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time. Menotti is presently searching for another Amahl, since thirteenyear-old Chet Allen, who sang the role twice last season, is no longer a soprano. The opera telecasts will be offered monthly on Sunday afternoons, and all of them will be in English.
Speaking of better music, Mutual's Chicago Theatre of the Air has returned to the Saturday-night radio schedule. The program is now in its thirteenth consecutive opera-operetta season, and about thirty operas and operettas will be presented in this series.
You can still attend the Metropolitan Opera every week, via your radio, when ABC resumes its popular Met programs November 29. "Carmen" has been pencilled in for the first broadcast.
If you like your newscasts television-style, there's a whopper of a show on the ABC network called All-Star News. It will be seen fourand-a-half-hours a week, on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday evenings, at different times each of those nights. The whole operation is master-minded by Louis Ruppel, former editor of Collier's Magazine, and his stable of commentators and analysts includes such well-known names as Elmer Davis, Martin Agronsky, Pauline Frederick, Paul Harvey, Taylor Grant, Austin Kiplinger, and many others. All-Star News is all-inclusive in its approach, with the cameras switching from city to city to cover — in addition to news — sports, entertainment, science and fashions. The guests are top news personalities of note, from all fields.
Eddie Albert has temporarily deserted the movies and the stage for a fling at television. He has just begun a new {Continued on page 13)
Show folk are proud of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, keeping up a heavy schedule — and a brave front — despite their recent tragic loss.
Eddie Albert, during one of his rare hours of relaxation, shows little Ed how to play the piano with expert footwork.