Nat Johnson and Deborah Hope Stanton-Johnson wed

Nathaniel Sturgis Johnson
and
Deborah Hope Stanton-Johnson
are pleased to announce their marriage
which took place in
the Cromwell Room at the Lygon Arms
Broadway, Worcestershire, England
on Saturday 3 June 2000
at 1:15 PM

Join with us now in this happy occasion as we share these photos (below) with you!

Nat Johnson and Deborah Hope Stanton Johnson wed

(Back) Anthony, Peggy, sister Mandy, (another Mandy) and Mark

Nat Johnson and Deborah Hope Stanton Johnson wed

Debbie (standing), sister Mandy, Peggy (Mum) and Nat

Nat Johnson and Deborah Hope Stanton Johnson wed

Debbie, our Mum and sister Mandy

In: QuickNooz | , , ,

40 years with ‘GBH

This entry is part 1 of 9 in the series The Michael Ambrosino Collection
40 years with GBH

September 1956. The obligatory photo made of new employees in those days. It was run by the Westhampton Beach Chronicle, circulation 3000. My mother loved it.

My first visit to WGBH was in the fall of 1955, just after TV had gone on the air at 84 Mass Ave. in Cambridge. I was at work developing a TV master plan for the University of Connecticut at the time, and wanted a tour of one of the few (12) “educational” stations on the air.

Several drives up and down Mass Ave. from the river to Square showed nothing remotely resembling a TV station. Finally locating an oddly shaped small brick building, with a row of stores and a soda fountain on the street, I entered a small doorway between two round pillars.

A dark green flight of stairs led up to one of the smallest reception rooms ever seen, mostly taken up by the huge telephone switchboard. Behind it sat, at lunch time, one of the WGBH secretaries affording the regular operator a lunch break. On this day, it turned out to be a beautiful and familiar face, a former classmate from Syracuse University, Bernice Goldberg. Many of you will remember her in later life as “Bunny” Chesler, the gifted author and one of the spark plugs of the staff.

While waiting for my tour, three identically clad men, all in charcoal gray suits, white button-down shirts and black knit ties left for lunch. “Gracious,” I thought. “They’ve all brought their Harvard uniforms with them!” I suspect that was my first view of , , and . In such a way are first memories born.

In the Spring of ‘56, I gave a short talk at Harvard, describing the Ford Foundation school TV project I was then directing in Schenectady, New York. Hartford heard it and a few weeks later asked me to start in-school TV for Massachusetts. Arriving at WGBH the same week as Dave Davis, , and , my first job was to redesign the small office to make room for all the new bodies. I “accidentally” moved ’s desk next to mine.

My second task was to design a TV production facility to fit into the yet unexcavated basement of the University of New Hampshire. This was Hartford Gunn at his best, part visionary, part schemer, but all action. Give the President of UNH the plan, ask him to excavate the space so that when money is raised for such a facility, there will be someplace to put it! Working with Hartford was an experience to remember.

The 21’ Classroom went on the air in 1958 with series in French, Music, Literature, Social Studies, and Science. , Jean Brady, and I produced and directed and I remember as my floor manager. (I called him Mr. Henning in those days)

40 years with GBH

"The 21" Classroom: Hartford Gunn; the author; Bill Kiernan, the Massachusetts Commissioner of Education; Gene Gray, everybody's favorite science teacher on TV; and Norman Harris, Science Director, Boston Museum of Science.

I left in 1960 to help Hartford create the Eastern Educational Network. It’s hard to think of a time when so few stations were on the air, but Hartford knew that if the educational communities did not activate their licenses they would get swallowed up by the commercial interests. He also knew that many stations would ensure our success as we grew and shared our resources.

I helped groups plan facilities and budget for them. I testified before Legislatures. WGBH offered free programs. All these steps were necessary to insure new stations in New England and the East. The EEN began with an off-air interconnection between WGBH and , became a useful adjunct to NET, and soon, under Don Quayle’s effective guidance, became the nations first interconnected public television network.

I returned to WGBH in 1964 as Assistant and then Associate Program Manager to and then . In 1969-70 I also produced and appeared in an 18-program local documentary series immodestly titled Michael Ambrosino’s Show with Freddie Barzyk, , and Peter Downey as my directors. More and more I realized that making programs was where I wished to be and told Michael to fill my job for I was taking my 40th year off! If I came back to WGBH it would be to do something else.

That 40th year was spent at the BBC as CPB’s “American Fellow Abroad” working on a nightly BBC1 news and current affairs program, 24 Hours. The whole family enjoyed our year in London. I strongly recommend taking time for everyone. Time is our most precious commodity and we seem to squander it or leave it to others to manage.

I did return to WGBH in 1971, and developed and was the Executive Producer for the first three seasons of .

Leaving again in 1976, I developed and executive produced two seasons of , which was meant to be a continuing series like NOVA, but this time about human beings as seen in the past (archaeology) and present (anthropology). Nixon cut the PTV funding 40%. The stations bought 40% fewer series in the SPC choosing NOVA rather than Odyssey. So went my first experience as a freelance production company.

A side venture caught me up about this time as well. In the late 60’s, The Unitarian Church asked me to help a new black production company that had just started and assist with their efforts as I could. That began a 30 year professional and personal relationship with Henry Hampton and his company, Blackside. I went on to help Henry turn his dream Eyes on the Prize into a reality for PBS and was the Consulting Executive Producer for series I and II. (Henry and I also flew together for 20 years and owned a plane together for 10.)

40 years with GBH

Lillian and MJA in front of Sierra 162, the Beechcraft owned by Michael and .

In the mid 80s, Phil Morrison of MIT, the first NOVA consultant, came to me with his idea for a series on the nature of scientific evidence. The next years were spent developing and Executive Producing, The Ring of Truth, broadcast in 1987. It was a great chance to bring together many of the NOVA and Odyssey staff again. Working with Terry Rockefeller, , , , , , etc., has always made filmmaking in Boston such a rich experience.

As a natural arc of my life, I ended my career in the early 90s as writer/producer/on-camera correspondent for a 90-minute Frontline called “Journey to the Occupied Lands,” an investigation of the issues of land and justice in the 27th year of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. It was good to be intimately involved in production again after years of supervising.

All this time was spent in a marriage to the woman some of you knew as Lillian Akel. One of the worlds great romances, our life together ended sadly after an 8-year battle with cancer in 1995. Lillian was a reporter, a radio producer, a teacher, and spent her last and most happy years as an attorney with a clientele that included many of the independent film producers of Boston. Evelyn Sarson, Judy Chalfen, Peggy Charren and Lillian were the founders of Action for Children’s Television.

40 years with GBHI am now pleasantly retired having discovered the joys of reading American History (1740-1820), helping to build a post and beam barn in Vermont, blue water sailing and white water rafting.

“BFB” Big F’ing Barn, designed by Bob Slattery and built by Bob, several paid Vermonters and several volunteers. I spent 55 days over the summer and fall of ’98 to work through bereavement and bang home the joy of creating something that big and complex. What is it for? Well, Marian White of the news staff and NOVA now raises prize Churro sheep in Vermont and they need a home.

Another way to deal with grief is white water rafting and kayaking. It is very hard to think of anything else except survival in good company miles from the nearest phone in the Idaho wilderness.

40 years with GBH

Daughter Julie, after life in TV in Boston and LA, is a happy mommy for a while in Los Angeles. Michael, after years of college and cooking, designed, built and runs the art and animation computer labs for the Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon. Jonathan, who has been restoring and building organs here and on the coast, is living in Philadelphia, but can be found on the road most months voicing organs and writing about them. We will all get together with the grandkiddies for a sailing trip in the BVI to celebrate my 70th this summer.

I’m looking forward to the reunion and introducing you to my new love and best friend Lynn Cooper. Lynn is a clinical Psychologist who has heard about some of you and not heard all your stories about the “goode olde days.” She is a good listener and we hope to have a grand time.

40 years with GBH

We’ve moved five blocks away from the busy Centre Street home in Newton the family had lived in for 37 years. The new house is on a cliff side overlooking a 70 acre back yard called the Newton Commonwealth Golf Course. Our companions are ducks, geese, one swan, many song birds, a red fox and just last Saturday, a wild turkey.

In: 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 84 Mass. Ave., Essays, Eyes on the Prize, NOVA, Reminiscences, Staff, WGBH 2 | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

NOVA: From the beginning (1970s)

From Ben Shedd

I’m part of the group from the 1970s at ‘GBH, when was in some ways almost a separate unit at the station. It’s wonderful to learn about the history of WGBH and see why such grand programming has come from the people who worked there through the decades. I’m glad to be part of the great mix of talent who have worked at WGBH.

called 27 years ago from WGBH looking for science filmmakers for a new unnamed science series he was starting. I had just finished my USC Film School Master’s thesis film project, an educational science film titled Mars Minus Myth with Planetary Geologist Professor Bruce Murray from the California Institute of Technology. Michael had gotten my name from the Public Affairs office at Cal Tech.

All the producers and associate producers for the original NOVA teams came from either England … or Los Angeles or New York in the United States. It was almost as if we parachuted into this wonderful creative incubator place and were set to work.

I knew about WGBH and can remember I’d seen a very creative black and white drama on WGBH around 1969 (which I later learned directed and shot). It was like the films I was making in Film School. It had inspired me as being artful like I wanted my work to be.

I was a native Californian and was interested in seeing what other places in the US were like — places with seasons and older buildings — and the possibility of moving to Boston was an intriguing idea. I was hired as part of the original NOVA team and moved my family east. I was 26 years old.

All the producers and associate producers for the original NOVA teams came from either England (with experience on the Horizon series) or Los Angeles or New York in the United States. It was almost as if we parachuted into this wonderful creative incubator place and were set to work.

We started at 125 Western Avenue — 12 new people jammed into an already packed building — and soon moved to 475 Western along with Topper Carew’s Say Brother team, the mailroom, and the Film Department. One of the great things about working at ‘GBH was going through the ZOOM Mailroom to get to my office, and picking up a few ZOOMDo’s cards for my daughter. The day-to-day operation of WGBH was down the street from where we worked.

I remember Michael Ambrosino’s entire office door covered with colored 3×5 cards with lots of potential names for the series. NOVA was one of maybe three dozen names under consideration. I took several animation cels home one weekend and mocked up title designs for three or four of the finalists. NOVA was among them and I tripled exposed Helvetica type exploding out of a star photo (kind of like the logo looks nowadays). I think Michael had already decided on NOVA, but he liked the action in the image.

I was paired with Senior BBC Horizon Producer Simon Campbell-Jones as his Associate Producer and , from WGBH, was the Production Assistant. We were the first team to begin production for NOVA. When team #1 was trying to decide on what program to do first, we narrowed the choices down to the then new subject of artificial intelligence with scientists from MIT or water resources as modeled by the Colorado River. We decided on the Colorado River program for two reasons: 1) It was important that NOVA establish itself as a national program and not just a Boston based project, and 2) I remember Simon asking “Which river do you want to go cross over, the Charles or the Colorado?” We left Boston for 43 days on location, from the top of the Colorado River in the Rockies to where it runs dry in the Mexican desert.

While working on that first NOVA program, my thesis project science film about Mars was winning numerous awards, including two we heard about in one week. Michael Ambrosino made a party out of that news. It might have been one of our several ventures to the Faculty club for lunch.

By the time I wrapped up three years at NOVA, I traveled to more than half the States in this country, and visited numerous Universities while filming …

By the time I wrapped up three years at NOVA, I traveled to more than half the States in this country, and visited numerous Universities while filming, including Princeton where I am now a Visiting Senior Research Scholar and Lecturer — but I get ahead of myself.

When Simon returned to England after a year at WGBH, I moved to the Producer/Director role on team #1 and Terry Rockefeller took my position as Associate Producer. joined as PA.

While making my first NOVA program — 58 minutes and 38 seconds long with no breaks – there was a moment (or two) during editing when I was struggling to make sense of all the material. Fellow Producer Francis Gladstone happened by the editing room one day and asked me what was the longest film I produced before. I said, “20 minutes” and he then told me no wonder I was having a time of it, going from 20 minutes of sequences and continuity to 58 minutes. He and the other BBC producers had been working on 48 minute long shows at the BBC before coming to the States and he said they had a heck of a time going to 58 minutes. That made me laugh enough to get back to work and finish Why Do Birds Sing? which opened the 1974 second season. The Bird Song program was rerun several times over the years, including on election night in 1976 when all the network stations were showing national election returns for Carter/Ford. The only other thing to watch on TV that night was Why Do Birds Sing? and other PBS fare.

I started my now 24-year-old production company with a contract from WGBH to produce an independent project for NOVA, a film about human powered flight. While on vacation in California, I had met Dr. Paul MacCready, now known as the father of human powered flight, just after he sketched out his first idea for the airplane. I loved the idea of being able to film a great moving airplane, and it was clear to me that it would make a fascinating film following the process of science story of an invention in progress. My family and I were also interested in moving back to California. While based in Boston, I was so often on the road filming or in the editing room that I hardly got to know the place.

I did my by-then-usual NOVA research about the subject of human powered flight and became immersed in the world of slow speed flight. MacCready showed me his sketches and I noticed a detail which gave me great confidence to move ahead with the film. In his plans to make an airplane wing using hang glider structure — triangulated wires from a center post holding the huge wing rather than box construction on the inside — MacCready had designed a wing with one tenth the wing-area-to-weight ratio of any other human powered airplane. If the plane could be built and hold together, it was going to do something significant and it was an easy decision for me to make plans to film the project as far as the plane team would take it.

Boyd Estus (whom I’d worked with on 4 of the 6 NOVAs — Peter Hoving shot the other two) left the WGBH film department to come join me in the production. With the Gossamer Condor contract, he bought his own 16mm camera and started what’s become Heliotrope Productions.

To make a long story short, the invention of the first successful human powered airplane in history didn’t happen in time for the scheduled TV airdate and the project was written of
f. Shedd Productions, Inc. continued the production and the finished film showing the whole story of making the Gossamer Condor airplane went on to win numerous international awards including the Oscar Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject of 1978. The Flight of the Gossamer Condor film is the only science documentary film to receive an Academy Award.

Shedd Productions, Inc. licensed Gossamer Condor footage to the BBC Horizon series where my mentor Simon Campbell-Jones (by then Executive Producer of Horizon) produced the program Icarus’ Children, which was later shown on the NOVA series. The Gossamer Condor airplane has been in the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum since 1979, and the film was premiered there in the IMAX Theater, a small 16mm image in the middle of the huge screen. Now, excerpts from the film are shown continuously in a video kiosk as part of the permanent display of the plane.

  • Note: see The Flight of the Gossamer Condor film’s Web site for additional information.

Almost twenty years after NOVA began production, I had the great pleasure to reunite members of the original NOVA team #1 in 1990-1992 for the IMAX film Tropical Rainforest.

I produced and directed the Tropical Rainforest film through my production company then based in New Mexico (where I found buildings and cultures much older than those in Boston).

Simon wrote the 400,000,000-year evolution story of the rainforest in non-rhyming iambic pentameter. … When the huge IMAX film was shrunk to video and DVD, it became quite a beautiful tone poem.

I hired Marian White as Producer with me on the film (when we weren’t on location, Marian commuted west two weeks every month for two years while not leaving her New England roots) and brought in Simon Campbell-Jones from London to write the lyrical narration. Simon wrote the 400,000,000-year evolution story of the rainforest in non-rhyming iambic pentameter. The Tropical Rainforest film has been playing on some IMAX type screen somewhere on the planet almost continuously since 1992. When the huge IMAX film was shrunk to video and DVD, it became quite a beautiful tone poem.

I was in Boston — either in 1988 for a screening of my IMAX film Seasons or in the early 1990′s while working on the Tropical Rainforest film — when ‘GBH was closing down 475. I went over to my old offices with Boyd Estus and helped pull down some coat racks that I had helped put up in 1973. Even as a short timer at WGBH, I saw great changes over the years.

I still have a copy of the original American Association for the Advancement of Science White Paper that Michael Ambrosino wrote to create the NOVA series. Its called The Science Program Group for Public Television in the United States. AAAS Miscellaneous Publication 73-3.

Michael began with one of his always clear and direct comments: “Objectives: We, the Science Program Group, have these aims: We want to show the way the world works.” And later he wrote, “The Science Program Group will be founded on its first project: the development of an imaginative and entertaining science series for the adult and young audience, to awaken an interest in the nature of man and his world and to foster public understanding of science.” In 31 brief pages, he envisioned and changed the face of US television.

The Concluding Note reads: “The group would evolve a policy for publishing books, television cassettes and records — these are in the future. (Indeed, VCRs were still far in the future.) The first priority is to establish the Science Program Group as a first-rate television production unit and to get its first series before the American public.” The White Paper is dated March 1973. In March 1974, NOVA was on the air.

A few years ago, Michael invited me to join him and others from NOVA in Washington DC when the NOVA series received the first National Science Foundation National Science Board Public Service Award. NOVA was honored along with Jane Goodall and it was nice to meet many of the present NOVA production group who make the series.

After NOVA being on the air for 25 years, when I say I worked at WGBH, Boston on the NOVA series … its a great mark of professional stature and acclaim of which I am very proud.

For several years after leaving WGBH, it didn’t ring many bells when I mentioned that I had worked on the NOVA series. Such was living in Hollywood. But now after NOVA being on the air for 25 years, when I say I worked at WGBH, Boston on the NOVA series — on NOVA program #1 — its a great mark of professional stature and acclaim of which I am very proud. As I read through the Reunion notes and memories, I see WGBH is a very special place, where programs like NOVA can happen.

Thanks, Michael, for bringing me to WGBH, Boston in the early days of NOVA, and thanks to everyone who has worked to keep NOVA vital and on the air.

When Ben Shedd wrote this story in 2000, he was Visiting Senior Research Scholar and Lecturer in the Department of Computer Science at Princeton University. http://www.sheddproductions.com.

In: 1970s, Essays | , , , ,

Murray Yaeger – in memory

Former Professor of Broadcasting, ; former liaison for student interns between and WGBH; directed World Affairs Council series.

From 2/23/2000

My involvement with the station began in 1956 when I became a professor at what is now the College of Communications at Boston University. I served as a liaison with the station and Bob Moscone of WGBH in following the development of our graduate students enrolled in the ‘GBH Scholarship program. I also directed a World Affairs Council program for the station during the time took over as production head.

It was a great time for both institutions as evidenced by some of the accomplishments of many of its graduates. These included Bob Kerr, Phil Collyer, Bill Cosell, Dave Griffith, , Russ Morash, Sue Dietrich, Doug White and the late Bob Squier. As you probably know, Bob died only weeks ago and was reputedly one of the nation’s top political media consultants.

Others who worked in the studios in those days included Bill Lord, formerly vice-president if ABC and a professor at ; , political commentator on Boston TV; Al Folsom, screen writer and very successful novelist; Stan Norton of the GBH staff; Thea Chalow who won an Emmy for her “” work, as well as others whom I cannot at this moment recall.

I now live in Kennebunkport. Just writing this letter brings back a flood of wonderful memories and associations with these former students. So, although I won’t be able to attend the celebration, please convey my fondest regards to any who might remember me. … I have kept in touch with a great many of my former students and should love to know of the present whereabouts of others. …

At this point, I have about seventy-five former students (not all ‘GBH) with whom I am in touch at least at Christmas when I paint a card to send to some 325 people on my mailing list. It’s a terrible job, but I do enjoy hearing back.

I am a partner in a bed and breakfast [The Arundel Meadows Inn] here in Maine. Been in business for fifteen years — starring Yaeger as the waiter with the PhD. See what you can aspire to with forty years of teaching and an advanced degree.

I retired from BU in 1989, kept a consultant business going and taught at the University of Southern Maine and University of New England for a few years after that. Oh, yes, had a second heart by-pass in 1990 to break the rhythm for a while.

In any case, I am ensconced in Kennebunkport with my Schnauzer, my paint brushes and attic studio, the innkeeper’s duties, theater in Boston and Portland, some travel, and a quiet assortment of friends. Not too bad a life at that. Emma, my dog, and I have the beach walks each morning and comparatively clean air to breathe.

From the Boston Globe (excerpts) – 10/20/2004

Murray Yaeger, at 75; challenged students at BU

When Dr. Murray Yaeger invited colleagues to speak to his famous introductory communication course at Boston University, he made them rehearse. ”Otto, I don’t just want you to lecture. I want you to get something alive,” he told fellow professor Otto Lerbinger. Each week, Dr. Yaeger spent more than 25 hours preparing theatrical presentations for the hundreds of communications freshmen enrolled in the course.

For students, the intimidating and stimulating course was ”psychological boot camp” because Dr. Yaeger encouraged them to ”dig deep,” said Hollywood film director and former student Gary Fleder. Dr. Yaeger did not ”allow you to coast on your strengths. He cajoled you to recognize the things you had to prove in your art.”

Dr. Yaeger, who is remembered for his feisty, conscientious, honest, and devoted teaching in the department of broadcasting and film, died June 13 from prostate cancer in Kennebunkport, Maine. He was 75.

As a dedicated member of the Boston University community, Dr. Yaeger supported faculty camaraderie, lobbying for a faculty lounge. An advocate for students, Dr. Yaeger also encouraged professors to write extended course descriptions so that students could know more about the classes they were choosing. Dr. Yaeger also mentored numerous students.

”You always saw a smile on his face whenever he talked about a specific student,” said Lerbinger.

Once, at a meeting on faculty bylaws at Dr. Yaeger’s home in Maine, Lerbinger said, he ”almost felt I was in Philadelphia writing the Constitution” because of Dr. Yaeger’s fiery resolve. Dr. Yaeger believed ”life is a theater and you’ve got to live up to the role you’re playing,” Lerbinger said.

Passionate about increasing instructors’ involvement in their own leadership, Dr. Yaeger ”was so involved in pursuing this goal that it became contagious, and he carried the rest of us along with his dream,” Lerbinger said.

Norman Noyes, a colleague at Boston University, described Dr. Yaeger as ”a dynamo going full blast all the time. He was either with students or lecturing or preparing for his lectures.”

Fleder, who has directed films including Kiss the Girls and ‘Runaway Jury, said that Dr. Yaeger was the first professor with whom he discussed his career aspirations.

“What was great was that he was skeptical,” Fleder said. ”I remember showing him some of my films when I was in film school. It was scary. His approval meant a lot. He was certainly somebody who could mix encouragement with criticism in a skillful way. If I were to describe the ultimate model of a professor, it would be Murray Yaeger.”

Dr. Yaeger grew up in El Paso, Texas, and graduated from the University of Texas at El Paso and the State University of Iowa. Dr. Yaeger moved east because of his interest in the theater and arts. In 1958, he joined the faculty at Boston University.

He traveled to Cairo to help teach the first generation of Egyptian television broadcasters; to Saudi Arabia to train weathermen; and to Frankfurt to coach Armed Forces Network television staff. He also spent a year studying at London University and at the British Broadcasting Corporation in London.

For a quarter-century, Dr. Yaeger took on consulting projects on the side, working to improve the image of school systems, government agencies, and companies, from the US Air Force and the Internal Revenue Service to New England Telephone, GTE, and the United Way of America.

In 1979, Boston University awarded Dr. Yaeger the Metcalf Prize for Excellence in Teaching, an accolade given to one teacher every year.

Dr. Yaeger worked overtime to show his commitment to education. Lerbinger said he often ”bumped into Murray at school in the evening setting up lights and cameras, getting everything ready.”

On a sabbatical from Boston University in December 1985, Dr. Yaeger and his partner, Mark Bachelder, bought Arundel Meadows Inn, a bed and breakfast in Maine. Dr. Yaeger retired to his home in Maine in 1989 to pursue innkeeping, oil painting, cooking, and taking morning beach walks with his schnauzer, Emma. His former BU students would often visit in Maine, and he taught part time at the University of Southern Maine and the University of New England.

At its 50th anniversary in 1997, the College of Communication at Boston University honored Dr. Yaeger as the faculty member with the greatest impact on his students.

Fleder said, ”When you go to college, if you can have one or two or three professors that really inspire you and provoke you to do better work, then you’re lucky. Murray Yaeger was one of those professors that many students would say that about.”

In addition to Bachelder, Dr. Yaeger leaves his brother, Lanny, of Westfield, Pa.

Dr. Yaeger requested that no funeral be held.

In: Staff | , ,

Footprints in your heart

From Rocky Coe - 1999

To on the occasion of his seventy fifth birthday

I remember a very exciting evening in a funky old building on Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge when I switched on the lights in the little glassed-in room we then called studio B and you cued the cameras and the mike went live for Louis Lyons to begin the first ever television broadcast by WGBH.

Footprints in your heart

"Rocky" Coe with Mary Lela Grimes on the set of Discovery.

We didn’t know anything about television, yet we knew everything that was necessary. And so it was when the chrysalis opened and the Luna moth spread its wings on Mary Lela Grimes’ live-television nature show. And I remember when we did our first thrilling remotes from the Museum of Fine Arts and when Jordan Whitelaw cued the team in at Symphony Hall. So many wonderful names for seventy five year-old guys to remember. Bill Pierce, Ray Wilding White, Boardy O’Connor, Peter Hollander, Parker Wheatly, , and so many more.

You would remember them all. You always were so good at that. Now my card files from those days have been left behind in old attics of the past. And my silicon data base has not yet been retrofitted to bring those good old days back to the present. So I’m happy to just celebrate our days of working together, and the years of friendship that have followed.

Eleanor Roosevelt wrote: “Many people will walk in and out of your life, but only true friends will leave footprints in your heart. Beautiful young people are accidents of nature, But beautiful old people are works of art.”

To Don Hallock

How wonderful to hear from you. I remember 84 Mass. Ave. with a lot of affection. What exciting days they were. ‘GBH was a big deal in so many of our lives. And it turned out to be a big deal in its own right. Far beyond what I might have imagined at the time.

Over the years I have taken a sly bit of unwarranted pride as the call letters burned their way onto the screen at the introduction of so many of the most outstanding series productions of the nearly half century since I was last in a control booth. I look forward to meeting with you and some of those other early birds on the eighth of April.

To my friend Ellen

You may remember that one of my early work adventures involved a couple of years as Staging Facilities Director for the nascent WGBH-TV in the early days of what we then spoke of as Educational Television. They were exciting times.

Footprints in your heartWay before ‘GBH evolved into the powerhouse of television production that it became a few years later, I left the station to go to Boston University and get my MFA. But we had already begun to do “remotes” from the Museum of Fine Arts and from Symphony Hall, and our studio programing was making inNOVAtive use of very limited facilities — and it was all done under the pressure of live broadcasts without the help of tape recording.

So the tension and concentration was stimulating and the possibility of hilarious, or disastrous, mistakes lurked at every camera switch and prop misplacement. All these memories hang suspended in the kind of golden mists that seem to surround our “salad days” adventures, back in those times when anything seemed possible.

Now ‘GBH is organizing a reunion for some of the people from those very early days. I’ve made contact with a few old friends who have been off my radar screen for almost forty years. And I’m planning to be in Boston on April 8th for the get-together.

In: 1950s, 1960s, Essays
  • Follow us

    Become a Fan Connect with me RSS feed Tweet with me
  • Subscribe via e-mail

    Subscribe via e-mail
  • Recent posts

  • Recent Comments

    • Tim Aarset I recall the wonders of War and Peace during the '73-'74 season. Are these readings... – May 07, 11:10 PM
    • David A. J. Ridge I would like to see the winner of "Dancing with The Stars" go up against... – Apr 30, 9:52 PM
    • Lynn Rinfret-Tijssen I have fond memories of John and working with him. He was a kind man... – Apr 29, 10:25 AM
    • Nat Johnson Vern was an uncommonly kind and modest man, always ready to give you a hand.... – Apr 02, 10:39 AM
    • Older »
  • Categories

  • Archives

  • Support this site