- The Bell Telephone Hour
"The Bell Telephone Hour", aka "The Telephone Hour", was a long-run concert series which began
April 29 ,1940 onNBC radio and was heard on NBC untilJune 30 ,1958 . Sponsored by Bell Telephone, it showcased the best in classical and Broadway music, reaching eight to nine million listeners each week. It continued on television from 1959 to 1968. Throughout the program's run on both radio and television, the studio orchestra on the program was conducted byDonald Voorhees .After early shows featuring
James Melton and Francia White as soloists, producer Wallace Magill restructured the format onApril 27 ,1942 into the "Great Artists Series" of concert and opera performers, beginning withJascha Heifetz . The list of talents heard over the years includedMarian Anderson ,Bing Crosby ,Benny Goodman ,Nelson Eddy ,José Iturbi ,Oscar Levant ,Lily Pons ,Gladys Swarthout andHelen Traubel .The series returned to radio in 1968-69 as "Bell Telephone Hour Encores", aka "Encores from the Bell Telephone Hour", featuring highlights and interviews from the original series.
Television
The TV show, seen on NBC from
January 12 ,1959 to 1968, was one of the first TV series to be telecast exclusively in color, using the color TV system perfected byRCA in 1954. For much of the early part of its run, the show didn't have a weekly time slot but usually had to share with another program, meaning it aired every other week. By the mid-1960s, however, it had received a weekly time slot, usually on Friday or Saturday evenings. It was noted for itsChristmas specials, frequently featuringopera stars as well as stars ofmusical theater andballet . In the fall of 1965, the show was switched to an earlier time slot of Sundays at 6:30pm. In 1967, the format changed from a videotaped and mostly musical presentation to filmed documentaries about classical musicians made on location.One of the most notable documentary programs combined a tour of the
Museo del Prado inMadrid , with performances by such noted Spanish musicians asAndrés Segovia ,Alicia de Larrocha , andVictoria de los Angeles . Another was a profile ofCleveland Orchestra conductorGeorge Szell . This one was not a biography of Szell, but a documentary showing how he worked with the orchestra.One of the last, and most notable episodes done in the videotape format, was "First Ladies of Opera", featuring
Joan Sutherland ,Leontyne Price ,Renata Tebaldi andBirgit Nilsson , all on one program. In 1976, footage from the TV series was edited into a 90-minute documentary, "The Bell Telephone Jubilee", aka "Jubilee"."Rehearsal: The Bell Telephone Hour"
In 1947, a 27-minute black-and-white
short subject entitled "Rehearsal: The Bell Telephone Hour", was released to theaters. This film featured, in addition to Voorhees and the orchestra, operatic bassEzio Pinza and opera mezzo-sopranoBlanche Thebom singing arias. It simulated a rehearsal of the popular program, and then, near the end, segued to what was presumably the actual radio broadcast.Listen to
* [http://www.archive.org/details/Bell_Telephone_Hour Internet Archive: "The Bell Telephone Hour"]
External links
*
* [http://catnyp.nypl.org/record=b7831133 "The Bell Telephone Hour" collection of sound recordings, 1940-1968] , at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
* [http://www.otrsite.com/logs/logb1042.htm Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs: "The Bell Telephone Hour"]
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