16/02/1989
More
housekeeping: Top of the Pops cannot be stopped! (except by the BBC in 2005).
Many thanks to Billy Smart and mumu03 who both stepped in and offered help to
keep these write ups going. Billy Smart has kindly hooked me up with the
relevant episodes and I understand from the Popscene forum (in other news, I've
learned there's a Popscene forum) that efforts are being made to get the whole
huge archive back online somewhere. Let's see what happens.
Mark Goodier:
“Yo. Good evening and welcome to Europe's number one pop show.”
Andy Crane:
“It's two days after Valentine's Day but we're still feeling romantic, we're
still feeling mushy.”
Mark Goodier:
“Well almost, with our first band. They are the biggest British rock band in
the world.”
Andy Crane:
“This is single number six from Hysteria, Def Leppard...”
Mark Goodier:
“Woh!”
Andy Crane:
“... Rocket!”
[20] DEF
LEPPARD: rocket. The
biggest British rock band in the world? Iron Maiden make a note to never appear
again on Top of the Pops.
But enough of
that. These write ups have been given a new lease of life so lets use it to
talk about camera positioning. This edition opens with an odd, and very dark,
shot of the audience. The camera then rises up to reveal our hosts in the
crow's nest. But where is the camera? The crow's nest sits at the join of the
two arms of the main stage and the camera has been placed behind the stage
right arm, in the gap between the back of the arm and the black drapes used to
cover the studio wall. This is why the crowd shot looked so murky, they've been
gathered in a part of the set that was never lit or designed to appear on
camera.
This angle also
allows a good look at the painted flat that hangs behind the crow's nest. I
think it's been there since the twenty fifth anniversary party revamp,
31/12/1985, but you don't normally get to see it because it's behind the hosts.
We get a much better angle here, although it's partially obscured by a
combination of Mark Goodier, some bloke, and a couple of heart-shaped balloons.
The logo is a canvas flat hung from the ceiling (it's gently swinging backwards
and forwards, and you can see one of the ropes suspending it from the lighting
grid) with the Top of the Pops logo stuck on; the big white circle in
the middle casts a shadow.