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A LIFE OF SOUND WITH PANAMIC - Jo Andrews AMPS MIPS Having recently completed work on the BBC’s contemporary thriller Informer, career Boom Operator Jo Andrews takes time out to talk to Canford Marketing Manager, Stephen Gallagher about life on-set and explains why Panamic boom poles are trusted by industry professionals.
Panamic p o l e s
a p a r t
At this point in my career, I am teetering on the cusp between 1st AS (boom operator) and 2nd AS (sound assistant). This means that I tend to work as an assistant on bigger projects like TV dramas and big budget features, and boom operator on smaller projects like lower budget features, commercials and dailies. My most recent jobs as assistant were HBO TV series Succession and BBC TV series Informer, both yet to air. My most recent jobs as boom operator were feature film Beast, pickups on Johnny English 3 and additional/alternate boom operator on BBC TV series Detectorists. My career path has been somewhat unconventional in that I took 5 years out from the industry in 2010-15, meaning that I had to go back in at ground level in 2015, despite having a good deal of experience. I sometimes joke that I’m the world’s longest serving sound assistant.
How did you get into the business? In my mid-twenties, I was working in the exciting world of higher education funding administration. After a couple of years I realised I had better get out before my soul atrophied, and I decided that sound for film and tv was the life for me, based solely on the fact that I was a huge film nerd with a background in music - and therefore analytical listening (or so I reasoned). I read some sound books, and took a short course in sound at City of Westminster College - which was entirely useless in preparing me for
Jo Andrews between set ups at the Shar House, BBC Informer
boom operating, since it was just reel-to-reel tape editing, which I have never been required to do since. However, it was enough to encourage me to apply for a place on the Diploma in Sound Recording for Film and TV at the National Film and Television School in 2004. Here, I was fortunate that the course was only in its second year, and presumably much less popular than it is now, since I was offered a place with almost nothing in the way of experience! Luckily I found that I hugely enjoyed being part of a film crew, and boom operating in particular.
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