Basil Wright

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1907-06-12

Deathday 1987-10-14 (80 years old)

Place of Birth Frieth, Buckinghamshire, England

Also Known As Basil Charles Wright

Basil Wright

Biography

Basil Wright - was a documentary filmmaker, film historian, film critic and teacher. During World War II, Wright worked only as a producer, first at John Grierson's Film Centre before joining The Crown Film Unit between 1945 and 1946 as producer-in-charge. Among the best known films he produced for Crown are Humphrey Jennings' A Diary for Timothy (1946) and A Defeated People (1946) and Instruments of the Orchestra (1946) featuring Benjamin Britten's The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra.[1] Returning to direction in the early 1950s, his films included Waters of Time (1951) made for the Festival of Britain, World Without End (1953) directed with Paul Rotha for UNESCO and Greece: The Immortal Land (1958) in collaboration with his friend the artist Michael Ayrton. Writing throughout the 30s and 40s, Basil Wright had contributed to the theoretical development of documentary in the movement's journals Cinema Quarterly, World Film News and Documentary Newsletter. He was the film critic for The Spectator after Graham Greene left. Wright was a regular contributor to the British Film Institute's Sight and Sound during the 1940s and '50s. He published a small book: The Uses of Film (1948) and his personal (extensive) history of cinema The Long View (1974). He taught at the University of Southern California (1962 and 1968), The National Film and Television School in London (1971–73) and Temple University in Philadelphia (1977–78). He was Governor of the British Film Institute, a fellow of the British Film Academy and President of the International Association of Documentary Filmmakers. In his films Wright combined an ability to look closely and carefully at a subject with a poetic and often experimental approach to editing and sound. In Britain he is commemorated with a film prize awarded biennially by the Royal Anthropological Institute.

Known For

Director

1958
The Immortal Land

as Director

1953
World Without End

as Director

1951
Waters of Time

as Director

1938
1937
Children at School

as Director

1936
Night Mail

as Director

1934
The Song of Ceylon

as Director

1932
O'er Hill and Dale

as Director

Producer

1958
The Immortal Land

as Producer

1946
It Might Be You

as Producer

1945
1942
This Is Colour

as Producer

1942
London Scrapbook

as Producer

1941
The Green Girdle

as Producer

1940
Men of Africa

as Producer

1938
Advance Democracy!

as Producer

Camera

1935
Coal Face

as Director of Photography

1934
The Song of Ceylon

as Director of Photography

1931
Industrial Britain

as Additional Photography

Editor

1936
Night Mail

as Editor

1934

Writer

Crew

1932
O'er Hill and Dale

as Cinematography