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Horizon at 60 - Chris La Fontaine

Producer at Horizon in the 1970s

Such was the power of television in the 1970s (there were only three TV channels in the UK until 1982), that sometimes it was enough to simply look behind the scenes of an institution and see what went on there. Many series attempted this over the years with varying degrees of success. Horizon tried it with producer Christopher La Fontaine’s Horizon: Noah’s Ark in Kensington. The original Radio Times billing for the programme that was broadcast in September 1970, stated:

The Natural History Museum is a place of enthusiasts: the hundreds of children who swarm through the public galleries each day and the 350 naturalists employed by the museum. Their job is to look after and do research on one of the largest collections of living organisms in the world.

Tonight's programme is a chance to look behind the scenes of a well-known institution. It is also about the public who visit it and the people who work there.

A charmingly simple idea, and a charming film, but with a most extraordinary musical score by one of the world’s top modern composers.’ Chris la Fontaine explains.

Chris La Fontaine recalls his film "Noah’s Ark in Kensington" (1970).

Before the Â鶹ԼÅÄ’s Natural History Unit started making films in any great number, Horizon regularly made forays into the world of wildlife.

Producer Chris La Fontaine is a self confessed ‘people-person’ so working with animals did not come high on his list of film making priorities. However one of his more noted films, which many seem to remember was A Smile for the Crocodile (Horizon, Â鶹ԼÅÄ 2, January, 1977). By all accounts this was a hair raising and exasperating experience.

Chris La Fontaine's film "A Smile for the Crocodile" was one of Horizon's forays into the world of wildlife documentary.

Interviews

  • Peter Goodchild

    After having trained in studio direction Peter Goodchild (the longest surviving editor of the programme) was asked by Aubrey Singer, then Head of Â鶹ԼÅÄ Science and Features, to make a choice. Did he want to be an educationalist or an entertainer for the rest of his Â鶹ԼÅÄ career?
  • Alec Nisbett

    Alec Nisbett, has been described by fellow programme makers as ‘the quintessential Horizon producer’, never shying away from putting hard science on TV.
  • Deborah Cadbury

    The first programme Deborah worked on for the Â鶹ԼÅÄ was on a series which was something of a training ground for many a Horizon producer, Tomorrow's World (Â鶹ԼÅÄ: 1965-2003). She won many awards for her work on Horizon including Emmys and BAFTAS.
  • Simon Campbell-Jones

    Simon’s first film for Horizon was broadcast in January 1969, and was called The Miraculous Wonder: the Human Eye. Narrated by Christopher Chataway, the programme asked if human eyes “were windows to your soul, the receiver of irrelevant information, respectable substitutes for sex, something like footballs? Or a piece of the brain looking out at the world?â€
  • Peter Jones

    Peter Jones had been watching Horizon from the very early days, soon after the studio based magazine format was phased out, and just knew he had to be part of the programme.
  • Sarah Carr

    With a large team of directors, producers, production assistants, and researchers, keeping Horizon on schedule and within budget was no mean feat. Unit Manager Sarah Carr had the mammoth task of keeping the Horizon ship afloat, which she did with wit, charm and firmness!
  • David Dugan

    David Dugan joined Horizon in 1976 as a researcher, having only contributed science articles to the national press before. He heard about his appointment to the programme by what today would be considered antiquated means – telegram!
  • Andrew Cohen

    Arguably the rise through the world of TV science, of the hugely popular and highly successful physicist and communicator Professor Brian Cox, was down to Andrew Cohen.
  • Maggie Bebbington

    By 1992 Director General Michael Checkland had seen through the introduction of the inital phase of the Â鶹ԼÅÄ’s internal market called Producer Choice. For a Unit Manager like Maggie Bebbington there were a few surprises in store.
  • Edward Goldwyn

    Ed Goldwyn joined the Â鶹ԼÅÄ in 1962 first as a researcher, then producer in schools, education, and Open University programmes. He was anxious to move to Horizon which had impressed him since it first began in 1964.
  • Tessa Livingstone

    Horizon is known for its specialist and engaging science films, but occasionally the production team finds itself in a breaking news situation when on location.
  • Martin Freeth

    The pressures of the multi-channel world were not a concern for earlier Horizon film makers. Although Martin Freeth experienced some of the changes brought about by digital TV, his Horizon career (1971–1997) rarely encountered pressure to deliver anything other than ‘a good programme’.
  • Chris La Fontaine

    Such was the power of television in the 1970s (there were only three TV channels in the UK until 1982), that sometimes it was enough to simply look behind the scenes of an institution and see what went on there.
  • Graham Massey

    Horizon soon started to make itself known as a vehicle for breaking science stories and questioning accepted wisdoms. Graham Massey was Head of Â鶹ԼÅÄ Science between 1989-91, and was a Horizon film maker between 1974 and 1985.
  • John Lynch

    When John Lynch joined Horizon in the 1970s, simply revealing how something ‘worked’, without necessarily telling any ‘story’ as such, provided sufficient interest for audiences.
  • Christopher Sykes

    In 1980 Christopher Sykes wrote and produced The Slatemakers for Horizon. It was this programme that triggered his own unique approach to science television. For Chris, people were the key to successful science documentaries.
  • Jana Bennett

    It took until 1990 for the Â鶹ԼÅÄ to appoint a women to the position of Editor, Horizon. It had not been a straightforward journey for Jana Bennett who took the job, having faced some less than positive views about the role of women in broadcasting.

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