List of years in Italian television
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This is a list of Italian television related events from 1956.

Events

  • RAI extends television broadcasting to 6 hours by day, and 11 hours on Sunday.
  • 3 February. With the first airing of Carosello, (see below) advertising is introduced to Italian television. The show is inaugurated by an educational short about car driving, sponsored by Shell and played by the sports journalist Giovanni Canestrini.[1]
  • 25 March: RAI broadcasts on Eurovision the signing of the Treaty of Rome.[2]
  • 16 May. Foundation of TVL (Televisione Libera), presided by Gian Vittorio Figari, which aimed to create a commercial television in Milan. Involved in In this project were the American William A. Berns, manager of RCA and NBC, and the controversial businessman Umberto Ortolani. The firm performs (illegally) the first test broadcastings by an Italian private television, on the UHF band, which was not used by RAI.[3]
  • 8 September. In the encyclical Miranda prorsus, Pope Pius XII expresses the Catholic Church’s views regarding to modern mass media. About television, the Pope shows interest but also concern. He asks for a strict control by the civil authorities on its content.[4] 
  • 19 December. In Rome, RAI inaugurates the Via Teulada Production Center, with 6 studios; the core of the firm moves definitively from Turin to the capital.[5]
  • December 31: Images from the sky is the first show broadcast simultaneously in all ten Eurovision member countries. Italy contributes with a recital of operatic arias, performed by Maria Callas from RAI auditorium in Rome.[6]

Debuts

  • Carosello (Carousel) – advertising show, aired daily between the news and the prime time; it consists of a series of two minutes film (usually comical sketches or cartoons), ending with the slogan of the sponsor, and often realized anonymously by renowned directors, as Luciano Emmer and Ermanno Olmi. For twenty years, it’s one of the TV show most loved by the public (moreover by the childish one) and sees the presence as testimonials of almost all the most famous Italian showmen, from Eduardo De Filippo to Dario Fo.[7]
  • Telematch – game show, hosted by Enzo Tortora, Silvio Noto and Renato Tagliani; two seasons. It includes, for the first time in Italy, two segments not shot in studio: The mysterious object, from the square of a village, and The arm and the mind, cultural and athletic test from a gym, with the presence of famous sportsmen.[8]
  • Il musichiere – musical game show, Italian version of Name that tune; directed by Antonello Falqui, written by Garinei and Giovannini, hosted by Mario Riva. The program gets huge popularity, not only for the game but also for the presence as guest stars of the biggest names of the show business and of the sport, not only Italians, from Gary Cooper to Coppi and Bartali.[9] After three seasons, the show is deleted because the sudden Mario Riva’s death.[10] 
  • Zürich festival of the Italian song; 11 editions.

Television shows

  • Volti e voci della fortuna (Faces and voices of the luck) – musical contest bound to the New Year lottery, hosted by Enzo Tortora and Silvio Noto, won by Aurelio Fierro with Scapricciatello. It’s considered an early version of Canzonissima (also if a similar show had been already aired, only by radio, in 1956, under the title Le canzoni della fortuna, The luck’s song).
  • Viaggio nella valle del Po : alla ricerca di cibi genuini (Trip in the Po Valley: looking for genuine foods) – gastronomical reportage in 12 episodes, directed and hosted by Mario Soldati. While the Italian intellectuals flaunt, generally, distrust for the television, Soldati shows the potentialities of the new media, using the cuisine as a way to investigate the rural Italy.[11]
  • Othello – traduced by Salvatore Quasimodo and directed by Claudio Fino, with Vittorio Gassmann, Salvo Randone and Anna Maria Ferrero.[12]

Period dramas

References

  1. "Shell - per guidare meglio - guida a destra o a sinistra". Archived from the original on 2021-05-13.
  2. "1957-2017, il Sogno Europeo - S1957 - La firma dei trattati - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  3. "Tv e politica: nel 1957 si tentò di fare la prima tv privata con l'aiuto della Cia". TvZoom (in Italian). 2017-01-29. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  4. "Miranda prorsus". Archived from the original on 2019-11-17.
  5. "Memorie - Fatti e persone da ricordare - 1957 - Rai Via Teulada 66, si aprono gli studi - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  6. "Callas, la dea della voce". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  7. "Memorie - Fatti e persone da ricordare - Dopo Carosello...tutti a nanna! Un ricordo di Federico Moccia - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  8. Emanuelli, Massimo (2004). 50 anni di storia della televisione attraverso la stampa settimanale (in Italian). GRECO & GRECO Editori. p. 65. ISBN 978-88-7980-346-5.
  9. "Fausto Coppi e Gino Bartali in Il Musichiere del 1959 -". Rai Teche (in Italian). 2013-06-06. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  10. "60 anni fa in onda la prima puntata de "Il musichiere" -". Rai Teche (in Italian). 2017-12-07. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  11. "Viaggio nella valle del Po". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  12. "Otello (1957) - Video". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-09-14.
  13. "Orgoglio e pregiudizio". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-01.
  14. "Piccolo mondo antico". RaiPlay (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-01.
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