When it comes to life on the front bench of a sports
production, it is often the technical director who is in the hot seat. The role
demands a tremendous amount of focus and clearheadedness, for it is the
technical director (TD) who turns the mental vision of the director and
producer into a comprehensive story that smoothly takes the viewer from one
camera shot and replay to the next.
At first glance, the position can appear to be nothing more
than pushing buttons on a production switcher. But the late Steve Laxton, who
served as technical director for NBC Olympics beginning in 1988 and also
freelanced for ABC, CBS, ESPN, and HBO, transformed the role for future
generations.
“He was not just a button pusher,” says Dave Mazza, NBC
Olympics, SVP of engineering and Laxton’s predecessor as NBC Olympics TD. “He
would design and develop graphic looks and transition elements, and he would
build disks of effects for other TDs.”
Laxton’s creative juices surfaced in his personal life
through a love of music, playing guitar, and gourmet cooking. “He was very
thoughtful and caring,” says Nancy Laxton, his widow. “He loved the beach and
was always on the edge with things like cave diving and ice climbing.”
His desire to push the limits surfaced professionally in a
love for the creative process. “He would get involved in the creative process
earlier than most,” says Mazza, “and he had a knowledge of what was possible
with the tools.”
More important, Laxton had strong relationships with his
directors, particularly with Bucky Gunts. The two began working together in
1988 on NBC’s late-night show from the Seoul Olympics. Gunts and Laxton would
work together on five Olympics, the last four as director and technical
director, respectively, of the primetime Olympics broadcast.
“He was very creative as well as a tremendous engineer,”
says Gunts. “He also wouldn’t allow anything to go on the air that wasn’t
perfect.”
Going for Gold
That perfectionism resulted in long hours of building effects and other
elements. Often, he would use subtleties, such as shadows, that would be
appreciated only by him and Gunts, but they were part of his quest for
perfection.
Solid, intuitive communication between the director and TD
is the key to on-air success. For Gunts and Laxton, that communication often
didn’t need words because they both knew what to do in certain situations.
Opening Ceremonies like those at the Athens Olympics were a
favorite, and Gunts recalls Laxton’s simply giving him a quick look when he
thought Gunts was staying with a shot too long: “He was always making sure the
right thing was on the monitor.”
Laxton was born on Oct. 18, 1955, and, the son of Navy
officer Roy Laxton, lived in numerous places, including Morocco, Taiwan, Japan,
and the U.S. He graduated from high school in
Japan
in 1973 and attended
FloridaStateUniversity.
He began his career at
WTSP Tampa Bay,
FL, in 1982 and joined F&F Productions, located in
Clearwater,
FL,
as editor in 1987. While there, he began to build a reputation as a top-level
talent.
“He was extremely talented in all facets of the job, whether
the creative side or the editing side,” says F&F Productions VP of
Engineering Bill McKechney. “He was a great guy to work with.”
In 1988, Laxton made the jump from F&F Productions to
NBC Olympics, working on the Seoul Summer Games. That move began a period of
his career in which his work influenced a generation of technical directors.
“He was always very generous with his time and more than
happy to teach and spend time with other TDs,” says Gunts.
Technology Innovator
While Laxton spent most of his professional time driving production switchers
for major sporting events, he also drove innovation and product development for
such manufacturers as Sony, Abekas, and Philips. Helping Sony build a
production switcher capable of competing with the
GrassValley
production-switcher line was a key contribution.
Charlie Steinberg, then president of Sony Broadcast, brought
Laxton in as a consultant based on input from those who worked in the
sports-production field. Laxton relished the opportunity.
“He came to us and used the production switcher
extensively,” says Steinberg, “helping us know what features were needed and
what features could be cut because they were of little value and, by cutting
them out, we could cut costs.”
The real benefit was making the switcher easy for technical
directors to use. “You can do almost anything technically, but the question is,
what is required by the technical director and what is the man-machine
interface?” says Steinberg. “For a technical director, you need an absolute
perfect interface that is readily operable by the user. And Steve gave us the
input to make that happen.”
Laxton died of a heart attack on Dec. 2, 2005, but his
legacy lives on and, next February, will once again be front and center during
NBC Olympics coverage of the 2010 Winter Games in
Vancouver.
“He was the best,” says Gunts. “We always prided ourselves
on being a step above, and he helped us have a very classy and clean look on
air. He is sorely missed.”