Great job, I've looked through loads (mainly to listen to) and this is the first you can see my late grandpa Ivor Mairants on the guitar. I think it's the first I've found altogether online although he is still on TV occasionally in a couple of films there was nothing available on demand I could find till now.
This is still an utterly entrancing and rivetting video, especially for me as I am trying to learn this piece. It is so helpful to be able to see her right hand or at least the piano hammers in many places.
She's fabulous. I remember loving her music when I was a schoolgirl back in the 1950s, and I'm so glad to have found this clip, which I've played over and over gain.
Very cheering. I love it when the upper register of a piano is so well used! Off on a tangent, one of those little known facts (that Cliffy on Cheers would have been proud to relate!): The English title for this piece is a mistranslation based on the homophones (in French), gens (people) and Jean (the name). The original song in French was Pauvre Jean de Paris (Poor John of Paris).
I knew that would make all your days better.