Joe Medjuck (later to become a producer in Hollywood working with Ivan Reitman) was another McGill Film Society alumnus who became involved with the magazine—initially as a Toronto "correspondent", and then as co-editor/publisher.
This, first, Take One continued briefly to publish after the departure (about 1977) of founder Peter Lebensold, under the editorship of Phyllis Platt (later a vice-president of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and television-program producer) but folded shortly afterwards, in 1979, after 81 issues.
Reflecting the magazine's broad cinematic scope, notable issues of this Take One included a special on Alfred Hitchcock (with contributions from photographer Philippe Halsman, director Peter Bogdanovich, actress Ingrid Bergman and many others) ... and issues that featured long cover essays by Alanna Nash on filmmaker D.W. Griffith (1974) and actress Jean Muir (1977.)
Over the span of its publishing history, contributing editors included Marc Glassman, Tom McSorley, Maurie Alioff and Cynthia Amsden.
22, Winter 1998 included Wyndham Wise’s essay “Canadian Cinema from Boom to Bust: The Tax-Shelter Years”; and issue No.