By Fred H. Arm

Nicolas Armington, 41, the filmmaker of “The Plunge: Time Laps Through History”, drowned yesterday in the deep waters of the Pacific near Ventura. He had been scuba diving with a group off an 85-foot commercial dive boat at about 2:45 pm, when he suddenly surfaced waving his hands. By the time the rescue team reached him, he was already unconscious. CPR was administered to no avail. He was shortly after pronounced dead by the ambulance crew on shore.
Nick was born in New York, an only child following his late father’s footsteps to become a filmmaker. He met his wife, Sari at the 1993 Sundance film festival in Park City, Utah. They married and he moved from Manhattan to California. Sari and Nick started Alchemedia Ltd. in Point Richmond. His mother, Dr. Irene Meister-Armington resides in New York.
He has been described as a hard-working and dedicated filmmaker, with a good sense of humor, although he rarely took life very seriously. Sari said he lived every day like it was his last. Nick was an optimist who believed in the goodness of the human spirit, although not naively so.
Nick and Sari began to make films for public television. Their recent film on Pt Richmond’s Grand Natatorium aired on KQED, profiling the magnificent pool from its opening in 1926 to its closing in the summer of 2001, when a wall bulged unexpectedly. Ever since, residents have been fighting for the building's restoration. The 30-minute documentary profiled 12 swimmers whose ages ranged from two to 92 years old. He will be truly missed. So long Nicolas and thanks for sharing with us your dedication and artistic talents.
Memorial services will take place in the Bay Area and New York.