Mark Kidel
Ravi Shankar - Between Two Worlds, 2001
Mark Kidel is a film-maker and writer specialising in the arts and music, working in the UK and France. He has been making films since the early 1970’s. He made a number of classic feature-length documentaries about rock music in the mid-70’s, and went on to co-found the ground-breaking BBC-2 arts series ARENA. He has been rock critic of the New Statesman (London), as well as writing about music for many national newspapers. He is a regular contributor of the Times Literary Supplement.
Mark Kidel grew up and was educated in France, Austria, the UK and the USA. He then settled in the UK, where he started working as a film-maker and programme-maker at the BBC. Early successes (which are still occasionally broadcast) include "So You Wanna Be a Rock’n’Roll Star" (1975), a ground-breaking feature-length fly-on-the-wall chronicle of Southend Band The Kursaal Flyers, as they tried to break in to the big time, and a film sometimes thought to have inspired "Spinal Tap" and "Rod The Mod Has Come of Age" (1976), also feature-length, a ruthless and hilarious account of Rod Stewart in promotional mode, which has become something of a classic.
In the 1970’s Kidel also campaigned for broadcast TV’s support of struggling video artists, and commissioned new work from Peter Donebauer and David Hall. As Editor of the new BBC-2 arts programme ARENA (of which he was one of the founding producers) in 1976, he was responsible for programming the first compilation of video art on British television.
In 1976, Mark Kidel moved to Devon to take up a job with the Dartington Hall Trust. He also concentrated more on writing, mostly about rock music. He was the first rock critic of the New Statesman, a regular rock columnist in the Listener and wrote profiles of musicians for the Sunday Colour Supplements. In the early 1980’s he was a part-time lecturer in the Music Department of Dartington College of Arts as well as director of the Dartington Conference, which explored cutting-edge connections between the arts and sciences.
While in Devon, Mark Kidel co-edited (with Susan Rowe-Leete) "The Meaning of Illness" (RKP, London 1995), a series of essays on the relationship between psyche and soma ; "Learning by Doing" (Green Books, Hartland), a survey of Dartington’s experiments in education outside the classroom or lecture hall, and "Dartington" (Webb & Bower, Exeter 1993)
In the late 1970’s, early 1980’s and again in the 1990’s, Mark Kidel was a member of the Film Committee of the Arts Council.
During his time at Dartington, Mark Kidel started working with James Hillman, the psychologist and writer. A weekend seminar on "Animals in Myth, Dreams and Fairy Tales" led to the making a number of films in collaboration with Susan Rowe-Leete and James Hillman (see Mark Kidel filmography)
In 1982 Mark Kidel collaborated with Peter Gabriel on the conception of a world music festival, an idea which grew into the world-famous WOMAD festivals. His interest in world music led to making a film about WOMAD for Channel Four in 1987, and a subsequent series of films about African music.
In 1987, Mark Kidel too up full time film-making again. He renewed his contacts with France, and was joint commissioning editor for the first day of broadcasts of LA SEPT (later ARTE France) on France’s FR3 channel.
During 1997-8, Mark Kidel researched and developed a major treatment for a feature-length documentary on the life and work of the US gospel and soul singer Sam Cooke.
Since 1988, he has worked as a documentary, arts and music consultant to Channel Four, United, and BBC Wales, as well as producing and directing many films in the UK and France (see Mark Kidel filmography). He has worked closely with Third Eye Productions and Rosetta Films in London, and Les Films d’ici in Paris
Since 1989 Mark Kidel has been based in Bristol, where he lives with his wife and occasional collaborator Susan Rowe-Leete, his son Sam and his daughter Anna.
