Whitby Film from the BFI

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • This well-crafted film focuses on the famous Fortune family kipper business in Whitby, as told by a local fisherman. In a very personal film, our narrator recounts his own experience of life in the town and as a fisherman. We follow the journey of the Fortune family as they bring back their catch and prepare the herrings for smoking, while the women skein the mussels, feeding the leftovers to the ever hungry gulls.
    The Fortune family started smoking herring in 1872 at 20 Henrietta Street, in the historic east-side of Whitby, near the famous 199 steps which lead up to Whitby Abbey. We bought Haglathe house from the Fortune family in1993 when the aunt passed away.
    Six generations on, the family business is still going strong. The swing bridge in Whitby still has its “house”, and is still manned two hours either side of high water.
    The song at the end of the film, "The Shoals of Herring" was sung and written by Ewan MacColl for the BBC Radio ballads, ‘Singing the Fishing’, first broadcast in 1960.
    One of the filmmakers, Buff Kim, went on to have a career as a mixed media artist, photographer and printmaker.

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