Arena is a British television documentary series, made and broadcast by the BBC since 1 October 1975. Voted by TV executives in Broadcast magazine as one of the top 50 most influential programmes of all time, it has produced more than six hundred episodes directed by, among others, Frederick Baker, Jana Boková, Jonathan Demme, Nigel Finch, Mary Harron, Vikram Jayanti, Vivian Kubrick, Paul Lee, Adam Low, Bernard MacMahon, James Marsh, Leslie Megahey, Volker Schlondorff, Martin Scorsese, Julien Temple, Anthony Wall, Leslie Woodhead, and Alan Yentob.
The arts strand Arena was initially created in 1975[1] by the BBC Head of Music & Arts at that time, Humphrey Burton, when he founded a magazine named Arena exploring art, design, filmmaking, and theatre. In 1977, under producer and director Leslie Megahey, the strand divided into Arena Theatre and Arena Art and Design, and Arena became less of a magazine and more a home for short, distinctive and stylish films about mainly British theatre and visual arts. In 1978, Megahey became editor of Omnibus and Alan Yentob, who had been supervising Arena Theatre, took over and the two themes were merged. The series, relaunched in January 1979 and renamed simply Arena, began to adopt a format of single subject essays. It earned great critical acclaim for its enthusiasm for the popular as well as the high arts. During Yentob's time as editor, Arena had six BAFTA nominations and three BAFTA awards.
A group of radical directors, notably Nigel Finch and Anthony Wall, gathered around Yentob and Arena, including Nigel Williams and Mary Dickinson. Hits from 1979 included Who Is Poly Styrene?,[2] La Dame Aux Gladiolas,[3] a portrait of Edna Everage, and most notably the groundbreaking My Way,[4] an examination of the appeal of the song, by Finch and Wall. It was the first of their collaborations, which developed a new kind of arts film, taking an unlikely subject and building a poetic meditation on its various aspects - further examples include The Chelsea Hotel (1981),[5] The Private Life of the Ford Cortina (1982),[6] Desert Island Discs (1982).[7] Other successes included Megahey's portrait of Orson Welles (1982),[8][9] Williams's study of George Orwell (1982),[10][11][12][13] Yentob's portrait of Mel Brooks (1981)[14] and Wall's four-part documentary on Slim Gaillard (1989).[15][16][17]
On Yentob's move to become Head of Music & Arts in 1985, Finch and Wall took over as joint editors of Arena until Finch's death in 1995. Following a period of uncertainty concerning the future of the arts strand, series editor Wall protected the series in a reshuffle of the BBC. Since then Arena has been transmitted outside the conventional weekly broadcast strand on BBC Two and BBC Four, and latterly on BBC Four.
Under Wall and Finch, Arena developed the idea of the themed evening, beginning with Blues Night (1985),[18] followed by Caribbean Nights (1986),[19] Animal Night (1989),[20] Food Night (1990),[21] Texas Saturday Night (1991),[22] Radio Night simulcast with BBC Radio 4 (1993)[23] and Stories My Country Told Me (1995),[24] a three-and-a-half-hour presentation on Nations and Nationalism. Since then Arena has won numerous awards with regular screenings at the BFI Southbank and has continued to cover the arts and culture at the highest level, with films on Bob Dylan, Harold Pinter, The National Theatre and Spitting Image, to name but a few.
Arena developed a substantial online presence featuring the Arena Hotel, a site that turns the 600-film Arena archive into a resource to build an online hotel for the stars. The Arena Hotel was nominated for a Focal International Award in 2013.[citation needed] Werner Herzog has praised the series as "the oasis in the sea of insanity that is television".[citation needed]
Wall retired in 2018, and the strand is now overseen by commissioning editor Mark Bell.[25]
The programme's theme music is taken from the title track of the 1975 album Another Green World by Brian Eno, himself the subject of a 2010 Arena film subtitled Another Green World.[26]
The Arena opening titles were voted among the "Top 5 Most Influential Opening Titles in the History of Television" by Broadcast magazine in 2004.
Anthony Wall edited Arena since 1985. He joined the series in 1978 and became one of its leading directors.
Arena has won a Primetime and International Emmys,[27] a Grammy,[28] nine BAFTAs,[29] six Royal Television Society Awards, a Peabody and the Prix Italia. Arena also won the Sundance Grand Jury Prize for Paris Is Burning (1990), the Best Performance Award for Lili Taylor's role in I Shot Andy Warhol (1996) at the Sundance Film Festival, and the SFFIF's Mel Novikoff Award.[30]
Now and Then - Anthony Green
My Way
Making The Shining
The Comic Strip Hero
Chelsea Hotel
Brixton to Barbados
The Orson Welles Story
L. Megahey
Burroughs
Borges and I
Old Kent Road
Saint Genet
C. Chabot
C. L. R. James' First Cricket XI
The Confessions of Robert Crumb
Evelyn Waugh Trilogy
Stop Making Sense
Kapuściński
The Other Graham Greene
Slim Gaillard's Civilisation (Episode 1) - "A Traveller's Tale"[31]
Slim Gaillard's Civilisation (Episode 2) - "How High The Moon"[32]
Slim Gaillard's Civilisation (Episode 3) - "My Dinner With Dizzy"[33]
Slim Gaillard's Civilisation (Episode 4) - "Everything's OK in the UK"[34]
Paris is Burning
Nigel Finch
Miller Meets Mandela
Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon
The Human Face[35]
Michael Coulson
Edward Said
T. May
The Last Soviet Citizen
Kalashnikov[36]
Marvin Gaye
Punk and the Pistols
Stonewall
Stories My Country Told Me: The Meaning of Nationhood - Eric Hobsbawn and Slovakian Nationalism[37]
Stories My Country Told Me: The Meaning of Nationhood - Desmond Tutu and the Rainbow Nation[37]
Stories My Country Told Me: The Meaning of Nationhood - Eqbal Ahmad on the Grand Trunk Road[37]
The Burger & the King: The Life & Cuisine of Elvis Presley
I Shot Andy Warhol
The Football Men
Cuba Night
J. Shinner
Salman Rushdie
Looking for the Iron Curtain
Wisconsin Death Trip
Clint Eastwood
B. Ricker
Salgado: Spectre of Hope
Kurosawa
Harold Pinter Season at the BBC
Nigel Williams Martin Rosenbaum
Imagine Imagine
Dylan Thomas: Grave to Cradle
Pavarotti: The Last Tenor
Shadowing the Third Man
Painting the Clouds: A Portrait of Dennis Potter
Nigel Williams
Calling Hedy Lamarr
Bacon's Arena
No Direction Home: Bob Dylan
The Princess and Panorama
Pete Doherty
Underground
Bob Marley's Exodus '77
Encountering Bergman
Bergman and the Cinema
V.S. Naipaul: The Strange Luck Of...
Phil Spector
T. S. Eliot
Brian Eno: Another Green World
Harold: A Celebration
Dave Brubeck: In His Own Sweet Way
Produced by George Martin
George Harrison: Living in the Material World
Dickens On Film
Sonny Rollins: This is Who I Am
The Dreams of William Golding
Jonathan Miller
Amy Winehouse: The Day She Came to Dingle
The Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour Revisited
Screen Goddesses
Sister Wendy and the Art of the Gospels
AKA Norman Parkinson
The National Theatre
Whatever Happened to Spitting Image?
The 50 Year Argument: The New York Review of Books
David Tedeschi
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