Title:
Christmas Night
Format:
Live television ballet performance
Country:
UK
Production
company:
BBC Television
Year:
1946 (broadcast live on the BBC Television Service at 9pm on December 25th that year)
Length:
60 minutes
Setting:
Victorian
Background:
Ten years after what ought to have been the very first television adaptation of A Christmas Carol in Britain – and, indeed, the world – had failed to happen due to the illness of its star, the BBC Television Service finally got in on the act with the debut of the Carol on British television. Although in the meantime, there had been versions broadcast by the fledgling commercial television operations in the United States.
The BBC
Television Service had been shut down for the duration of the Second World War
in September 1939, and did not resume until a year after the conflict had
finished, in the summer of 1946. This, then, was British television’s first
post-war Christmas, and it had not yet come to dominate the day in the UK as it
would through the second half of the 20th century. For one thing, the
number of people who had sets was numbered in no more than the tens of
thousands at the very, very most.
For another, the
BBC’s broadcasts were still limited to anyone within range of the transmitter
above their Alexandra Palace studios – which basically meant London and the
surrounding counties, although in practice in favourable weather conditions the
service could be picked up a great deal further away. For example, when going
through the files related to the television coverage of the 1948 Olympic Games
at the BBC’s Written Archives Centre when I was making a documentary about the football commentator Jimmy Jewell, I found a mention of their “viewer in the
Channel Islands” having enjoyed the coverage of the opening ceremony!
Whether said
viewer had a set by this point and was able to watch Christmas Night
is almost certainly lost to history, of course. Although one day I would like
to try and organise a visit to the WAC to see what if any files they hold on
some of these early Carol adaptations!
The personnel and technology of the BBC Television
Service from Alexandra Palace in 1946 were almost identical to the service
which had been suspended seven years earlier. The vast majority of programmes
were broadcast live, and although there was now a BBC Film Unit, they did not
concern themselves with fiction or entertainment as such. Videotape technology
did not yet exist, and film recordings of studio output were not yet in
operation, so the entire cast and crew of Christmas Night came in to
produce the thing live at Alexandra Palace on the day itself.
Christmas Night
Live television ballet performance
UK
BBC Television
1946 (broadcast live on the BBC Television Service at 9pm on December 25th that year)
60 minutes
Victorian
Ten years after what ought to have been the very first television adaptation of A Christmas Carol in Britain – and, indeed, the world – had failed to happen due to the illness of its star, the BBC Television Service finally got in on the act with the debut of the Carol on British television. Although in the meantime, there had been versions broadcast by the fledgling commercial television operations in the United States.
Cast and crew:
There’s some heavy musical firepower in operation here, as the music for Christmas Night was by the esteemed English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams – The Lark Ascending and all that. Whether or not the music was actually for this production, however, I’m not so sure. Vaughan Williams had written for the BBC recently when this was broadcast, having composed a piece called Thanksgiving for Victory for them to mark the end of the Second World War.
However, he’d
also written a “masque” called On Christmas Night twenty years earlier,
in 1926, apparently as an American commission. Like the BBC Television Christmas
Night, this was based on A Christmas Carol – or “freely adapted” from
it – and evidently combined singing, dancing and mime, so it seems very likely, in fact I would say almost certain, that the 1946 television piece was based on it.
The producer was
Philip Bate, a Scottish-born musicologist of English parentage, who’d been working as a studio
manager and then a producer for BBC radio since the mid-1930s. In these early
days of BBC Television, ‘producer’ combined what would now understood to be the
separate roles of both producer and director, and in these very early
days frequently the scriptwriter too, so Bate would have been very much the
driving force behind the whole production.
Bate had started
making programmes for television from Alexandra Palace in 1938, frequently about
music in a more educational or general interest capacity rather than musical productions
as such. However, he’d also begun to produce concerts and ballets and other
such musical specials, and then returned after the break, even producing a section
of the special re-opening programme in June 1946.
The only cast member
named by the BBC’s Radio Times listings magazine at the time was Hubert
Foss, who gets a ‘story told by’ credit. Presumably as some form of narrator,
although whether he appeared in-vision or only in voiceover I cannot say. I
cannot find a record of an actor named Hubert Foss, so I assume he is the Hubert J. Foss who was a journalist and Musical Editor of the Oxford University Press.
This Foss had been a regular broadcaster on music programmes for BBC radio and
was also an expert on Vaughan Williams, so it seems almost entirely certain
that this was he.
Underdone Potato:
The character descriptions in the Radio Times billing certainly match up with the titles of the individual pieces from Vaughan Williams’s 1926 On Christmas Night, so we can get some clues as to the content.
We know that
after some sort of introductory section, some of the music of which draws from
existing Christmas carols such as God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen, Jacob
Marley’s ghost puts in an appearance.
I’m confident in
saying that the setting of the whole thing is or was Victorian, as one of the musical
pieces in Vaughan Williams’s 1926 work is called Victorian Drawing Room,
and the Radio Times article previewing BBC Television’s Christmas
programmes refers to “a flavour of Dickens” (I know that can just about mean
Georgian or… erm… Williamian or whatever, but something Dickensian would commonly
be understood to be mid-Victorian).
There’s some heavy musical firepower in operation here, as the music for Christmas Night was by the esteemed English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams – The Lark Ascending and all that. Whether or not the music was actually for this production, however, I’m not so sure. Vaughan Williams had written for the BBC recently when this was broadcast, having composed a piece called Thanksgiving for Victory for them to mark the end of the Second World War.
The character descriptions in the Radio Times billing certainly match up with the titles of the individual pieces from Vaughan Williams’s 1926 On Christmas Night, so we can get some clues as to the content.
As with several silent film versions of the story, it does not appear that there are three different spirits in this version, but instead one combined “Spirit of Christmas” – exactly the same name that this combined ghost was given in the 1910 silent film. I wonder if Vaughan Williams had seen it…?
There are sections of the music titled Bob Cratchit’s Christmas Party and Bob Cratchit’s Toast, so it seems as if there was some sort of version of the Cratchit ‘Christmas Present’ scene, but more than that I cannot tell you.
The Cratchit music is towards the end and appears to be immediately followed by the finale, so I’m unsure as to whether there was a ‘Yet to Come’ section in this version.
It all seems to end with a version of the English folk dance Black Nag and then Procession of the Nativity, so perhaps had a more overtly Christian conclusion than elsewhere.
I only wish I could tell you more! I can listen to versions of the music, of course, which I suppose is more than can be said for other lost versions. It certainly sounds appropriately festive, and you can see – or rather, hear – why it seemed like a suitable candidate for television, as it does have a lot of the feel of what we might now regard a Christmas film soundtrack. I like the way Vaughan Williams works in bits and pieces from various existing carols and other Christmas music.
Not so much ‘lost’ as aired live once and never recorded, but it has its place in history as British television’s very first version of A Christmas Carol.
BBC Genome
British Film Institute
No comments:
Post a Comment