About: Sue Malden   Sponge Permalink

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Once the BBC realised they had made a mistake by junking early episodes of the programme, they hatched a plan to try to find them. In the 1970s, they established the BBC Film and Videotape Library, and named Malden as its first "archive selector". She held the post until some time in the 1980s. As the head of the library, one of her first acts was to decide what programmes she would actively try to recover. Thanks in part to pressure from Ian Levine, the Doctor Who production office and the outcry of the nascent fan community, she made Doctor Who a priority.

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  • Sue Malden
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  • Once the BBC realised they had made a mistake by junking early episodes of the programme, they hatched a plan to try to find them. In the 1970s, they established the BBC Film and Videotape Library, and named Malden as its first "archive selector". She held the post until some time in the 1980s. As the head of the library, one of her first acts was to decide what programmes she would actively try to recover. Thanks in part to pressure from Ian Levine, the Doctor Who production office and the outcry of the nascent fan community, she made Doctor Who a priority.
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abstract
  • Once the BBC realised they had made a mistake by junking early episodes of the programme, they hatched a plan to try to find them. In the 1970s, they established the BBC Film and Videotape Library, and named Malden as its first "archive selector". She held the post until some time in the 1980s. As the head of the library, one of her first acts was to decide what programmes she would actively try to recover. Thanks in part to pressure from Ian Levine, the Doctor Who production office and the outcry of the nascent fan community, she made Doctor Who a priority. She began to piece together what had actually happened to the episodes, something not fully understood by the BBC at the time. Perhaps her most significant achievement was the discovery of two separate libraries. She quickly determined that the BBC's own library of videtaped masters had been entirely and systematically wiped,because the videoape medium itself was perceived to be more valuable than the information recorded on it. What was completely unknown to most employees of the BBC was that Pamela Nash had been buiding up her own library of 16mm telerecordings of the episodes in a separate library at BBC Enterprises. The existence of this second library resulted in the immediate recovery of some episodes — notably the entirety of The Daleks. It also led Mallden to an extensive paper trail. Nash's team had paperwork detailing where prints of Doctor Who had been shipped and which countries had bought the episodes. This allowed Malden and her successors — like the Doctor Who Restoration Team — to go on a global and sometimes fruitful hunt for episodes. While unable to recover every missing episode, nor directly responsible for every successful recovery, it is largely Malden's work which established the framework by which any episodes were recovered at all.
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