By the by, Jack is certainly not a modern studio photographer. I attended a lecture and demonstration; in the half hour of the demonstration they took over 200 frames -- 20-30 frames per se-up and a over a dozen set-ups.
In one way shooting on the Moon WAS like studio photography. Most studio photographers don't have to haul out the light meter with each setup. They know from trial and error the best exposure settings with the lights they are using. The lights don't change from day-to-day, so all they really have to do is adjust a little for the subject.
On the Moon, there is no weather, no atmosphere, no seasons. Just raw sunlight, at an easily calculated angle to the ground. From moment to moment or from day to day the exposure settings remain essentially the same. Now throw in film with a good latitude and a developer that is willing to push and pull and remember you are trying to capture a record of events, not a dresden-doll complexion...