Gordon Stainforth was born (a twin) in 1949
in Welwyn Garden City, England. He discovered
two of his main interests in life, climbing and photography,
at about the same time at the age of 16. While
still at school he was making his first films
with an 8mm movie camera, and by 1968 was starting
to take climbing photographs.
At Cardiff University he found what is perhaps his greatest and most enduring interest, philosophy, for which he gained a first class honours degree in 1972. Despite the very understandable protestations of his tutors, he then went to London and studied film and television at the Royal College of Art. One of his first professional
film jobs as a clapper-loader was with the Oscar-winning
cameraman Walter Lassally while still at film
school.
Film industry
From 1975-85 Gordon worked initially in television
and then in the film industry as a freelance
Assistant Film Editor.
His biggest break in films came in 1979 when
he joined Stanley Kubrick's The Shining at
Elstree Studios as an Assistant Editor. When
Ray Lovejoy, the Editor, fell ill in the final
stages of the production in the following year,
Gordon cut the last 30 minutes of the film, working
directly with Kubrick. He then worked as the
Music Editor, laying all the avant-garde music for
the movie, which has now become something of
a cult (see this website).
He also cut the BBC television documentary, Making The Shining, directed
by Vivian Kubrick (Stanley's daughter). After that, he worked as First Assistant Editor on five other major movies (see below).
Main film credits
1972 Drive into Europe (dir:
Peter Ormrod). Film Editor.
Documentary for the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu.
1973 Requiem for a Village (dir:
David Gladwell). Assistant Cameraman. A BFIProduction
1974 This Game of Golf (dir:
Mike Raeburn, ph: Walter Lassally), featuring
Sean Connery. Assistant Cameraman.
Haunting Storm (dir: Mike Hall). Assistant
Cameraman.
Part of a V & A Museum exhibition on film special effects.
1975 Horizons (dir:
Peter Ormrod). Film Editor.
A short film shown on BBC2 Premiere series, featuring
extraordinary aerial footage in an aerobatic
biplane.
1976 Rachel and the Beelzebub
Bombadiers (dir: Peter Ormrod). Sound Recordist.
A Southern Arts Council Film, shown on BBC2.
1977 The Crisis Inside (producer:
John Penycate, reporter: Tom Mangold). Assistant Editor.
A four-part BBC series about our prisons.
Remote Britain (producer: Keith Hulse). Assistant Editor.
A series of six films
for BBC Nationwide.
1978 Terror International (producer:
John Penycate, reporter: Tom Mangold). Assistant Editor.
A two-part BBC Panorama Special on international terrorism.
The Real War in Space (producer: John
Penycate, reporter: Tom Mangold). Assistant Editor.
A two-part BBC Panorama Special about the nuclear arms race.
High Hopes. Associate
Producer.
A BBC South-West documentary about Norman Croucher, the outstanding double-leg amputee mountaineer.
1979 Peru, Bolivia (reporter: Jonathan Dimbleby). Assistant
Editor.
Thames TV six-part series on South America.
1979-80 The Shining (dir:
Stanley Kubrick, ed: Ray Lovejoy). Warner Bros. First Assistant Editor and Music Editor.
1980 Making the Shining (dir:
Vivian Kubrick, prod: Alan Yentob). Editor.
BBC Arena Special
1981 Churchill, The Wilderness
Years (dir: Ferdinand Fairfax)
Southern Pictures for ITV. Assistant Dialogue Editor.
A seven-part drama-documentary starring Robert Hardy.
1982 Krull (dir: Peter
Yates, ed: Ray Lovejoy). Columbia Pictures. First Assistant Editor.
1983 The Dresser (dir:
Peter Yates, ed: Ray Lovejoy). Columbia Pictures. First Assistant Editor and Music Editor for James Horner
The Neverending Story (dir: Wolfgang
Petersen) Warner Bros.
Made at Bavaria Film Studios, Munich. Assistant Optical Effects Editor
1984 Sheena, (dir:
John Guillermin, ed: Ray Lovejoy.) Columbia Pictures. Made on location in Kenya. Associate Editor
1985 Legend, (dir:
Ridley Scott.) Universal Pictures. American re-cut. English Associate Editor
1986 Legend Promotional
Video (dir: Tim Pope). Universal Pictures. Consultant Editor
Photography, writing and media since 1985:
In 1985/6, when the Film Industry went into
a periodic decline, Gordon began a new career
in still photography and writing. In November
1985 he won the Mountain Landscape Photography
competition at the Kendal Mountain Film Festival,
and this encouraged him to begin his series of
four award-winning, bestselling mountain landscape books:
1991 Eyes to the Hills
1992 Lakeland: Landscape
of Imagination
1994 The Cuillin
1998 The Peak: Past and
Present
In this period Gordon exhibited his photographic
work at a wide range of venues including the
National Museum of Photography in Bradford and
the Barbican Centre in London. He has also lectured
extensively, notably to the Royal Photographic
Society, the Alpine Club, the World Wildlife
Fund, the Ruskin Society, and the John Muir Trust,
as well as at mountaineering literature festivals
in Buxton, Ambleside, Llandudno, Wakefield, and
Banff (in Canada).
Also during this period Gordon won many more prizes and awards for his work:
1989, 1990 ARPS, FRGS
1992 The Thomas Cook Illustrated Travel Book Award for Eyes to the Hills
1994 The Banff Mountain Book Festival Best Book of Mountain Images for The Cuillin
1995 The Outdoor Writers' Guild Award for Excellence for The Cuillin
1999 The Peak: Past and Present shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker Award
2000 The Peak: Past and Present shortlisted for the Portico Prize.
1999 Photographic trips to
the the Grand Canyon, Yosemite , Zion and Joshua
Tree in America, and to the Everest region
of Nepal for World Expeditions.
The Stanley Kubrick Companion by James
Howard. Contributor
Robin Hood of the Peak
Gordon lectured at a 3-day Robin Hood Symposium at Nottingham University
2000 - 2001 Worked on the umpteenth
draft of a Science Fiction novel: The Last Days of P-Ship
and continued researching a philosophy book, The Secret Meaning of Mountains
In the summer of 2001, after the end of the devastating outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease, Gordon made a 145-mile
circular walk of the Peak District in 12 days, starting and finishing in Derby, The
Peak Grand Tour
2002 Turpin, screenplay
for Producer David Rose
Book sales of Gordon's mountain hardbacks
topped 43,000
2003 Revised The Last Days
of P-Ship for Tor Books, New York
Activity Britain. Directed five short
videos on outdoor activities for Visit Britain
Wild Britain. Directed two television
test promos for the BBC, with Brian Blessed and
Rebecca Stephens as presenters
2004 The Owl and the Cragrat, an
anthology of climbing poems. Project Director and Co-Editor (with
Marc Chrysanthou)
Continued research work for mountain philosophy book
2005 The Crux: 150 years of British climbing in 25 images. Compiled and designed the 25th anniversary photographic exhibition for the Kendal Mountain Film Festival. For further details see Kendal Mountain Arts.
Expanded web design business activities.
2006 Featuring in a BBC TV documentary about the Lake District as part of a series called Mountains with Griff Rhys Jones. More details soon.
The Crux photographic exhibition at the Alpine Club, London, in the summer.
Continuing research work on a major non-fiction book project on mountains and philosophy.
Climbing Gordon's climbing career goes back over 40 years.
He started rock-climbing with his twin brother John
while still at school, and on family holidays
to Zermatt in 1966 and 1967 they climbed their
first alpine peaks. In 1969, again with his brother,
he made an ascent of the very long and dangerous
'Fiva Route' in Romsdal in Norway, an escapade
that nearly cost them their lives. The next
year they were both climbing Extremes in North
Wales (they both led the classic 'Cenotaph Corner',
separately, on the same day). Two more Alpine
seasons followed in 1971 and 1972, but then work
in the film industry restricted further climbing
activities for over a decade. Since 1983 however,
Gordon has been rock climbing and hill walking
whenever the opportunity has arisen, and has
made a point of climbing many of the rock routes
that are featured in his books.
Some pictures of Gordon's climbing can be found in
my UKClimbing photogallery
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