Brian Beaton..
The Australian International Documentary Conference (Aidc) has announced Brian Beaton as the posthumous recipient of this year.s Stanley Hawes Award, which recognises outstanding contribution to the documentary sector in Australia.
Beaton, who was a documentary producer and Ep with Perth-based Artemis International, passed away last June. The award will be accepted on Beaton.s behalf by his business partner and Artemis MD Celia Tait, and older brother and fellow documentarian John Beaton. The pair will jointly deliver the 2017 Stanley Hawes Oration.
Beaton.s career spanned over 35 years. He founded Artemis alongside Tait in 1999 and produced projects such as.Saving Andrew Mallard, Shaun Micallef.s Stairway to Heaven, The Dreamhouse, Desperately Seeking Sheila and, with co-producer Serendipity Productions, seven seasons of Who Do You Think You Are?
.I had the honour of meeting Brian when I worked briefly in Western Australia in the late 1980s," said Aidc CEO Andrew Wiseman.
The Australian International Documentary Conference (Aidc) has announced Brian Beaton as the posthumous recipient of this year.s Stanley Hawes Award, which recognises outstanding contribution to the documentary sector in Australia.
Beaton, who was a documentary producer and Ep with Perth-based Artemis International, passed away last June. The award will be accepted on Beaton.s behalf by his business partner and Artemis MD Celia Tait, and older brother and fellow documentarian John Beaton. The pair will jointly deliver the 2017 Stanley Hawes Oration.
Beaton.s career spanned over 35 years. He founded Artemis alongside Tait in 1999 and produced projects such as.Saving Andrew Mallard, Shaun Micallef.s Stairway to Heaven, The Dreamhouse, Desperately Seeking Sheila and, with co-producer Serendipity Productions, seven seasons of Who Do You Think You Are?
.I had the honour of meeting Brian when I worked briefly in Western Australia in the late 1980s," said Aidc CEO Andrew Wiseman.
- 2/28/2017
- by Staff Writer
- IF.com.au
Last week myself and fellow Shadowlockers Deborah Cosgrove (Sl’s resident photographer, whose work graces this column and who also happens to be my wonderful wife) and Luke Connolly (Sl writer and editor) had the good fortune to go to the Smackdown taping at the O2 Arena as guests of 2K Games, so I must first of all give a massive shout out to 2K’s John Beaton for sorting us out with tickets.
This was only my second live WWE event, the first having been when the circus rolled into town last November, but while that was a continuously flowing show, which I suspect the live Raw show that went out the night before must have been, the Smackdown experience was more like being in a studio audience as a show was being pieced together, which isn’t really surprising as that’s exactly what happened.
After a dark...
This was only my second live WWE event, the first having been when the circus rolled into town last November, but while that was a continuously flowing show, which I suspect the live Raw show that went out the night before must have been, the Smackdown experience was more like being in a studio audience as a show was being pieced together, which isn’t really surprising as that’s exactly what happened.
After a dark...
- 5/28/2014
- Shadowlocked
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