1976 in Italian television

Events

1976 is the year of three turning points in the history of Italian television: the reform of RAI, the official beginning of the color broadcastings by the RAI and the birth of the private channels on air.

The RAI reform

  • 30 January. RAI reform. The firm passes from the government's control to the parliament's one; the National and the Second Channel change name in Raiuno and Raidue and become two autonomous and concurrent channels, the first more traditionalist, the second more experimental and liberal; the information is served by two news programs of different political bias (TG1, directed by the catholic Emilio Rossi, and TG2, directed by the socialist Andrea Barbato). Similar changes are done in the radio sector. The reform makes RAI more pluralist and less censored, but accentuates too the spoils system.[1]
  • 25 October. New schedule of the RAI programs; RAI Due gets the same broadcasting time than Rai Uno (12,30-2,00 pm and 5,00-11,30 pm.)[1]
  • 8 December: the magazine Odeon, in a reportage about the Crazy Horse in Paris, shows naked women for the first time on the Italian TV.[2]
  • 15 December. In Lombardy, first regional broadcastings by RAI.[1]

The color

  • 17 July: Starting from the inaugural ceremony, RAI broadcasts in color the 1976 Summer Olympics.[1]
  • 7 August. RAI begins the “experimental phase” of the color, lasting six months, broadcasting from Wimbledon the tennis match Italy-England for the Davis Cup. The experimentation is limited to sport, news and cultural programs, excluding the entertainment (films, fictions and varieties).[3]
  • 7 December: for the first time, RAI broadcasts the Premiere at La Scala (the Verdi’s Othello); the show is in color. Outside the theatre, a battle between police and protesters is fought.[4]
  • 30 December: the Economic Programming Committee chose definitively the PAL system for the color broadcastings.[1]

The private channels

  • Telemontecarlo opens a studio in Milan, where the first Italian private news program (Il giornale nuovo, care of Indro Montanelli and the Il giornale’s redaction) is recorded.[5]
  • June 9: TeleAppula, one of the first Italian private channels on air, begins to broadcast from the Mercadante theatre in Altamura.[6]
  • June 25: A sentence of the Constitutional court allows to the private radio and TV stations to broadcast “not exceeding the local area”.[7]
  • Summer. After the Court's sentence, birth of other private channels: RTP (Radio Televisione Peloritana) in Messina.[8] Telemilano in Milan, Teleroma, Quinta Rete and GBR, the first to broadcast in color, in Rome.[9](Telemilano and Teleroma were already active as cable channels).
  • August. In Malta, birth of Radio Televisione Indipendente, private channel in Italian language, property of Angelo Rizzoli; in September, Dom Mintoff announces the opening of Telemalta, a TV in Italian managed in company by Rizzoli and the Maltean government, and relayed on the whole Italian territory. The project will remain unfulfilled.[10]
  • 11 December: birth of the Puglia local TV TeleNorba. At the end of the year, in Italy around fifty private channels already exist. Ediliio Rusconi is the first Italian editor to enter in the TV business, founding Quinta Rete in Rome and Antenna Nord in Milan.

Debuts

Variety

  • L’altra domenica (The other Sunday) – hosted by Renzo Arbore, on Rai Due. The show is born as a “container” to fill the dead times among the sport programs in the Sunday afternoon, but becomes very popular among the younger public for its demented and then transgressive humor. It launches Roberto Benigni, in the role of a mad movie critic and Isabella Rossellini as special correspondent.
  • Domenica in (Sunday in) – hosted, for the first three editions, by Corrado Mantoni, on Rai Uno. It's another “container show”, similar by formula to L’altra domenica, but aimed to a family audience. Since the beginning, the show is a great public success; in the years, it had been hosted, among others, by Pippo Baudo, Lino Banfi, Mara Venier, Carlo Conti and Massimo Giletti and is now again one of the pivots of the RAI palimpsest, also if its more recent editions have been often accused to be “trash TV”.
  • Scommettiamo? (Let it bet?) – quiz inspired by the horse racing, hosted by Mike Bongiorno, who comes back in RAI after a two years “exile” at the Swiss tv.

News and educational

On Rai Uno debut, for the Friuli earthquake, of the magazine Speciale TG1 (again today on air). The empowered Rai Due gets, beyond its news (TG2), its magazine (TG2 dossier), its sport magazine (Domenica Sprint) and its weather program (Meteo 2).

  • Almanacco del giorno dopo (Next day’s almanac) – magazine of petty culture.
  • TG l’una, quasi un rotocalco per la domenica (TG one hour, an almost magazine for the Sunday) – talk show with reportages, broadcast on Rai Uno the Sunday at the lunch hour.
  • Bontà loro (For their goodness) – first Italian talk-show, hosted by Maurizio Costanzo, on RAI Uno the Monday late evening. The show is a novity for the tone of the interviews, polite but not obsequious, also towards the politicians, and sometimes unprejudiced; famous is the question about her private life to Tina Anselmi, first Italian woman minister.
  • Odeon, tutto quanto fa spettacolo (Odeon, all about show business) – magazine about show business by Brando Giordani and Emilio Ravel, famous for having broken the RAI taboo about female nakedness (see over).[11]

Television shows

Drama

  • Tosca – by Giancarlo De Bosio, with Placido Domingo; TV version of the Puccini’s opera, shot in Rome, on the real places of the action.

Miniseries

[12]

Period dramas

Mystery

  • Alle origini della mafia (To the mafia’s origins) – in five episodes, by Enrico Muzii, script by Leonardo Sciascia; history of the Mafia, from the sixteenth century to today, with an international cast.
  • A casa, una sera… - in two episodes, by Mario Landi, with Nino Castelnuovo and Lia Tanzi; from Francis Durbridge’s Suddenly at home.
  • Dimenticare Lisa (To forget Lisa) – in three episodes, by Salvatore Nocita, with Ugo Pagliai; from Francis Durbridge’s The doll, whose action is transferred in Naples.
  • Aut-aut, cronaca di una rapina (Aut-aut, chronicle of a hold-up) – in two episodes, by Silvio Maestranzi, with Gabriele Lavia; reconstruction of a crime story really happened in Denmark.
  • Dov’è Anna? (Where is Anna?) – In seven episodes, by Piero Schivazappa, with Mariano Rigillo and Scilla Gabel. Anna, an ordinary middle-class woman, disappears; the investigations both by the police and by the husband and a friend of the missing, improvised detectives, reveal always new and unsuspected sides in Anna’s secret life, till to a sad ending. The miniseries deals social question audacious for the time, as the market of the adoptions and the mental disease. The final episode gets an audience of 28 million viewers, absolute record for an Italian fiction.[15]
  • La mia vita con Daniela (My life with Daniela) – in two episodes; paranormal thriller by Domenico Campana, with Ivana Monti.

Variety

  • Chi? (Who?) – hosted by Pippo Baudo; “detective quiz” combined to the Lotteria Italia, including inside it short mystery fictions with Alberto Lupo and Nino Castelnuovo..
  • Dal primo momento che ti ho visto (Since first time I Saw you) – by Vito Molinari, with Massimo Ranieri and Loretta Goggi; mix of variety and fiction. A love story is the thread for the songs of the two vocalists and for the Loretta Goggi’s impersonations.
  • Due ragazzi incorreggibili (Two incorrigible boys) – by Romolo Siena, with Franco Franchi and Ciccio Ingrassia, reunited after a five year separation. It includes the miniseries Sandogat, parody of Sandokan.[16]
  • Onda libera (Free wave) – by Beppe Recchia, ideated by Giuseppe Bertolucci, with Roberto Benigni, on Rai due. An imaginary private channel, based in a stable, interferes with the RAI programs. For its foul mouthed humor the show is censured by RAI (the original title Televacca, Tvcow, is changed and the caricature character of a priest is deleted)[17]
  • Rete tre (Third channel) – by Enzo Trapani, with Arnoldo Foà, Ombretta Colli and Gianni Morandi. Through an imaginary third channel,[18] the show mocks the true RAI programs (i.e., the fiction Dov’è Ada is a parody of Dov’è Anna, see over).[19]
  • Per una sera d’estate (For a summer evening) – musical show, hosted by Claudio Lippi.

News and educational

  • Bertolucci secondo il cinema (Bertolucci according to the cinema) by Gianni Amelio; reportage about the shooting of Bertolucci’s 1900.[20]
  • Babau – with Paolo Poli, in four episodes; enquiry about the faults of the Italians, halfway between satirical variety and custom reportage, with the interventions of intellectuals as Umberto Eco. The show, recorded in 1970, is broadcast only after six years, for censure’s reasons.[21]
  • I quaderni neri (The black dossiers) – historical documentaries; it’s one of the first programs broadcast in color by RAI.
  • La questione femminile (The female question) – by Virgilio Sabel; reportage in ten episodes, inside the cultural column Sapere.[22]

Ending this year

References

  1. Unknown (25 October 2012). "1976-1979". cronologia radiotelevisiva III. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  2. "Odeon. Tutto quanto fa spettacolo - Eros e disciplina - video - RaiPlay". Rai. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  3. "Con il tennis e Paolo VI comincia il colore in TV". La Stampa. 8 August 1976. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  4. "1976 Otello di Verdi. La prima diretta della RAI alla Scala". Rainews (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  5. "Telemontecarlo", Wikipedia (in Italian), 2019-05-23, retrieved 2019-05-28
  6. Emanuelli, Massimo (2018-06-25). "TeleAppula". MASSIMO EMANUELLI (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  7. "Storia della TV 1910-1990" (PDF). Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  8. "RTP (Sicilia)", Wikipedia (in Italian), 2019-05-02, retrieved 2019-05-28
  9. "GBR (rete televisiva)", Wikipedia (in Italian), 2019-05-26, retrieved 2019-05-28
  10. "A & G TELEVISION". www.storiaradiotv.it. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  11. "Odeon. Tutto quanto fa spettacolo - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  12. "Sceneggiati e Fiction 1975 - 1977 -". Rai Teche (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  13. "Sandokan - La serie - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  14. Giuliano (April 10, 2020). "L'OPERA AL CINEMA: Paganini 1976 ( I )". L'OPERA AL CINEMA. Retrieved 2021-02-09.
  15. "Dov'è Anna? - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  16. "Due ragazzi incorreggibili - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  17. "Onda libera - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  18. The third RAI channel will be real only three years later.
  19. "Rete tre - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  20. "Bertolucci secondo il cinema - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  21. "Babau - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  22. "La questione femminile - RaiPlay". www.raiplay.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-05-28.
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