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Winners 2001
Cotswold International Film & Video Festival
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The Festival took place in the South Cotswold town of Stroud
on Friday and Saturday the 14th and 15th September 2001.

Contact: Lee Prescott, Festival Officer (01453 823802) email

The winners are:
Amateur:
GOLD & OVERALL BEST FILM:
Rose by Ron Prosser.
SILVER:
Chester by Malcolm Whiteley.
BRONZE:
Mlyn (The Mill) by Martin Lanik, Czechoslovakia
poster
Student:
GOLD:
A Day at the Park by Dan Greenway.
SILVER:
Left With the Unknown by Emma Hey.
BRONZE:
The Seven Days of The Ninja by Mark Jackson.
Open:

GOLD:
Counting Sheep
by Sven Taddicken, Germany.
SILVER:
Shooter by K. Akeseh Tsakpo - Gloucester.
BRONZE:
The Arabian Prince by Tana Fletcher.

still
Counting Sheep
Photographic Society of America Gold Medal
for Best Photography:

H5 by Holger Hendricks, Germany.

Best of British
Romania by Matthew Bigwood, Dursley, Stroud.

Sound:

Left With the Unknown by Emma Hey
A Park for all Seasons by John Astin
A Forgotten Hero by Alan Wood

Jessops Prize:

The Enchanted Islands by Daphne Barbieri

For more information see the Cotswold Festival website.

Polly Lloyd - HTV Presenter (photo courtesy of HTV)The Awards were presented by HTV Personality
Polly Lloyd

Polly joined HTV in 1998 to work on the weekly programme Live & Local with Richard Wyatt, continuing the partnership with Look Back 2000 and Town & Country.

Polly has been a broadcaster for 20 years working in radio and television. During that time she has covered everything from pet care phone ins to politics, Royal visits to murder trials. She has also written four local history books and enjoys producing programmes that take her around the region to meet new people. Polly loves to visit the countryside - this is such a beautiful part of the world - but she's a city girl at heart and is always glad to get back to busy Bristol.


The festival is supported by Stroud District Council and this year also Stroud Town Council. The organisers are gratefully appreciative for this support.

It is organised by a sub committee of the Cotswold Video Camera Club (now Stroud Video Makers) which meets fortnightly in Stroud. The chairman is Clive Blackmore and the chief organising festival officer is Lee Prescott, himself the winner of a number of international awards for his films.
This festival is considered to be part of the regeneration of Stroud and through the major international connections is also aimed at attracting visitors to the area.


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Page updated on 21 March 2008

Authors' views are not necessarily those of The Institute of Amateur Cinematographers

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