This film is now available on DVD with enhanced audio. The 
        black and white film is very grainy and frankly poor quality. The DVD 
        presents two historically important gala performances by the celebrated 
        diva. At the time she was towards the end of her career and her voice 
        was past its best. There are difficulties, for example, with some high 
        notes in the Don Carlo aria but her singing is nonetheless still very 
        worthy of the prolonged applause of the Covent Garden audience. 
         
        
The first, filmed in 1962 comprised the extended aria, 
          ‘Tu che le Vanità’ from Verdi’s Don Carlo and two arias from 
          Bizet’s Carmen. The taxing Verdi aria is delivered most expressively 
          notwithstanding my remarks above. The Carmen arias – the Habanera 
          and Séguedille are sung with verve and a great joie de 
          vivre yet the audience is left in no doubt that this Carmen is a dangerous 
          man-eating spitfire. These brief tantalising glimpses of the Callas 
          Carmen were to be the only ones left to us for she never sang the role 
          in any opera house although she recorded the work in July 1964. It is 
          also a delight to see Georges Prêtre conducting the Royal Opera 
          House Orchestra in colourful performances of the Carmen Prelude 
          and Entr’acte from Act III. 
        
 
        
The 1964 Gala Concert excerpt is devoted to the Second 
          Act of Puccini’s Tosca. Again one misses the voice that Callas 
          brought to her famous 1953 EMI recording (with Tito Gobbi again as Scarpia 
          and Giuseppe di Stefano as Cavaradossi now available on EMI Great Recordings 
          of the Century EMI CMS 5 67756 2). Yet Zeffirelli’s inspired direction 
          persuades Callas to bring an infinitely more persuasive dimension to 
          her role as the tormented diva at the mercy of her passions and jealousies. 
          Instead of the imperious operatic diva one normally had met, this Tosca 
          was presented much more effectively as a vulnerable young girl at the 
          mercy of her emotions and the cruel manipulations of the sadistic Scarpia 
          – wonderfully portrayed by Gobbi, imperious, salacious, and utterly 
          ruthless. The bespectacled, slightly limping Spoletta of Robert Bowman 
          adds yet another dimension of horror to this chilling Tosca. 
        
 
        
Classic Callas that despite, a few practically negligible 
          carps, should be in every Callas fan’s collection despite the grainy 
          monochrome film. 
        
 
         
        
Ian Lace