Civilisation
1 9 6 9 (UK)
13 x 50 minute episodes
A 13-part documentary series created,
written and presented by Sir Kenneth Clark, charting the events from
the fall of the Greek and Roman empires - incidents which ultimately
led to current 20th century Western civilisation. The premise for
the series, which was fully titled Civilisation: a personal view by
Kenneth Clark, was explained by Clark with a quote from John
Ruskin:
"Great nations write their
autobiographies in three manuscripts - the book of their deeds, the
book of their words and the book of their art. Not one of these books
can be understood unless we read the two others, but of the three the
only trustworthy one is the last." And for 13 weeks he attempted
to show how two thousand years of the creative urge had moulded
western civilisation.
The series cost £200, 000 and took three
years to make. In that time, Clark and his crew travelled 80,000
miles, went to 117 different locations in 11 countries, visited 118
museums and 18 libraries. They shot 200,000 feet of film - enough to
make six full-length movies and 66-year-old Clark became an unlikely
celebrity. His smart suits contrasted with what so many were wearing
in 1969. He took viewers back to splendid cathedrals and palaces and
he showed them beautiful tapestries and paintings whereas they had
been used to Vietnam, race riots, protest demonstrations and pop
festivals.
Peter Montagnon and Michael Gill
produced.
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