Canterbury academic author produces first Rutherford documentary
June 5, 2014
Amazingly, until now, there has never been a full documentary on Nobel Prize winner and University of Canterbury
physicist Ernest Rutherford.
University of Canterbury researcher Dr John Campbell has produced the Rutherford Documentary, which is based on his
book, Rutherford Scientist Supreme. Research spanning a quarter of a century went into material for the book.
Dr Campbell has just screened on campus the first episode, The Apprentice, which covers Rutherford's early life and work
in New Zealand and Canterbury College, plus his pioneering wireless telegraphy work in England.
Episode one also shows general student life and graduation ceremonies of Canterbury College from more than 120 years
ago. Rutherford received the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1908, 18 years after starting as a student at the University
of Canterbury, formerly known as Canterbury College.
``Lord Rutherford is internationally New Zealand's most famous son, the first Nobel Prize recipient for research
performed in Canada and probably the most illustrious British scientist of the first half of the 20th century,’’ Dr
Campbell says.
The documentary was recorded in high definition digital video with three one-hour episodes. An eight minute trailer of
the whole documentary can be seen at www.rutherford.org.nz.
The Canadian Nuclear Society recently awarded Dr Campbell an Education and Communication Award for the documentary. A
DVD of the documentary has been gifted to every secondary school in New Zealand. It is now re-licenced for television
and general DVD sales.
The documentary was directed by Gillian Ashurst, whose previous credits include the feature filmSnakeskin and the documentary Rocketman - The Story of Bill Pickering, the New Zealander and Canterbury alumni who led the USA's deep space exploration programme.
Dr Campbell has spent 36 years of his life studying Lord Rutherford. About 50 books have been written about him. His
image is on the $100 New Zealand banknote and stamps in 10 countries. He is, still and always will be, mentioned in
school science books the world over.
``We should be promoting him as an example of Kiwi youth who, through hard work and perseverance, rose to immortality.
Gillian did a fantastic job in turning my book into a great documentary.
``It was filmed in three countries, includes interviews with people who worked with Rutherford, his relatives, and those
whose work followed on from Rutherford's, plus re-enactments, animations of his famous experiments, never before seen
moving images of him, extracts from his personal correspondence, and even a song written by Rutherford.’’
Dr Campbell taught physics at the University of Canterbury from 1968 until retiring in 2004. He now concentrates on
Rutherford and his Ask-A-Scientist programme which has seen some 100,000 column centimetres of science in New Zealand
newspapers since he initiated it 1993.
ENDS