Festival | |
---|---|
Season 9 | |
No. of episodes | 14 |
Release | |
Original network | CBC |
Original release | 30 October 1968 – 26 March 1969 |
Season chronology | |
The ninth and final season of the Canadian television anthology series Festival broadcast on CBC Television from 30 October 1968 to 26 March 1969 . Fourteen new episodes aired this season, in addition to three musical specials which aired in Festival's time-slot, a BBC production of Billy Budd , [1] and a third drama special from the anthology series Cariboo Country . [2]
Season nine plays and literature includes Peter Raby's adaptation of the Alexandre Dumas novel The Three Musketeers , a 1968 Stratford production. Melwyn Breen adapted The Journey of the Fifth Horse for television from Ronald Ribman's off-Broadway play, which in turn was partly based on Ivan Turgenev's novella The Diary of a Superfluous Man , a drama set in 19th century Russia. John Whiting's stage drama A Penny for a Song (1951) was adapted for television by Fletcher Markle. American playwright Frank D. Gilroy's That Summer, That Fall, which had been adapted for Broadway in 1967, is a version of the Hippolytus-Phaedra story. Charles Israel's drama Noises of Paradise is based on a story by Seymour Epstein. In a double bill, Harold Pinter's one-act The Basement aired with James Saunders' one-act Neighbours. Saunders' drama A Scent of Flowers (1966) also aired. Canadian plays included George Salverson's The Write-Off, Munroe Scott's drama Reddick, and Gratien Gélinas' play Yesterday the Children were Dancing .
Music includes an hour of jazz piano by four distinguished pianist-composers, each with their individual styles; American Erroll Garner, American Bill Evans, English-American Marian McPartland, and Canadian Brian Browne. They perform their own compositions and jazz standards by Jerome Kern, Duke Ellington, et al, accompanied by their own accomplished/fellow musicians including Skip Beckwith, Archie Alleyne, Linc Milliman, James Kappes, Eddie Gómez, Arnold Wise, Charles "Ike" Isaacs, Jimmy Smith, and José Mangual Sr.. A "changing of the baton" occurs between Seiji Ozawa and Czechoslovakian composer Karel Ančerl, who conducts the Toronto Symphony Orchestra performing tone poem No. 2 Vltava (The Moldau) from Má vlast by Bedřich Smetana, with concertmaster Gerard Kantarjian. Producer Franz Kraemer introduces a University of Toronto concert by Australian soprano Joan Sutherland singing arias by Bizet, Handel, Bononcini, Bellini, Rossini, and Delibes, accompanied by her husband, pianist Richard Bonynge. The French-CBC production of Carl Orff's 1937 secular cantata Carmina Burana is re-aired on the English-CBC network this season on Festival, with Pierre Hétu conducting a 70-piece orchestra, Marcel Laurencelle directing 60 chorus members, pianist/chorister Monik Grenier, dancers with choreography by George Skibine, and children playing nearly 300 roles. Featured are French-Canadian coloratura soprano Colette Boky, tenor René Lacourse, baritone Claude Létourneau, baritone Raymond Pincince, American ballerina Marjorie Tallchief, and Daniel Jackson.
Executive producer Robert Allen is the drama supervisor for Festival, in charge of selecting which plays are chosen, and in which order they air. For each script approved, fifty were rejected. As of mid-November 1968, twelve play productions had been chosen for season nine, out of which five are Canadian; The Write-Off, Yesterday the Children were Dancing , Reddick, The Noises of Paradise, and the last, Sister Balonika which had developed out of the Cariboo Country [2] anthology series. [3]
Notes:
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Ref. | ||||||
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197 | 1 | "The Write-Off" | Rudi Dorn | George Salverson | 30 October 1968 | [18] [19] | ||||||
Please add a Plot Summary here, replacing this text. For guidance, see How to write a plot summary. WP:PLOTSUM Episode summaries must be expressed in your own words. Do NOT submit content you find from another web site as it is plagiarism and likely a copyright violation, which Wikipedia cannot accept and will be removed or reverted. Superficially modifying copyrighted content or closely paraphrasing it, even if the source is cited, still constitutes a copyright violation. As per Television Plot Manual of Style, MOS:TVPLOT summaries should be about 100 to 200 words in length, and those substantially less than 100 words are most likely to be scrutinized for possible copyright violation. Cast: Gerard Parkes, Cec Linder, Sandra Scott, Maggie Morris, Henry Ramer, William Needles, and Herbert Goodier. | ||||||||||||
198 | 2 | "Yesterday the Children were Dancing" | Unknown | Play by : Gratien Gélinas Translated by : Mavor Moore | 6 November 1968 | [20] [21] | ||||||
199 | 3 | "A Scent of Flowers" | Unknown | James Saunders | 13 November 1968 | [22] [23] | ||||||
200 | 4 | "Reddick" | Mervyn Rosenzveig | Munroe Scott | 11 December 1968 | [24] [25] | ||||||
201 | 5 | "A Penny for a Song" | Norman Campbell | Play by : John Whiting Adapted by : Fletcher Markle | 1 January 1969 | [26] [27] | ||||||
202 | 6 | "Neighbours" | George Bloomfield | James Saunders | 15 January 1969 | [28] [29] [30] | ||||||
"The Basement" | Harold Pinter | |||||||||||
Part 1 (30 minutes). Neighbours : Please add a Plot Summary here, replacing this text. For guidance, see How to write a plot summary WP:PLOTSUM and the Television Plot Manual of Style. MOS:TVPLOT Cast: Special guest star Billy Dee Williams (Man) and Frances Hyland (Woman). Part 2 (60 minutes). The Basement : Please add a Plot Summary here, replacing this text. For guidance, see How to write a plot summary WP:PLOTSUM and the Television Plot Manual of Style. MOS:TVPLOT Cast: Gerard Parkes as Scott, Joseph Shaw as Law, and Belinda Montgomery cast in the role of Jane. [31] | ||||||||||||
203 | 7 | "The Jazz Piano" | Unknown | Unknown | 22 January 1969 | [32] [33] [34] | ||||||
This hour features jazz piano in four distinctive styles with American swing time pianist/composer Erroll Garner, American impressionist Bill Evans, English-American Marian McPartland, and Canadian Brian Browne. Drawn from individual recording sessions, each of the four artists provide informal discussion on jazz piano in general, and their own style of jazz in particular. Each with their own fellow musicians perform selections.
Notes: Produced by John Coulson. Duration, 60 minutes. CBC-TV Music Special preceded by Public Eye (9-10 PM). | ||||||||||||
204 | 8 | "Noises of Paradise" | Rudi Dorn | Written by : Charles E. Israel Story by : Seymour Epstein | 29 January 1969 | [36] [37] [38] | ||||||
205 | 9 | "Karel Ančerl with Toronto Symphony" | Unknown | Bedřich Smetana | 5 February 1969 | [39] [40] [41] [42] | ||||||
With the conductor's baton soon to be relayed from Seiji Ozawa to Czechoslovakian composer Karel Ančerl for the 1969–70 season, Ančerl is seen working at rehearsal with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. The Prague maestro had already accepted the appointment when the Russian invasion of Czechoslovia occurred earlier in August 1968. Ančerl, who had survived the Auschwitz concentration camp, immigrated from Prague to Canada with his family. Ančerl conducts a performance of tone poem No. 2 Vltava (The Moldau) from Má vlast (aka My Fatherland) by Bedřich Smetana, with concertmaster Gerard Kantarjian. Notes: Producer, Franz Kraemer. Settings, Murray Laufer. Taped in Studio 7 at CBC Toronto. Duration, 60 minutes. CBC-TV Music Special preceded by Public Eye (9-10 PM). | ||||||||||||
206 | 10 | "Joan Sutherland in Concert" | Unknown | Bizet · Handel · Bononcini · Bellini · Rossini · Delibes | 12 February 1969 | [43] [44] | ||||||
Producer Franz Kraemer provides an introduction to this one-hour concert, recorded in April 1968. Before an audience at MacMilian Theatre in the Edward Johnson Building, University of Toronto, Australian soprano Joan Sutherland performs arias by French composer Georges Bizet (1838–1875), German-British composer George Frideric Handel (1685–1759), Italian composers Giovanni Bononcini (1670–1747), Vincenzo Bellini (1801–1835), Gioachino Rossini (1792–1868), and French operetta excerpts by Léo Delibes (1836–1891), with piano accompaniment by Richard Bonynge. Notes: CBC-TV Music Special preceded by a Constitutional Conference News Special (9-10 PM). | ||||||||||||
207 | 11 | "The Journey of the Fifth Horse" | Unknown | Novella by : Ivan Turgenev Play by : Ronald Ribman Adapted by : Melwyn Breen | 19 February 1969 | [45] [46] | ||||||
208 | 12 | "Carmina Burana" | Jean-Yves Landry | Cantata by : Carl Orff Choreography by : George Skibine | 5 March 1969 | [47] [48] [49] | ||||||
Pierre Hétu conducts a 70-piece orchestra, with choirmaster Marcel Laurencelle directing a 60-member chorus, pianist/chorister Monik Grenier, solo vocalists, 12 dancers with choreography by Russian-American George Skibine, and 8 children performing nearly 300 characters, in a staged presentation of Carl Orff's 1937 secular cantata Carmina Burana . Soloist singers include French-Canadian coloratura soprano Colette Boky, tenor René Lacourse, baritone Claude Létourneau, and baritone Raymond Pincince. Dancers include American ballerina Marjorie Tallchief and Daniel Jackson. The cantata is based on 13th-century Latin poems celebrating life's earthly pleasures written for wandering scholars and discovered among the monks of Benediktbeuern Abbey, Germany. Notes: Originally telecast in color by CBC's French network Société Radio Canada on Les Beaux Dimanches (Beautiful Sundays), 27 October 1968. Duration, 90 minutes. Technical director, Pierre Dupuis. Artistic director, Claude Fortin. Costumes, Marie-Andrée Lainé. | ||||||||||||
209 | 13 | "That Summer, That Fall" | Mario Prizek | Frank D. Gilroy | 12 March 1969 | [50] [51] | ||||||
210 | 14 | "The Three Musketeers" | John Hirsch | Novel by : Alexandre Dumas Adapted by : Peter Raby | 19 March 1969 | [52] [53] [54] | ||||||
This two-hour Festival Special is the Stratford National Theatre Company's 1968 hit stage production of Alexandre Dumas' novel The Three Musketeers , as adapted by Peter Raby. Cast: Kenneth Welsh (D'Artagnan), Martha Henry (Milady de Winter), Leo Ciceri (Cardinal Richelieu), Pat Galloway (Queen Anne), Powys Thomas (Athos), James Blendick (Porthos), Colin Fox (Aramis), Chris Wiggins, Kenneth Wickes, Jonathan White, Mia Anderson, and Max Helpmann. Notes: Producer, David Gardner. Music by Raymond Pannell. Broadcast in color at 8:00 PM EST, it was followed at 10 PM by the NFB drama special, The Best Damn Fiddler from Calabogie to Kaladar (1968), which filled the remainder of the Festival time-slot. |