Clips like that have been found (and are on Lost in Time), but given how short a home cine reel was then (and how expensive they were compared with a kid's pocket money), clips seem likely to be all that anyone shot.
True, but maybe someone shot clips of
other scenes that would at least give us more of a snapshot. Also even back in the 60s you had people with money who used professional-grade equipment. The finger-crossing part being the hope at least one of these people were fans of a sci-fi serial aimed at kids...
One 1960s episode was found on an early home video recorder a few years back, but unfortunately it was The Space Pirates 2 (which already existed).
Of course that's not always a bad thing. Wasn't there a Pertwee or a Troughton case in which a duplicate was discovered but it was with better picture quality? I think that might have been the case with that one episode of Edge of Destruction (or was it The Daleks?) that was found with the Arabic soundtrack.
Anecdotally, some schools apparently had video recorders in the mid 1960s and recorded the Hartnell historicals to show as primary school history lessons, but if any of those tapes weren't reused, they haven't turned up since those stories started going around 25 years back.
I wonder if Levine and his colleagues have thought of exploring school storage rooms? If schools in Britain are anything like the schools I went to in Saskatchewan, there might be cupboards that haven't been opened in 40 years!
For a real horror story, check out Dixon of Dock Green...
That is just awful. Imagine if the original Star Trek had been made by the BBC. We'd be lucky to have the Tribbles episode and Spock's Brain left over.
It is a real shame. I mean, the US isn't 100% spotless on this record either (the vast majority of Johnny Carson's first decade as host of the Tonight Show is lost, including his first show, though some audio recordings survive). But in terms of scripted shows the only US network show from the 1960s or later that I believe is lost is the My Living Doll sitcom starring Julie Newmar - only an episode or two of that still exists. I shudder to think how much history, great performances, and early appearances by actors of note have been lost. As I said earlier I understand the reasoning as it was at the time, but all these lost shows, from Dixon of Dock Green to most of Troughton's Doctor Who, are losses that could have been avoided. I've been critical of everything being archived in digital format, but I do wish they'd had access to that technology back in the 60s and 70s -- there wouldn't have been the whole issue of storing and reusing videotapes.
And if the BBC hadn't been so cheap and had actually FILMED most of its shows (and none of that stupid videotaped interior/film exterior mix either) maybe we'd have had more of these shows to enjoy. And they might have made some money off the deal. ITV got to sell shows like The Saint, Danger Man and The Avengers to US networks and syndication. Did a single BBC network series ever get shown on an American mainstream network? Probably not - they all ended up on PBS. Not exactly a cash cow. Considering how many British shows were on CBS, NBC and ABC in the 60s there's no real reason why Doctor Who couldn't have been given a go if it had been filmed - but that's another thread!
Alex