Canyon Del Muerto

Just last night, we attended and managed press and social media for the very special advance, exclusive screening of brand-new feature film Canyon Del Muerto, directed by Coerte Voorhees, starring Tom Felton (Harry Potter) and BAFTA winner Abigail Lawrie (The Crown), which also featured a Q&A with the cast and director.

Canyon Del Muerto is a stunning historical epic and the important true story of Ann Axtell Morris, North America’s first female archaeologist who worked with her husband Earl Morris (the inspiration for the Indiana Jones character created by George Lucas) and the Navajo in the 1920s, to uncover America’s first civilization – the Anasazi. 

Ann struggled to prove herself in a male-dominated profession, but she was overshadowed by her husband’s accomplishments and virtually left out of the history books. 

Their trek across the magnificent Southwestern United States was fraught with danger as their Navajo guides discouraged them from their descent into the canyon, which they believed was cursed.

The incredible supporting cast includes Hanako Footman (The Crown), Academy Award Winner Wes Studi (Dances with wolves, Last of the Mohicans), Academy Award Nominee Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine), James Hillier (The Crown), and Jacob Fortune-Lloyd (The Queen’s Gambit, How They Run).

With the importance and type of subject matter, and the advanced and exclusive nature of the screening, we spoke to a very targeted selection of media and generated interest within a very specific sector. In the audience, we had The Express, The Guardian, New Scientist, Current World Archaeology, Minerva, and British Archaeology, with an in-depth feature on the Q&A running in The Express  just a couple of days later.

We looked after the press in attendance and made sure they got what they needed from the evening, and in addition we devised and managed birth of the Canyon Del Muerto official Instagram account, as well as the gathering of all social media content inclusive of all cast and director interviews and audience vox-pops before and after the screening.

It has been a brilliant journey working with the Canyon Del Muerto team and we cannot wait to see what’s next for this hugely important story.

 

Tom  x

 

Pictures by: Shoib Ahmad and Olivia Ross 

 

The VECTAR Project launches state of the art virtual studios

In the Spring of this year, we were so excited to hear the news that industry leading, carbon neutral, independent film and TV production facility The VECTAR Project had launched two brand new state of the art virtual studios in our hometown of Greater Manchester, at its base in Heaton Mersey, Stockport.

The VECTAR Project is the first independent and self-funded studio to bring this game-changing film and television production technology to the North West, and when Managing Director Tom Henderson approached us to help get the word out about his wonderful new facilities, we were more than happy to help spread the news.

Offering a vital service for commercial use, film and television production and even live events, such as virtual conferences, which will be available and accessible to producers of all sizes, the newly refurbished studios offer real time virtual production, which combines live action footage and CGI or photo real backgrounds in real time, using a variety of different techniques.

The VECTAR Project’s ambition to offer no-energy filming, is incredibly exciting for the industry and with the new studios this can be delivered not only by its real-time virtual sets, but by further green enhancements such as LED lighting powered by the sun, paperless production and virtual attendance for producers.

We were absolutely delighted to be able to share the news for Tom exclusively in one of the biggest TV trade titles in the UK, Broadcast in May 2021, where the team shared an excellent piece on the new facilities in their weekly tech newsletter.

In the following days, we went on to achieve further coverage across a variety of other trade press including TV trade titles Prolific North and Televisual, plus local Manchester title About Manchester and business title The Business Desk also shared the news.

So far VECTAR  Project has worked with a host of impressive clients including BBC, ITV, Netflix, Universal, Amazon Prime and has helped to deliver content for TV shows including Big Talk Productions’ Cold Feet, Saffron Cherry’s ‘The World According to Grandpa’, which how our team was introduced to Tom.

The VECTAR Project has so many exciting productions in the pipeline and we are looking forward to working with Tom and the rest of the team in the near future. If you would like to find out more information on The Vectar Project and to book the studio, please visit: vectarproject.co.uk

Nova Cinema shines bright in Woking

Our good friends at Ambassador Theatre Group (ATG) brightened up our year here at Sundae when they asked us to look after the events and communications campaign for the newly refurbished, renamed and rebranded Nova Cinema in Woking Town Centre.

As the name suggests, the brand spanking Nova Cinema is out of this world and we wanted to give it a launch schedule to match, so we got to work and came up with an exciting series of events to work alongside a comprehensive press and social media campaign.

EVENTS, you say?! Well we started working on this project as the UK very first went into lockdown back in March and, as you can imagine, we have planned, replanned and replanned the replan since then; we simply had to adapt, develop and move forward with enough contingencies to deal with anything that was thrown at us.

Under the government restrictions at the time of planning, we worked with the incredible Louise from the Nova Cinema team to put together a socially distanced press launch with a 3D screening of Hollywood hit, Gravity starring Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.

We engaged and built new relationships with the lovely local press down in Woking and invited them along for the evening. With all 25 (yes ALL) of the press list including journalists from nearly media every outlet in Woking turning up to support the launch, we needed no more proof that the media in the area were right behind the venue!

Coverage around the launch appeared in Surrey Live, Radio Woking, Surrey Advertiser, Surrey Mag Online, Woking Writers Circle, Girl About, Rewrite This Story, Love London Love Culture to name a few, with a front page and double page spread  in the print edition Woking News & Mail and a live interview for Venue Director Simon Thomsett on BBC Radio Surrey to add the proverbial cherries to an already marvellous cake.

The event was absolutely brilliant; screening a venue showreel, coordinating staggered venue tours in safe numbers, facilitating press interviews and then screening a blockbuster with a bespoke seating plan while following social distancing regulations was never going to be easy but with the help of an unbelievable Nova team, the operation was slick and all in attendance really loved the experience.

Just two weeks later came the launch event for Nova Kids; a Halloween screening of The Addams Family where families could attend, safely and securely, in their bubbles to enjoy a fancy dress contest, special prizes, arts and crafts and a spooky cake decorating workshop from local favourite, Victoria’s Kitchen.

The event was a complete sell out after gaining coverage in Woking News & Mail, Surrey Mag Online, BBC Radio Surrey, Radio Woking, BFBS Aldersot Radio and Love London Love Culture to name a few with journalists from Woking News & Mail, Surrey Blogger Collective and, leading national kids newspaper, First News bringing their little ones along to enjoy the day.

We were so happy with the first two events in our launch schedule for Nova Cinema that we simply could not wait to get started on the next one! Unfortunately the pandemic had other ideas and into Lockdown 2.0 the country went.

If this year has taught us anything though, it is that arts, culture and entertainment will never be defeated and we will be back with our new friends in Woking to deliver the rest of the launch campaign under whatever restrictions apply at the time and help Nova to shine bright like the true new star that it is.

Until then, cinema…. “We’ll be back in no time..” –  Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995)

Tom x

Let’s Netflix and Party

Having worked from home for 4 years before joining the Sundae team, I’m no stranger to conference call catch ups, seeking advice over Whatsapp and never quite finding the most comfortable spot in my apartment to set up shop. The things you miss about being in an office are the little details, the ritual of brewing up alongside someone else, chatting about what everyone else is doing for lunch, and fundamentally for us, catching up on the previous night’s TV! 

Now confined to our homes for the foreseeable, television and streaming services will play an important role in offering comfort and escapism on demand for so many people. Along with at home pub quizzes, virtual dance parties, and concert live streams, we’re seeing the Netflix Party Chrome Extension bring an innate social practice into the digital space.

Netflix Party synchronises video playback and adds a group chat to your favourite shows, so that your friends can react simultaneously to the twists and turns of that new true crime documentary, (we see you fellow Tiger King bingers). Imagine watching the next BBC drama and being able to debate theories while the episode is playing out; being able to prove your detective skills in guessing the culprit of a crime at the beginning of a series and winning the coveted bragging rights as the story unfolds.

The tool could even help to end the issue we constantly find ourselves facing in the world of online streaming, in that our friends are always one step ahead of or behind us in a new series. Perhaps, finally, truces can be made within friendship groups to watch that new series at the exact same pace, so as to truly enjoy each plot development in-sync. If there’s one thing I hate more than hearing a spoiler, it’s trying to convince someone to watch a brilliant new show while desperately trying not to let something slip and ruin it in the same breath. 

For many, television is a natural shared interest, a topic of conversation it’s easy to connect over and hard to run out of things to say about, hence the success of the show Gogglebox. With online watch parties you can now create your own personal version of Gogglebox at home, on your respective sofas, with the people whose opinions you’re most interested in. 

The act of staying in and watching TV on a Saturday night is becoming a whole lot more social, and we’re very much here for it! We’ll be having our own Sundae watch party next Monday for the first episode of Hollywood, just one of the new series’ coming out during lockdown that we can’t wait to watch and discuss.

Stay in, put the telly on and stay safe. 

Hannah

Images and video courtesy of Saeed Adyani and Netflix.

A love letter to storytelling….

“You’re never going to kill storytelling, because it’s built into the human plan. We come with it.” Margaret Atwood.

Working in the film and television industry in both London and the North West of England over the past 15 years, I’ve witnessed some seismic changes in its culture, from the recession, to Operation Yewtree, #MeToo (me too BTW), the growth and impact of social media, the current BBC License Fee debate, and the recent, terrifying (more so as they’re not completely surprising), findings of The Looking Glass survey.

Amidst, perhaps concealed by, all the noise and politics, and fighting hard in a business built on ingrained prejudice, there is an army of determined, talented people supporting that change, and working incredibly hard to try and make creative, innovative and entertaining television that reflects the UK’s nations and regions. 

My heroes are those whose ambition it is to create opportunity for new young content producers, from all backgrounds and cultures, to tell stories. There is a determined shift towards greater regionality and diversity in broadcasting, and a wealth of projects that take small steps that are our hope for the future of British content.

Back in 2013, when we were still a very young company, Universal Pictures entrusted us with Elaine Constantine’s Northern Soul – the film, her love letter to the scene, which we fell in love with. The film became a pivotal project for us. It was expected to hit 7-10 screens across the country, but what had been underestimated was the tremendous groundswell of support from Northern Soulers in the media and, most importantly, in the regions across the country. It became a break out top ten box office hit, our campaign won a BVA, and the film eventually screened in over 150 cinemas.

Elaine herself was a first-time filmmaker, and it took her 17 years to get her film made, even as a highly respected fashion photographer and image maker, and even with great friends, including Steve Coogan, Lisa Stansfield, John Thompson and Ricky Tomlinson, who guest starred in and supported her film.

Having seen first-hand the sheer force of will and boundless enthusiasm Elaine had to call upon to make her voice, and that of the Northern Soul scene, both seen and heard, we were inspired to find our own place in the industry, championing stories of different backgrounds, cultures and place.

Northern Soul – the film made us realise the power of the largely overlooked audience power in the regions of the UK. It made us realise that being Northern was our superpower, and that growing a specialist entertainment consultancy in Manchester was definitely possible, and absolutely necessary. 

Seven years on, proudly based in Manchester, we’ve been honoured to raise the profile of wonderful projects from all corners of the UK.

In Manchester, we’ve delivered programme publicity for The Tez O’Clock Show, a late-night satirical comedy, made at The Studios in Salford’s MediaCity, a ‘TRULY anti-establishment show’ hosted by Tez Ilyas, a Northern working-class British-Asian-Muslim; we’ve worked with the Royal Exchange and Talawa Theatre Company on the film of King Lear, broadcast on BBC Four, which cast Lear’s family as black and raised questions about the whitewashing of British history and the lack of roles for black actors in the UK; and we’ve delivered an incredibly important campaign for I told my Mum I was going on an R.E. trip, a BBC Performance Live project from Contact and 20 Stories High, that told verbatim stories of abortion, from all sides of the debate and very different perspectives.

Across the country, we’ve produced international level red carpets for BBC Sports Personality of the Year in Leeds, Glasgow, Belfast and Birmingham; we’ve publicised London Short Film Festival, the UK’s premier showcase for emerging and established, homegrown and international short form, for four consecutive years; and we’ve launched the £57 million Young Audiences Content Fund with the BFI, dedicated to making exceptional programming that reflects the lives of all young people in the UK on screen.

Recently we’ve been working with Creative England on ShortFLIX, a flourishing short film making scheme, in conjunction with Sky Arts and ScreenSkills, which creates valuable opportunity for new voices to create diverse and representative films for broadcast. This year’s finalists hail from Newcastle, Cheshire, Wakefield and London, bringing a rich slate of short films with culturally relevant and powerful stories exploring family, friendship, rivalry, loss, survival and recovery in contemporary Britain.

We’re also about to launch The Snow Spider for the brilliant Leopard Pictures. A co-commission from CBBC and BBC Wales, the spell-binding fantasy drama is based on Jenny Nimmo’s best-selling book trilogy,  and adapted for television by award-winning writer Owen Sheers. The 5×30’ series, featuring an all Welsh, and all Welsh-speaking cast, blends ancient Welsh folklore, magic and myth with contemporary adventures.

In short, in an industry where being regional is still often seen as being synonymous with a lack of ambition or talent, and where the door is so often closed,  we think it is vital to celebrate difference. At Sundae, we publicise stories about people and place, from all regions of the UK, and are delighted to help give them the national and international platform they deserve. 

Fiona x

 

London Short Film Festival 2020

And we’re back for the fourth time, feeling luckier than Minogue on a mad one!

As if working with London Short Film Festival 2017 – 2019 wasn’t enough, we were honoured with heading up the communications campaign for this year’s 17th edition.

LSFF, year on year, is one of our very favourite things here at Sundae; we don’t just work on it, we are massive fans of it and we well and truly live it from the very first strategy meeting until the final bit of coverage goes live… funnily enough, we hate this moment as much as we love it because it means it is a full year until we get to do it again.

Widely regarded as the UK’s premier showcase for emerging and established, homegrown and international short form, 2020 saw LSFF take over the capital at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), BFI Southbank, Science Museum and historic independents including the Dalston’s Rio Cinema.

Being LSFF communications stalwarts, we know the dance, we’ve learnt the moves and we know what will work on the d-flo’. However, the everchanging nature of this cutting edge Festival means that the beat is never the same… it keeps us on our tip-toes and this is what we love the most; it’s fresh, innovative and, most certainly, never dull.

We left our first planning meeting for the 2020 instalment all fired up, the creative flame was burning bright as the programming had just gone and done something that we didn’t think was possible; it got even better!

The names on the list blew our mere mortal minds, with folk like Baloji, Stacy Martin, Lydia Ogwang, Peter Strickland, Penelope Spheeris, Figs in Wigs, Tom Rubnitz, Kamal Aljafari, Baby Lame, Drag Syndrome, Jeffrey Hinton with Rainer Kohlberger, Wong Ping and Diana Vidrașcu in the mix we knew we were clicking our heels into yet another LSFF year that was right up our straße.

This line-up deserved huge exposure so we put together a bespoke strategy that was perfect for the content with the aim of maximising visibility and traffic across the board while ticking off some high quality media targets in the process.

National coverage ran in national newspapers The Guardian and i Newspaper, LGBTQ coverage ran in QX Magazine and QWEERIST, culture coverage ran in frieze and Dazed, music coverage ran in DJ Mag and London Jazz News and broadcast interviews ran on BBC Radio London and Worldwide FM…. there are too many others to list but it’s safe to say that the media support for this fantastic festival is growing by the year.

Then came the best bit, we got to go to the Festival! We went along to Opening Night: More Than Just a Pretty Face – Alt Drag Revolution where we saw (and may have had a wee beverage with) the wonderful Sarah, Philip and Jenna from the Festival team. Lovely people that we adore working alongside!

Across the course of the opening weekend we went to New Shorts: A Winter’s Tale of Romantic Shorts which was the simply perfect warmth tonic to a cold January evening and This is a Public Service Announcement: American Nightmare which opened up our eyes and sent us away with a Tupperware full of food for thought. Hometime came far too soon and we wish we could have seen more.

Another year, and another amazing campaign with the LSFF team… we’re off to find a Tardis to see if we can get to 2021 any quicker.

Tom x

A Blooming Marvellous MAFterstroke

It’s no secret that we are hugely proud of our relationship and work with our friends at Manchester Animation Festival – year on year the festival grows in stature and we are so happy to be part of that journey.

With MAF being the UK’s largest animation festival, this is obviously something that Manchester can hang its hat on so we wanted a local interest news story that represented the Mancunian input into something so amazing.

Upon scouring the content, we found ‘Bloomers’ made by animated documentary maker Samantha Moore along with composer Malin Bång and producer Abigail Addison as part of The Happiness Machine, a project that paired up 10 European female animation directors with 10 female contemporary music composers to contribute to an original orchestral piece that would be performed live all over the world, and is a portrait of Headen & Quarmby a knicker factory in Middleton, Manchester.

When researching the film Samantha spent a lot of time in the factory drawing the workers, and chatting to them about their backgrounds. Hazel, who works in the factory office doing the accounts, has been involved with the factory since she was a child because it was her parents, Mary and Eric, who set up the factory when they were teenagers and her son David now co-runs the factory.

We got straight on the blower to Samantha followed by a call to David at the factory to garner all of the information that we required to make a pitch on this happen.

As a result, not only did BBC Radio Manchester interview Samantha live on air, they sent a team up over to Headen & Quarmby to interview the factory workers and the family that own it for a package that eventually ran across a number of days featuring on the Sunday Breakfast Show, the Mike Sweeney Show, the Phil Trow Show and numerous times on the Breakfast Show with Chelsea Norris.

As I write, I am leaving screening of The Happiness Machine. It was a big success and the Headen & Quarmby team were in attendance to see themselves in animated form on the big screen – they were so pleased that they were able to tell their story on the radio and we were so pleased that we could help make this happen.

We’re all off to the Premiere screening of Netflix’s Klaus so we better run!

Tom x

Images courtesy of Manchester Animation Festival

Everyman is welcome in Manchester!

Everyone knows that we love Everyman here at Sundae and we were super hyped when they asked us to manage the announcement and launch period of Everyman Manchester St. John’s in the city centre – not just because we love working with the Everyman team but also because we knew our favourite cinema would soon be just a few minutes walk from the office.

Continuing our role with Everyman of engaging with the community and regional press as we have done for them in Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool and Newcastle, we knew that ahead of launch that the Manchester and North West business, property, lifestyle, culture and news titles needed a heads up… and so did their readers.

First things always come first and the press release was top of our list. We worked closely with the amazing Maria from the Everyman dream team to get this just right for the regional titles that we would be hitting with the announcement.

Out it went and it was enthusiastically received by our contacts across all relevant media sectors with features appearing in The Business Desk, I Love Manchester, The Manc, Insider, Place North West, Manchester Confidential and Manchester Wire along with MEN Online and MEN Newspaper to name a few.

The coverage has created the coveted Manchester buzz and  people across the city and beyond can’t wait to see the place come to life. We have one just down the road in Altrincham but there is just something about its Quay Street spot that is creating a chorus of hometown hysteria.

The next phase of the launch period is everyone’s favourite part – the launch party! It’s the night before Halloween so we better get cracking on the guestlist and decide witch people we have broom for!

See you on the d-floor!

Tom x

Images courtesy of Everyman

On-set at The Tez O’Clock Show….in yo’ FACE!

We’ve been building towards this moment for weeks and now it’s here…. and of course we’re here!

Team Sundae is at MediaCityUK, on-set, on the ground at RX1 of Tez Ilyas’ The Tez O’Clock Show by Expectation for Channel 4.

The studio is bubbling with the vibration of hushed excitement; amongst the audience are some of Tez’s friends and family, some key media, and some well known Manchester faces.

Speaking of faces… our Wednesday evening has been made even more special by the presence of TJ and Sara who are here to do a BTS interview feature on Tez and the making of the show for, the iconic and newly re-lanched, The Face

TJ is taking care of words for the article so we get the ball rolling by making sure he has a great spot within the live studio audience for the duration of the recording. Next, we speak to Sara who is taking care of photos to figure out just how she is going to get the shots that she needs – turns out that this can only happen by all of us moving very (VERY) quickly!

We’re ready!

John Bishop has just turned up and is getting ready to go on stage. Everybody is already in stitches as Tez is warming up the audience – if you have ever seen Tez do stand up then you can imagine how hilarious this is – and when John joins him it goes next level.

And we’re off!

The record starts and the talent are doing their thing, the photographers are doing their thing and as much as we’d love to pop our trotters up and enjoy the show… we are now doing our thing.

We’re thinking about tomorrow’s newslines and clips; what will make in the morning? What best represents the show? What are the hot topics? What will people find funny?

Thanks to the talent on show, by the end of the record we’ve got more than enough material for the morning.

We work with the amazing production team at Expectation to decide which of our selections are the most newsworthy for them to turn into slick, perfectly edited clips overnight for us to issue first thing – John Bishop talking about the audience taking to the streets to overthrow the current government and make Tez Prime Minister (see video below) is a no brainer!

It’s late at night now but Sara’s got her pics, TJ’s had the Tez experience and we’re all set to tell the press what to expect from tomorrow’s show.

TJ’s meeting Tez round the corner first thing in the morning for the interview portion of the feature… we better get to bed!

Tom x

(Images: The Tez O’Clock Show / Expectation / Channel 4 / Joseph Scanlon / Stuart Wood / publicity shots)

Everyman in the mid90s

The mid 90s you say? Jonah Hill you say? A film you say? Launch events you say? Well that’s four of our favourite things right there… throw Everyman and some skateboards into the mix and that’s a cocktail team Sundae will drink all day long.

When our good friends over at the amazing Everyman came to us and asked us to look after their launch events for the UK release of, Jonah Hill’s directorial debut, mid90s at their venues in Birmingham, Leeds and Liverpool we were massively hyped – mainly because we love Everyman and we love Jonah Hill… everything else was a bonus.

Everyman isn’t every cinema – they do things differently. We wanted these events to be fully experiential and to convey exactly what Jonah Hill was trying to communicate through mid90s and partner it with Everyman’s relaxed and welcoming approach to cinema.

We took to the OST to garner some knowledge on the writer’s perspective; the OST is hip-hop heavy and within it are snippets of an interview with Jonah in which he describes both hip-hop and skateboarding as emotive, empathetic, accepting, family based and judgement free scenes that gave him an identity and a home throughout his formative years.

Hill disagrees with how both scenes are represented in films generally – intimidating and aggressive cliques that don’t allow outsiders in – and wanted to flip the script, show them in their true light and let people know that everybody was, and still is, welcome.

This became our inspiration.

We wanted to use our friends in the skate and music industries to continue that family feeling in the events – our mission was to recreate the film’s atmosphere outside of the cinema and make the guests feel at home and welcomed by the hip-hop and skate worlds respectively to put them in the correct mindset for the film that they were about to watch.

First we tapped up our mate Tez at Black Sheep Skateboard Store, home of the best skate team in Europe, for some advice – he gave us better than that; they became our skate partners for the entire project. Result.

Next we had a chat with our pals Poppy and Nik over at the Marcus Intalex Music Foundation (MIMF) about coming on board as a music partner and their answer was simple: we got you. Ideal.

Sundae’s friend Lei-Mai LeMaow is known for her incredible skateboard art (amongst many other talents) so she came on board as a live art partner. More than safe hands!

Down in Birmingham we hooked up with the B-SIDE Hip-Hop Festival which is organised by the Hippodrome and they joined us as an event curation partner; they wanted to supply breakdancers, skaters and DJs and cross promote their upcoming Festival. Works for us – the more the merrier.

After much planning and negotiation with the various shopping centres that the Everyman cinemas operate out of, we were good to go.

In Birmingham, upon arrival, guests walked through a live skateboard and b-boy display outside the cinema with the mid90s OST booming in the background. Once inside, they were greeted by DJ Silence tha Nomad on the 1s and 2s spinning beats pre screening…. after the film, the party started in the bar.

The event was also well attended by members of the city’s hip-hop and skate scenes and with the display being outdoors, a crowd formed and there was plenty of cheers and applause for the performances on show resulting in maximum authenticity.

Next up was Leeds. The guys at MIMF arranged for, local hip-hop heavyweight, DJ Weston to supply the soundtrack while Lei-Mai LeMaow did some awesome bespoke live skateboard art in the bar (later given away on Insta) as the guests arrived and, once again, after the film… the party continued.

And now, here we are in Liverpool at the final event of the trilogy, we’ve moved the skate display inside the shopping centre and with the soundtrack blasting, this is the edgiest of the three events.

As the guests move through the display and into the cinema, Liverpool legends No Fakin’ are on the turntables (again courtesy of MIMF) and are taking zero prisoners. Liverpool’s leading skate store, Lost Art, were out in force and after the screening….. well, you know the rest.

Three cities, three venues, three awesome events, insane skateboard displays, breakdancing,  great music, an amazing film, family, friendship, acceptance, authenticity, lots of happy faces… and thanks to our videographer, RCLC, we’ve got evidence.

Until next time.

Tom x

(Images: mid90s / Everyman / RCLC / publicity shots)