The true story of a nurse who spent her life caring for terminally ill patients.The true story of a nurse who spent her life caring for terminally ill patients.The true story of a nurse who spent her life caring for terminally ill patients.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe production of the Lorimar MOW "A Matter of Life and Death" project was produced by the Lorimar Television division located on the Culver City-MGM Film lot. The MGM Studios art department offices/drafting room facilities had been taken over by the Lorimar Production Services division. Lorimar production manager Edward O. Denault's production services division was the following: Richard "Dick" Hamond was Lorimar's supervising art director. Hamond hired the art director, staffed and supervised the art department affiliated staff, which included set designers, model builders, illustrators, and allied staff. The Lorimar property department manager was Pierre Bouvet, who hired the set decorator, responsible for hiring the set decorator's lead person, swing-gang-crews, property master, 2nd property master and additional personnel. Pierre maintained Lorimar property offices, furniture and prop room (furniture storage), sign shop and drapery; Paul Wurtzel was head of the Lorimar construction, paint and special effects department, with Jerry Esposito Jr. as his assistant coordinating construction manager/supervisor. MGM Studios maintained the MGM Mill, special effects, property, paint and MGM drapery department during the same period of Lorimar's move onto the studio's property. Lorimar's deal arrangement with the MGM Studio established a financial relationship requiring Lorimar to pay MGM an additional charge for the use of any MGM department and stage in their Lorimar rental contract. Because of any incurred production costs remaining on the MGM lot, The "A Matter of Life and Death" production offices were set up off the lot. The project did not rent stage facilities, filming the entire MOW on locations, all located primarily in downtown vacant L.A. office buildings. The width of hospital corridors and room interiors doors were technical problems because corridor doors were the normal 36" wide x 6'x 8" hight, preventing hospital hardware equipment and camera dolly tracks moving into the rooms. Hospital gurneys could only dress against the corridor walls. The art director Hub Braden, and set decorator Don Remacle, had their office in the MGM art department, located above the MGM commissary. The MOW's construction/paint crews were based out of one of the MGM stages Lorimar used for the film series "Knot's Landing"; Jerry Esposito's construction/paint crews prepared all location set fabrication wall units, to be installed at the locations, including counter units, supply materials, could be assembled and constructed, primed and painted, then loaded onto transportation, moved to the individual location sights. Both property and special effects crews used the same "Knot's Landing" stage as a staging point. Lorimar construction could have use of the MGM mill facility, but an extra studio charge would have been incurred; not using an MGM stage not under Lorimar contract prevented overage costs in the MOW's show budget. Rental location fees were cheaper than for a stage rental and full set construction. The same art department staff, production designer Hub Braden, set decorator Don Remacle, and the Lorimar departments were pulled back together for another Lorimar Emmy nominated MOW project "A Death In California" a year later, which again was entirely filmed on Southern California locations. Filming occurred in Brentwood residences, a ranch and residence in Santa Monica Canyons, Calabasas, and utilizing existing jail interiors on independent rental stages.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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