ORION: THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING

FILM EDITOR / COLOURIST / ONLINE EDITOR

DIR: Jeanie Finlay | PROD: Creative England / BBC Storyville / Ffilm Cmryu Wales /
Broadway / Truth Department / Met Film Production / Glimmer Films

“A Must-See Movie…a fascinating, tragicomic documentary”

ROLLING STONE

  • ORION: THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING tells the story of Jimmy Ellis - an unknown singer plucked from obscurity and thrust into the spotlight as part of a crazy scheme that had him masquerade as Elvis back from the grave.

    The story of Orion proves that fact is indeed ‘stranger than fiction’. This is the story behind that story. Who was that masked man?

  • Winner: Discovery Award BRITISH INDEPENDENT FILM AWARDS

    Winner: Grand Jury Prize NASHVILLE FILM FESTIVAL

    Winner: Best International Documentary IN-EDIT, BARCELONA

    Winner: Best Screenplay SOLO POSITIVA FILM FESTIVAL, CROATIA

    Nominated: Best Music Documentary UK MUSIC VIDEO AWARDS

    Nominated: Grand Jury Award at SHEFFIELD DOCFEST

EVIDENTLY…JOHN COOPER CLARKE

FILM EDITOR / COLOURIST / ONLINE EDITOR

DIR: John Ross | PROD: BBC Four / Click Films

“This intelligent, hilarious documentary about punk’s poet laureate…is a real treat.”

THE OBSERVER

  • Documentary which records and celebrates the life and works of 'punk poet' John Cooper Clarke, looking at his life as a poet, a comedian, a recording artist and revealing how he has remained a significant influence on contemporary culture over four decades. Featuring Steve Coogan, Stewart Lee, Bill Bailey, Kate Nash, Billy Bragg, Miranda Sawyer, Jarvis Cocker, Alex Turner and more.

  • The film premiered at the Sheffield DocFest 2012, and on National Poetry Day was screened via satellite across UK cinemas with a live Q&A with the man himself. Also broadcast in the UK on BBC Four.

PANTO!

FILM EDITOR

DIR: Jeanie Finlay | PROD: BBC Storyville / Creative England / Glimmer Films

“The film captures magnificently the spirit of the production in all its chaotic, funny, joyful and exhilarating glory”

THE TIMES

  • PANTO! tells the story of how a small community theatre fights to keep afloat in austere times. With arts subsidies slashed, the cast must rely on ticket sales to keep afloat. This hilarious backstage glimpse follows their attempts to rehearse, provide costumes and scenery on a minuscule budget. Malfunctioning pyrotechnics and a donkey costume that exposes more than expected are just some of the challenges they face.

    With a cast of amateurs, some of the challenges are human rather than technical. The film follows their attempts to master the singing, dancing and acting required for a pantomime – a greater challenge than Shakespeare, according to one of the participants.

    The film movingly uncovers what it means to the cast, reflecting the vital and life-changing role the theatre plays in people’s lives.

  • Screened to great acclaim on BBC Four during a packed Christmas TV schedule, the film was awarded Pick Of The Day in just about every newspaper and listings magazine.

    At times this was quite a challenging observational documentary edit, with many cameras and characters to keep track of at certain points during the panto production. But by combining numerous points of view - from the front of house to the auditorium to the stage to the backstage and to the dressing rooms - the film was really able to capture the full impact of events both big and small. Not least when Puss in Boots loses his sword.

PASSIONS: CHI-CHI NWANOKU ON SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR

FILM EDITOR / COLOURIST / ONLINE EDITOR

DIR: Len Brown | PROD: Sky Arts / MacLarty Brown Media

“Marvellous…Nwanoku sets out to rediscover the lost works of black classical music”

THE TIMES

  • Founder and artistic director of the Chineke! orchestra – Britain’s first BAME orchestra - double bassist Chi-chi Nwanoku OBE is passionate about rediscovering the lost works of black classical music. One of her lifelong inspirations has been black British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. Widely known as the ‘African Mahler’ his most celebrated composition was Hiawatha's Wedding Feast, a huge classical hit in Britain and the USA in the first half of the 20th Century, performed every year at London’s Royal Albert Hall. But despite his early success he suffered racism throughout his career, received few royalties for his work and died penniless aged only 37.

  • First broadcast on Sky Arts, this programme was shortlisted for a Creative Diversity Network Award 2019. Nominated in the 'Disrupter' category which celebrates a piece of work that disrupts the way the industry views or tackles an issue. It was also screened at the LSE as part of their Black History Month programme of events.

HIDDEN PAINTINGS

FILM EDITOR / COLOURIST / ONLINE EDITOR

DIR: Andrew Abrahams | PROD: BBC Four / Full Blown Media / Spool Films

  • Dan Snow looks at the work of Nottinghamshire artist Arthur Spooner, whose paintings faithfully record events and people as he saw them. He looks in detail at the 1926 painting of “The Goose Fair” and asks how much this tells us about Nottinghamshire in this era.

  • This half-hour documentary was broadcast on both BBC One and BBC Four.

LIFE ON THE EDGE: NOTTINGHAM LACE

FILM EDITOR / COLOURIST

DIR: Jeanie Finlay | PROD: BBC World News / TVE

  • Charles Mason is the last of the lace makers. He has inherited a family business that’s had to confront technological change, globalisation and the credit crunch recession.

    The future is unpredictable. But despite the changes he has seen in the lace trade, Charles Mason firmly believes his unorthodox answer to globalization can pay off.

    This film traces the history and the precarious future of Nottingham's lace industry through rare archive footage and first-hand accounts by those who worked and continue to work at Cluny Lace, Nottingham.

  • A half-hour film made for TVE’s “Life on the Edge” series and broadcast on BBC World News to 192 countries with a potential global audience of 76 million viewers.