Association of Directors and Producers – Michael Custance

A.D.P: Association of Directors and Producers

From when ‘Jimmie’ Cellan Jones was directing ‘Jennie, Lady Randolf Churchill’ and told me he was part of a group of directors fighting the managements to get paid for repeats and foreign sales, known as director’s residual payments, matters had progressed and A.D.P., The Association of Directors and Producers had been formed. I joined, was co-opted onto the board of ADP management and created a monthly ADP newsletter. I stayed on the board and edited the newsletter until I started to make ‘Spyship’ three years later. With its 46 location all over the UK and the North Sea and the Arctic and over a year of production there was not time to do both so I resigned from the board and editorship.

ADP had gone from strength to strength and had won the battle. Since then all directors and producers receive a percentage of their fee for all repeats and sales worldwide. ADP was was also very influential in forcing the govt. to design the future new Channel 4 TV not to make programmes but to commission programmes from Independent Producers. This changed the face of UK TV by allowing producers to create their own programmes and sell them to the TV channel. Now that method applies in whole or part to every UK TV channel.

Whilst setting up ‘The Unborn’ there was a daring homosexual play being shot in the studio called ‘Solid Geometry’ by Ian McEwan. It was creating furious complaints from the costume and make-up depts. So much so that the technical head of the studios pulled all of his staff out of the studio and paralysed the shoot. The problem, there was a pickled erect penis in a jar on the mantelpiece in the set. The producer and director came to me asking for help from the ADP. I said I would call the president immediately but was not sure if ADP could help as it was in place to fight for working conditions and not bottled penises which is a censorship or public decency issue. This proved to be the case. I think the shooting went ahead minus one glass jar.

[N.B. the shoot of ‘Solid Geometry’ was actually halted, and the production cancelle].

Tribute to Dave Baumber by Paul Vanezis

Dave Baumber, photo by Peter Poole, no reproduction without permission

Dave Baumber, photo by Peter Poole, no reproduction without permission

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some sad news. Dave Baumber, ace sound recordist and dubbing mixer has died after a short illness. My Pebble Mill friends will be shocked, as I was, but for those of you who think they don’t know him, well, I’ll remind you of his work. My Doctor Who friends will have heard his work as a grams operator on the 1966 adventure serial The Moonbase.

Dave was a BAFTA award winning sound supervisor for Boys from the Blackstuff in 1983, but fans of cult TV will have heard his work as a sound recordist on Tom’s Midnight Garden and Torchwood and as a dubbing mixer on Artemis 81, Gangsters, Spyship, various ‘Play for Today’ editions including Nuts in May, Red Shift, Penda’s Fen and Licking Hitler.

Dave looked after the sound on many of the major series to come out of Pebble Mill including Anna of the Five Towns, All Creatures Great and Small, All Quiet on the Preston Front, Martin Chuzzlewit, Dangerfield and Dalziel & Pascoe.

By 2004 Dave had itchy feet and was keen to get back to doing more location sound. He was my sound recordist on Casualty Saved My Life. He had stints on the real thing, Casualty in Bristol and then the aforementioned Torchwood.

Apart from being brilliant at his job, he was a really nice guy.

Paul Vanezis

The following comments were left on the Pebble Mill Facebook Page:

Ray Holman: ‘So sad. I worked with Dave on several series, some at Pebble Mill such as All Creatures and the last one was in Cardiff on Torchwood. What a shock and what a lovely man, I’m so sorry.’

Steve Weddle: ‘A true professional who made everything he did seem deceptively easy. Happy times.’

Jeff Matthews: ‘I am devastated and totally saddened by this terrible news. I worked with Dave on Torchwood and had many a ‘soundman’s’ type chat with him. He retired and went to drink wine in France. I hope he had lots of fun. A very sad loss.’