Its was in sourthern California. The time was between 4pm and 6pm. It was outside. The murals and the models were in the shade, not in direct sun. I used a speed light (vivitar 285) with a white plastic diffuser snapped on the front. The flash was a few stops down from the ambient light exposure. Flash mounted on a stroboframe bracket just off camera. Flash was pointed directly at the scene.
Thanks, this really helps.
I agree with Bill - this sounds like a scene where the local contrast would be moderate, so most likely you wouldn't want to decrease it further with a pull process procedure.
Rodinal would probably give you the least "natural" speed but might give you more grain than you want (or at least more visible grain).
D-76 would be most likely give you full speed, which in this case would be a disadvantage.
If HC-110 is something you use regularly, that is what I would recommend.
If you wanted to experiment with other developers, I would recommend one of the "fine grain" options like Kodak's discontinued Microdol-X or the Ilford comparable.
And by the way, I also agree with Bill about how easy it is for all of us to make an exposure mistake in the field. You should feel heartened though - if all your exposure mistakes involve over-exposing TMY by a stop or two, you have great instincts and pick just about the best film to do it with.
