabriella Besanzoni (mezzo-soprano), Piero Pauli (tenor), The Scala, Milan, Chorus: Ebben, Carmen io t' amo ancora (Finale, Act 4)

Contributors

Unknown:
Gabriella Besanzoni
Unknown:
Gabriella Besanzoni
Soprano:
Tamara Beltacchi
Unknown:
Gabriella Besanzoni
Baritone:
Ernesto Besanzoni
Soprano:
Tamara Beltacchi
Tenor:
Alessandro Valente
Soprano:
Maria Carbone
Unknown:
Gabriella Besanzoni
Tenor:
Piero Pauli

Count Alfred A. Hessenstein
Count Hessenstein in his final talk in this series will recall Berlin in the days which he knew so intimately as a boy. He was there in 1888 with his sister, who was presented at the court of Kaiser William I, then an old man of ninety-four and the oldest reigning monarch in Europe. That was the year when Kaiser William I died and his son, the Emperor Frederick, came to the throne practically as a dying man and reigned for ninety-nine days; Count Hessenstein will describe the contrast when the young Crown Prince, Kaiser William II (the Kaiser of the Great War days) succeeded him. He will speak of Frederick's wife-Queen Victoria's daughter, Princess Victoria-and describe being taken to the Lake District near Berlin, where he remembers feeding the peacocks. He will recall driving down what is now one of the most fashionable streets in Berlin-fursurstendamm, which was in those days more like a lane.

Contributors

Unknown:
Count Alfred A. Hessenstein
Unknown:
Kaiser William

Regional Programme London

About Regional Programme

Regional Programme is a radio channel that started transmitting on the 9th March 1930 and ended on the 9th September 1939. It was replaced by BBC Home Service.

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More