EVERY TICKET SOLD
12 HOURS’ WAIT TO STAND TWO HOURS The 46th season of the Proms began last night, says a London paper. Not even the war, not even bombs over England could prevent Sir Henry Wood from stepping jauntily on to the platform at the Queen’s Hall at 8 p.m. precisely. There was the customary enthusiasm. For days every ticket had been sold, and some determined first nighters waited twelve hours for the privilege of standing for two hours.
After a tremendous welcome, the audience standing up to greet Sir Henry, they joined in the National Anthem. Berlioz’s ‘Carnaval Romain” overture made a brilliant start, followed by Elgar’s very beautiful second “Wand of Youth” suite—written originally when the composer was aged 12. Noel Eadie sang Verdi.’s sparkling “Ah fors e lui” from “Traviata,” and Pouishnoff played Liszt’s equally
sparkling Concerto in E Flat with Sullivan’s “Di Ballo” in between. After these coruscations came Ravel’s “Mother Goose” suite—one of the most delicately and piquantly orchestrated works ever written — and by way of contrast again there was Liszt’s First Hungarian Rhapsody. The “Tannhauser” Overture and Arthur Bliss’ curiously topical march “Things to Come” brought an exciting evening to a close.
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Times, Volume 127, Issue 21242, 12 October 1940, Page 13 (Supplement)
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199EVERY TICKET SOLD Waikato Times, Volume 127, Issue 21242, 12 October 1940, Page 13 (Supplement)
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