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North West Film
Archive

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BBC
North West Regional News and Documentary
Film 1966-1986: Preservation and Research
Access
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An
award of £210,636 was made by the Arts &
Humanities Research Council and work started on the
three year project in April 2005

See the showreel
After
a very busy three years, the team working on this
previously untapped collection is pleased to report
that the job is done! With funding from the AHRC,
and with generous support from colleagues at the
BBC, this rich resource is now ripe for study and
research. Two online catalogues provide information
on over 16,000 stories from across the region
enabling you to discover television coverage of
places, people and events through a simple keyword
search - and to catch a tantalising glimpse of some
of the gems. So go ahead - and please
tell
us what you
think
of it! It will continue to be a work-in-progress as
users help us to make improvements.
All
687 regional programmes and nearly 1,000 news
stories have been transferred to DigiBeta tape and
DVD - making over 220 hours of material newly
accessible. Anyone can view here at the North West
Film Archive (please contact us to arrange a time),
or material can be loaned to HE users on DVD for
study elsewhere. And of course the material is
available to BBC productions. Of the 16,000
stories in the BBC collection, around 1,600 (10%)
have been transferred, and 160 (1%) have a brief
sample clip attached.
Search
the BBC news
catalogue
containing
3,004 dates and 15,380
stories
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Search
the BBC documentaries
catalogue
containing
687 programmes
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Watch
some of our 160 online clips from the BBC
collection
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The
BBC collection at the NWFA
Programmes
made by the BBC for broadcast in the North West
region richly illustrate the interests and
preoccupations of their intended local audiences.
But much more than that, they provide a window into
a period of great interest to historians of
society, culture, and media. The North West Film
Archive has had this unique collection in its safe
custodianship for over 20 years - the successful
completion of this project has opened up
unprecedented access to the material through
preservation, on-line catalogues and transfer to
digital videotape.
From
this collection totalling 12,620 cans of 16mm film
and magnetic track, 9,763 cans relate to the daily
regional news magazine programme, containing the
filmed stories inserted into live studio shows.
These date from August 1973 - May 1986, with
complete runs for 1975 to 1984. They span 3,004
dates and include 15,373 separate news and feature
stories covering everything from industrial action,
economic development, health and welfare, policing
and vandalism, environmental issues, to fads,
fashions, tourism and inventions. The NWFA also has
access to the daily Programme-as-Broadcast sheets
which detail the contents of each day's show -
these form the basis of the catalogue. The
remaining 2,858 cans are examples of documentary
series and one-off programmes, broadcast from 1966
to 1983, totalling 687 separate
titles.
These
films were made in Manchester, broadcast regionally
between 1966 and 1986, and transferred permanently
to the NWFA by the BBC when they moved to videotape
formats. The Archive's ability to accept this
volume of material in 1986 most certainly prevented
its destruction. Its historical value as a unique
window upon the NW is likely to grow since
broadcasting companies often regarded such film as
ephemeral, disposing of it after broadcast. The
collection covers years of significant social,
economic, political and cultural change which saw a
considerable political shift in the national
culture, from the radicalism of the 1960s to the
conservatism of the 1980s. These transitional
decades were marked by economic restructuring,
industrial militancy and Thatcherite ascendancy.
Old ways of seeing the world were vanishing. Social
and cultural attitudes were transformed. Gender,
race, ethnicity, class and sexuality assumed
different meanings; communities, and identities
based on region and nation, were disrupted. This
resource is consequently an invaluable opportunity
to analyse how ways of presenting and representing
such issues changed; how the cultural format within
which the news was put over altered and was
influenced by developing technologies.
This
enhanced resource will appeal to researchers across
several disciplines: social/economic/political
history, cultural geography, cultural studies, the
history of art/design/architecture, as well as
film, television, communications and media studies.
It will contribute to a wider visual history of the
regions and provide an important regional
alternative to broader narratives of British TV
history.
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