Nigel Finch

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1949-08-01

Deathday 1995-02-14 (45 years old)

Place of Birth Tenterden, England, UK

Nigel Finch

Biography

Nigel Lucius Graeme Finch was an English film director and filmmaker whose career influenced the growth of British gay cinema. Finch began working as co-editor for the BBC television documentary series Arena in the early 1970s. He produced and directed many notable programs including My Way (1978), and The Private Life of the Ford Cortina (1982). He rose to prominence with the documentary Chelsea Hotel (1981), which profiled the famed New York hotel, and its legacy of famous gay guests, including Oscar Wilde, Tennessee Williams, William S. Burroughs, Quentin Crisp and Andy Warhol. His documentary subjects include artist Robert Mapplethorpe (1988), filmmaker Kenneth Anger (1991), and artist Louise Bourgeois (1994). Finch went on to direct films such as the BAFTA-nominated drama The Lost Language of Cranes, and the musical soap opera The Vampyr. Finch died from AIDS-related illness in London in 1995 during post-production of his first full-length feature film Stonewall, a docudrama loosely based on events leading up to the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City.

Known For

Producer

1994
Voices from the Island

as Executive Producer

1991
Miller Meets Mandela

as Executive Producer

1991
Paris Is Burning

as Executive Producer

1991
Van Morrison: One Irish Rover

as Executive Producer

1989
The Tip of the Iceberg

as Executive Producer

1989
Blackpool Wakes

as Producer

1987
The Confessions of Robert Crumb

as Executive Producer

1985
The Strange Case of Yukio Mishima

as Executive Producer

1975
Arena

as Executive Producer

Crew

1995
Stonewall

as In Memory Of

Editor

1975
Arena

as Editor