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Witness History

The first television opera

Witness History

BBC

History, Personal Journals, Society & Culture

4.51.6K Ratings

🗓️ 19 December 2025

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On 24 December 1951, in the United States, television history was made with the live broadcast of Amahl and the Night Visitors, the first opera ever composed specifically for TV.

Written by acclaimed Italian composer Gian Carlo Menotti, the opera almost didn’t happen. Struggling with writer’s block and a looming deadline, Menotti feared he wouldn’t finish, until a visit to an art gallery sparked a childhood memory and inspired the story.

Broadcast live every Christmas Eve on NBC until 1966, Amahl and the Night Visitors became a much-loved holiday tradition for American audiences.

Produced and presented by Gill Kearsley using a variety of archive from the 1950s through to the 2000s.

Eye-witness accounts brought to life by archive. Witness History is for those fascinated by the past. We take you to the events that have shaped our world through the eyes of the people who were there. For nine minutes every day, we take you back in time and all over the world, to examine wars, coups, scientific discoveries, cultural moments and much more. Recent episodes explore everything from the death of Adolf Hitler, the first spacewalk and the making of the movie Jaws, to celebrity tortoise Lonesome George, the Kobe earthquake and the invention of superglue. We look at the lives of some of the most famous leaders, artists, scientists and personalities in history, including: Eva Peron – Argentina’s Evita; President Ronald Reagan and his famous ‘tear down this wall’ speech; Thomas Keneally on why he wrote Schindler’s List; and Jacques Derrida, France’s ‘rock star’ philosopher. You can learn all about fascinating and surprising stories, such as the civil rights swimming protest; the disastrous D-Day rehearsal; and the death of one of the world’s oldest languages.

(Photo: Gian Carlo Menotti in 1957. Credit: Erich Auerbach/Getty Images)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts.

0:07.0

Hello, Greg Jenner here, host of You're Dead to Me, the comedy podcast that takes history seriously and then laughs at it.

0:13.4

This Christmas, forget about socks. We've got the best present of all.

0:17.2

Dead people!

0:18.2

All that sounds like zombies. Sorry, it's not zombies. Let me start again.

0:21.8

In our new family-friendly podcast series, dead funny history, historical figures come back to life

0:26.8

but just long enough to argue with me, tell their life stories and sometimes get on my nerves.

0:31.8

You're dead to me.

0:32.8

Dead funny history.

0:34.1

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:41.0

Hello. History. Listen on BBC Sounds. Hello, this is Witness History from the BBC World Service with me, Jill Kursley.

0:47.9

This is the podcast that takes you back to a key moment, and we bring it all to life through

0:52.6

incredible archive and the amazing memories of a witness.

0:56.9

The moment I'm taking you back to today is in December 1951, when the first opera written for television,

1:04.1

Amal and the Night Visitors, was broadcast.

1:06.8

The shepherds are coming. But it nearly didn't happen.

1:17.6

Well, this year I got into real trouble.

1:20.6

I was supposed to finish an opera for NBC

1:22.6

and I just didn't have an idea in my head.

1:26.6

Composer John Carlo Manotti,

1:28.8

remembering the worry of being asked to produce something

1:31.4

that would become a world first, but not knowing how to do it.

...

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