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The Best Episodes of Monitor Season 4

Every episode of Monitor Season 4 ranked from best to worst. Discover the Best Episodes of Monitor Season 4!

The Best Episodes of Monitor Season 4

Monitor was a BBC arts programme that was launched on 2 February 1958 and ran until 1965. Huw Wheldon was the first editor from 1958 to...

Seasons8

  1. Background image for Episode 1
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    #1 - Episode 1

    S4:E1

    A magazine of the arts. Tonight's edition includes: Shelagh Delaney's Salford The twenty-one year old author of "A Taste of Honey" and "The Lion in Love" looks at the town where she was brought up and where the action of both her plays takes place. Themes and Variations 'To compare a great copy with a great original is to attend a conversation between great artists' with Michael Ayrton. Introduced and edited by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  2. Background image for Musician in Montmartre
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    #2 - Musician in Montmartre

    S4:E2

    Darius Milhaud the most prolific composer of today, filmed at his home in Paris.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  3. Background image for The Eye of Cartier-Bresson
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    #3 - The Eye of Cartier-Bresson

    S4:E3

    The Eye of Cartier-Bresson The great French photographer at work. Music through the Looking Glass The fantasy world of Gerard Hoffnung.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  4. Background image for Lillian Hellman
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    #4 - Lillian Hellman

    S4:E4

    Man in a Landscape The art of Sidney Nolan, Australian painter. Lillian Hellman talks to Huw Wheldon

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  5. Background image for Henry Moore
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    #5 - Henry Moore

    S4:E5

    Henry Moore, Sculptor, at home and in his studio.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  6. Background image for Man In A Landscape
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    #6 - Man In A Landscape

    S4:E6

    The art of Sidney Nolan, australian painter.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
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  8. Background image for The Light Fantastic
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    #7 - The Light Fantastic

    S4:E7

    Five million people in England go dancing every week. A look at the strange and varied world of the dancers of England, from jive to ballroom, from folk dancing to flamenco.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  9. Background image for A Book of Hours
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    #8 - A Book of Hours

    S4:E8

    Book of Hours The seasonal calendar of the Duc de Berry. Zadkine at the Tate The famous Russian sculptor interviewed by Bernard Williams on the occasion of his retrospective exhibition opening at the Tate Gallery on January 5.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  10. Background image for Katina Paxinou
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    #9 - Katina Paxinou

    S4:E9

    In 1960, Huw Wheldon visited Epidaurus and Athens to meet the Greek star of stage and screen Katina Paxinou. Having initially trained as an opera singer, she moved into acting, helping to re-establish the National Theatre of Greece in 1932. Due to the outbreak of World War Two, she found herself unable to return to Greece, and so emigrated to the US, soon securing the role of Pilar in For Whom the Bell Tolls - which won her an Academy Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture. She returned to Greece in 1950 to resume her stage career, and alongside her husband, the actor and director Alexis Minotis, the pair achieved their dream of interpreting the Ancient Greek plays for a modern audience.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  11. Background image for Emlyn Williams
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    #10 - Emlyn Williams

    S4:E10

    Emlyn Williams who is appearing at the Arts Theatre, London, in three plays: "Lunch Hour" by John Mortimer, "A Slight Ache" by Harold Pinter, and "The Form" by N.F. Simpson - under the title "Three". Tonight he discusses his roles in the plays with extracts from each of them. George Chapman in the Rhondda Life in the Welsh mining valleys as seen by the English painter George Chapman.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  12. Background image for 12/02/1961
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    #11 - 12/02/1961

    S4:E11

    Ronald Searle on Toulouse-Lautrec Kingsley Amis on Science Fiction

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  13. Background image for The Devils of Loudun
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    #12 - The Devils of Loudun

    S4:E12

    The Devils of Loudun John Whiting returns to Loudun in France to tell the story of the possession by devils in the 17th century of the Ursuline nuns of the town. His new play 'The Devils' (from which extracts are shown) has just opened at the Aldwych Theatre, London. Two Composers, Two Worlds A film about the contrasts in the life and work of two outstanding young composers: Peter Maxwell Davies, Dudley Moore.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  14. Background image for Episode 13
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    #13 - Episode 13

    S4:E13

    Young Conductors A competition for young conductors, organised by the Philharmonia Concert Society and held last month in the Monitor studio at Lime Grove. Judges: Otto Klemperer, Sir Adrian Boult, Carlo-Maria Giulini, Walter Legge and the Philharmonia Orchestra.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  15. Background image for Episode 14
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    #14 - Episode 14

    S4:E14

    Lotte Lenya Sings Kurt Weill Kurt Weill was the composer of 'Mack the Knife' and many other songs which created a new style of musical theatre in the Berlin of pre-Hitler days. Lotte Lenya was his wife and his finest interpreter. With the The English Chamber Orchestra Jack Yeats A first view of some of the great Irish artist's early drawings and paintings - work which he decided in the 1920s should not be seen again until three years after his death.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  16. Background image for The Class
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    #15 - The Class

    S4:E15

    The teacher is Harold Lang. The students are from the Central School of Speech and Drama in London.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  17. Background image for The Hollow Crown
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    #16 - The Hollow Crown

    S4:E16

    ...For within the hollow crown That rounds the mortal temples of a king Keeps Death his court, and there the antick sits. Scoffing his state and grinning at his pomp; Allowing him a breath, a little scene (Richard II, Act 3, Scene 2) Facts and foibles concerning the Kings and Queens of England with Dorothy Tutin, Max Adrian, Richard Johnson, John Barton. A selection from the entertainment recently presented at the Aldwych Theatre, London. Architect at Work: Denys Lasdun The designer of rehousing schemes; luxury flats; Fitzwilliam House, Cambridge; The Royal College of Physicians, London; houses; banks; laboratories; shops, on the aims and intentions of a modern architect.

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    Director:Unknown
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  18. Background image for Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
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    #17 - Hamlet, Prince of Denmark

    S4:E17

    Extracts from the controversial production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford, and comments on their approach to the part and the play from Ian Bannen who plays Hamlet and Peter Wood who directs the production.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  19. Background image for Brecht's Berliner Ensemble
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    #18 - Brecht's Berliner Ensemble

    S4:E18

    Brecht's Berliner Ensemble The famous German Theatre Company at rehearsal and in performance at their theatre in East Berlin as seen by Kenneth Tynan with Helene Weigel Brecht's widow and the Ensemble's leading actress and scenes from the Company's production of 'The Threepenny Opera', 'Galileo', 'Arturo Ul'.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  20. Background image for Episode 19
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    #19 - Episode 19

    S4:E19

    A fortnightly magazine of the arts. Introduced and edited by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  21. Background image for Prokofiev
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    #20 - Prokofiev

    S4:E20

    Prokofiev Portrait of a Soviet composer. Daumier A double life with illustrations from the Exhibition at the Tate Gallery organised by the Arts Council

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  22. Background image for Episode 21
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    #21 - Episode 21

    S4:E21

    A fortnightly magazine of the arts. Introduced and edited by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown
  23. Background image for Monitor: Summer Film Season
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    #22 - Monitor: Summer Film Season

    S4:E22

    A selection from the films shown in Monitor over the past two years. In this edition: Shelagh Delaney's Salford The twenty-two-year-old author of 'A Taste of Honey' and 'The Lion in Love' looks at the town where she was brought up, and where the action of both her plays takes place. '... the brilliant meeting with Shelagh Delaney and the vision through her lucid eyes of the restless, slate-grey, black-brick spirit of Salford.....' (Punch) and Profile of a Quartet A film about the life and work of a string quartet with The Allegri Quartet. '... this elaborate, witty and human film profile....' (New Statesman) * Programme edited and introduced by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
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  24. Background image for Monitor: Summer Film Season
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    #23 - Monitor: Summer Film Season

    S4:E23

    A selection from the films shown in Monitor over the past two years. In this edition: Rudolf Bing at the Met A portrait of an impresario filmed at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York. 'You could sense immediately the quality of the man who regards opera singers as spoilt children, who fired Maria Callas, who bends a world-famous institution to his sole will'. (News Chronicle) and The Death of Tolstoy An impression of Tolstoy's last days, compiled from Russian archive newsreel material filmed during his lifetime and at his funeral. 'It was an exciting experience to have this legendary genius, on the hearthrug'. (The Observer) Programme edited and introduced by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
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  25. Background image for Monitor: Summer Film Season
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    #24 - Monitor: Summer Film Season

    S4:E24

    A selection from the films shown in Monitor over the past two years. In this edition: Variations on a Mechanical Theme An investigation into mechanical instruments from the musical box to the automatic orchestra. 'Much of Monitor's best work has appeared among its miscellaneous short films like "Mechanical Instruments"... a kind of discursive essay which is not generally possible elsewhere in the commercial cinema world' (Sight and Sound) and George Chapman In The Rhondda Life in the Welsh mining valleys as seen by English painter George Chapman. 'Chapman's sympathy was in every canvas and model of his that we saw, as Wilfrid Owen's pity for the soldier was in his poetry.' (The Listener) Programme edited and introduced by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
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  26. Background image for Monitor: Summer Film Season
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    #25 - Monitor: Summer Film Season

    S4:E25

    A selection from the films shown in Monitor over the past two years. In this edition: Henry Moore Sculptor at home and in his studio. 'At their best-the recent Henry Moore film, for instance-they can really seem to reveal something new about an artist and his psychology'. (Sight and Sound) and The Miners' Picnic A brass band carnival filmed at Bedlington in Northumberland. '...delightful, with only a scarcely perceptible touch of tongue-in-cheek satire'. (New Statesman) Programme edited and introduced by Huw Wheldon.

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    Director:Unknown
    Writer:Unknown

Season 4 Ratings Summary

"Episode 1" is the best rated episode of "Monitor" season 4. It scored /10 based on 0 votes. Directed by Unknown and written by Unknown, it aired on 9/25/1960. This episode is rated 0.0 points higher than the second-best, "Musician in Montmartre".