The best way of, of making use of a location is to make the location tell the story, to be part of the story. It is another character, it is another subject. I mean all these locations that we used in Middlemarch were all chosen with great care, because they say something about the characters that actually live in those particular houses. The reason we came all the way down to Somerset, and to Brimpton. Divasy, was that this particular house um was the best house, or it was the house that best fitted um Edward Casabon's character. Somehow it said Edward Casabon.

Additional Notes in Pen:

Annotation 1: In pen, there are lines drawn surrounding the type-written text, omitting the first word: 'BRIAN:', underlined and in all capitals. To the left of the text, a hand-written note reads 'Part 3?'.

Ref Code: PM-96 Title: Transcript from a video interview with Brian Tufano, Lighting Cameraman for Middlemarch, p. 30, discussing the importance of location in relation to the decision to use Brympton D'Evercy Manor House as Casaubon's residence, Lowick Hall. Date: 1993 Format: .png Source: ITM-7963 Transcripts of interviews with members of the cast and crew of Middlemarch (BBC/WGBH, 1994). Edited for the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) Educational Developments/BFI (British Film Institute) Education package Screening Middlemarch: 19th Century Novel to 90s Television. Held at BFI, London, UK. http://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceArchive/110008677