Melba is a 1946 Australian radio drama about the life of Nellie Melba.[4] and first broadcast by stations 3DB and 3LK 1946–1947 in fifty 30-minute episodes. It was produced by Hector Crawford, who knew Melba.[5][6][7]
Eight-year-old Kareen Wilson spoke and sang the young Melba — "Comin' Thro' the Rye" and "See Me Dance the Polka" in the Richmond Town Hall. She was the daughter of baritone Ernest Wilson and soprano Freda Northcote.[2]
Glenda Raymond, a coloratura soprano from Melbourne, sang all the arias of Melba in her emerging years, in the original key and hitting the same notes. She was a relative unknown, but had a subsequent career in opera, notably as Etain in Rutland Boughton's The Immortal Hour.[10]
Stella Power — dubbed "the Little Melba" by Melba herself[11] — sang the mature Melba.
Patricia Kennedy played the speaking "Nellie Mitchell that scarifies you with the rough side of her tongue"[9] Melba, "a remarkable success", said the Adelaide Advertiser,[12] For continuity, Kennedy played ever stage of Melba's life.[2]
and many real-life friends and colleagues played themselves.[9]
ABC Weekly said "The woven story is interesting and the music-dialogue balance nicely placed, with the story itself built on factual references to Melba’s career."[13]
The Advocate said it was "very pleasant listening."[14]
"Melba's Life Story Comes to the Radio". Saturday Evening Express. Vol.17, no.49. Tasmania, Australia. 26 January 1946. p.9. Retrieved 14 December 2023– via National Library of Australia.
"Advertising". The Argus (Melbourne). No.31, 327. Victoria, Australia. 25 January 1947. p.16. Retrieved 14 December 2023– via National Library of Australia.
"Melba's Protege in Singing Role". Saturday Evening Express. Vol.17, no.49. Tasmania, Australia. 26 January 1946. p.9. Retrieved 14 December 2023– via National Library of Australia.
"Reviewing Serials is a Tough Job". Advocate. Vol.LXXIX, no.4723. Victoria, Australia. 6 February 1946. p.18. Retrieved 14 December 2023– via National Library of Australia.
Dunbar-Hall, Peter, "Power, Stella (1896–1977)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 29 June 2021
"Melba Show a Successful Radio Serial". Advocate. Vol.LXXIX, no.4739. Victoria, Australia. 29 May 1946. p.26. Retrieved 14 December 2023– via National Library of Australia.
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