A FILM DIRECTED BY TONY PALMER

Featuring Sir William Walton and Lady Susana Walton
and Carmen Du Sautoy as Edith Sitwell
Comments by Sir Laurence Olivier and Sacheverell Sitwell

With excerpts from

Cello Concerto (soloist: Ralph Kirshbaum)
Violin Concerto (soloist: Iona Brown)
Viola Concerto (soloist: Yehudi Menuhin)
Julian Bream plays Bagatelle for Guitar No. 3

Carmen Du Sautoy recites Façade
Yvonne Kenny as Cressida sings 'At the Haunted End of the Day' (Troilus and Cressida)
Simon Rattle conducts The Philharmonia Orchestra with John Shirley-Quirk
and choruses in excerpts from Belshazzar's Feast
Portsmouth Point
Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2
Crown Imperial
The First of the Few
Battle of Britain
Hamlet

Henry V

......This wonderful documentary has to be Tony Palmer's masterpiece. I remember, with great pleasure, its first screening in 1981 (two years before the composer's death) in an unprecedented 90 minute span on British commercial TV with just two short commercial breaks. One cannot imagine that sort of indulgence in today's dumbing- down, ratings-mad atmosphere!

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Palmer wisely steps back and allows Sir William and Lady Susana Walton to tell the story of the composer's life and times and music, together with astute observations from Sacheverell Sitwell and, especially, of Sir Laurence Olivier. Olivier comments that the music is sexy and strongly affirmative about love - no wonder that Walton wrote so much thrillingly effective music for films (John Williams has commented that he is held in great veneration by the Hollywood film music fraternity).

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Palmer's film traces Walton's life story beginning with his humble beginnings in Bolton Lancashire, a place he swore he would never return to after being bullied at the Oxford choir school because of his accent. His talent for composition was soon recognised and he was allowed to stay on in Oxford as 'the youngest undergraduate since Henry VIII'. The film then covers the period when he was lodged, in their attic, by his mentors, the unconventional Sitwells (Osbert, Edith (for whose verses William composed the Façade music) and Sacheverell. It was the Sitwells who introduced him to Italy and Amalfi. It was close-by on the island of Ischia in the Bay of Naples that he would eventually settle with Lady Susana. He had met her on a cultural visit to Buenos Aires and proposed to her on their first meeting. She said he was ridiculous but he went on to ask her again every day for the next two weeks or so with the same reply. When he then stopped asking, she became worried and said yes! She observes that Sir William was not at all worried about the fact she admitted to not being very musical - 'one musician in the family is enough', he commented. Lady Walton also comments "he looks upon his compositions as his children - worse than any pregnancy; 'longer and more painful!'

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Sir William's comments are often wry and impish and often show a touching vulnerability and sometimes the odd flash of anger at some slight or painful memory. For instance, he was greatly disappointed by Lionel Tertis's initial brusque rejection of his Viola Concerto and hurt about Elgar's (he remembers meeting the older composer in the lavatory at The Three Choirs Festival!) scathing comments about the same work.

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The excerpts are well chosen and sympathetically performed. A wonderful musical experience that is whole-heartedly recommended and especially welcome in this year that we celebrate the centenary of Sir William's birth.

Ian Lace......