"The Channel 4 factor" by Clare Kitson is a rich treasure with an in-depth look at 30 classic British films and the animators who created them.
From the production of The Snowman, which marked the dawn of Channel 4’s innovative move to funding animation for television in 1982 to Suzie Templeton’s Academy Award winning Peter and the Wolf, Clare is the insider who was a big part of it all. For a decade, from 1989 to 1999, she commissioned Channel 4’s animation, championing young animators and vigorously fighting to give short animation a high profile spot on the station.
For anyone interested in the inner workings and politics of arts programming for media this book is a must read. We all know that arts and commerce always seem to be at war, but it’s very insightful to be taken into the war room by someone who fought on the front lines. Clare was not only a fighter but an innovator as well, creating such programs as Four-mations. The series was a showcase for young British animators as well as a vehicle to bring the work of international animation legends into the living room. Kitson even managed to occasionally get these programs aired during prime time.
Clare Kitson’s struggle to bring quality adult oriented animation to the public is a true labor of love and who better to tell her story than Clare herself. I found this book to be as exciting and engaging as any page turner and I am still enjoying leafing through the book to look at the 300 illustrations and pictures, many in color. Not to be overlooked is a lovely forward by Peter Lord.
For those in the U.K. and Europe, you can purchase the book from Parliment Publishing for 17.99 pounds + postage and packing fee. In the United States it is available through Indiana University Press for $29.95.