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Famous Like Me > Director > G > Peter Greenaway

Profile of Peter Greenaway on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Peter Greenaway  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 5th April 1942
   
Place of Birth: Newport, Gwent, Wales, UK
   
Profession: Director
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Peter Greenaway

Peter Greenaway (b. April 5, 1942) is a British filmmaker trained as a painter and famous for his movies and exhibitions.

Career

Greenaway was born in Newport in Wales (his mother is Welsh), but grew up in England. The family left Wales when Greenaway was three years old and moved to Essex, England. At an early age he decided he wanted to be a painter. He developed an interest in European cinema, focusing first on the films of Bergman, and then on the nouvelle vague film-makers Godard, and most especially Resnais.

In 1962 he started studying at the Walthamstow College of Art, where amongst his fellow students was musician Ian Dury (who Greenaway would later cast in The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover). Greenaway would spend the next three years there, training to be a mural painter, and making his very first film there, Death of Sentiment an essay of church yard furniture, filmed in four large London cemeteries. In 1965 he joined the Central Office of Information (COI), where he remained for the next fifteen years as a film editor and then a director, starting to build up a personal filmography of experimental films, starting with Train, made in 1966, composed of footage of the last steam trains at Waterloo station (directly behind the COI), edited to a musique concrete track. Tree made in 1966, was a homage to the embattled tree growing in concrete outside the Royal Festival Hall on the South Bank in London. In the 1970s Greenaway, becoming more confident and ambitious, made Vertical Features Remake and A Walk Through H. The former is an examination of variations of arithmetical editing structure, and the latter a journey through the various maps of a fictitious country.

A hallmark of many of Greenaway's films is the heavy influence of Renaissance and, in particular Flemish, painting in his scene composition and lighting, with its concomitant contrasts of costume and naturalized nudity, nature and achitecture, funiture and person, sexual pleasure and painful death.

Greenaway has often worked with composer Michael Nyman, who is known for his sound tracks for films such as the Draughtsman's Contract, The Cook the Thief His Wife & Her Lover, Prospero's Books.

In 1980 Greenaway delivered The Falls – a mammoth, fantastical, absurdist encyclopedia of flight-associated material all relating to 92 victims of the Violent Unknown Event (VUE). The 1980s would see some of Greenaway's best known films, The Draughtsman's Contract in 1982, A Zed & Two Noughts in 1985, The Belly of an Architect in 1987, Drowning by Numbers in 1988, and his most successful (in the mainstream) film in 1989, The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover. He collaborated with the artist Tom Phillips (also in 1989) on a television mini-series called A TV Dante, dramatizing the first few cantos of Dante's Inferno. The 1990s brought the visually spectacular Prospero's Books in 1991, the controversial The Baby of Mâcon in 1993, The Pillow Book in 1996, and 8½ Women in 1999.

Greenaway is working on an ambitious film project, The Tulse Luper Suitcases, a multimedia extravaganza featuring innovative film techniques.

Greenaway also teaches cinema studies at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland, where he conducts Intensive Summer Seminars. In 2002 he received an honorary doctorate from the Media and Communications department.

He has also contributed to Visions of Europe, a collection of short films from different directors around the European Union. His entry for Britain is called The European Showerbath. In early 2005 it was announced that he would be making a film about the Dutch painter Rembrandt van Rijn to be released in 2006. The film is entitled as Nightwatching.

Films

  • Death of Sentiment (1962)
  • Tree (1966)
  • Train (1966)
  • Revolution (1967)
  • 5 Postcards From Capital Cities (1967)
  • Intervals (1969)
  • Erosion (1971)
  • H Is for House (1973)
  • Windows (1975)
  • Water Wrackets (1975)
  • Water (1975)
  • Vertical Features Remake (1976)
  • Goole by Numbers (1976)
  • Dear Phone (1977)
  • A Walk Through H: The Reincarnation of an Ornithologist (1978)
  • Eddie Kid (1978)
  • Cut Above the Rest (1978)
  • 1-100 (1978)
  • Zandra Rhodes (1979)
  • Women Artists (1979)
  • Leeds Castle (1979)
  • Lacock Village (1980)
  • The Falls (1980)
  • Country Diary (1980)
  • Terence Conran (1981)
  • The Draughtsman's Contract (1982)
  • Four American Composers (1983)
  • The Coastline (1983)
  • Making a Splash (1984)
  • A Zed & Two Noughts (1985)
  • Inside Rooms: 26 Bathrooms, London & Oxfordshire (1985)
  • The Belly of an Architect (1987)
  • Drowning by Numbers (1988)
  • Fear of Drowning (1988)
  • The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989)
  • Hubert Bals Handshake (1989)
  • Prospero's Books (1991)
  • Rosa (1992)
  • The Baby of Mâcon (1993)
  • Stairs 1 Geneva (1995)
  • Lumière et compagnie (1996)
  • The Pillow Book (1996)
  • The Bridge (1997)
  • 8½ Women (1999)
  • The Death of a Composer: Rosa, a Horse Drama (1999)
  • The Man in the Bath (2001)
  • Cinema16 (2003)
  • The Tulse Luper Suitcases, Part 1: The Moab Story (2003)
  • The Tulse Luper Suitcases, Part 3: From Sark to the Finish (2003)
  • The Tulse Luper Suitcases, Part 2: Vaux to the Sea (2004)
  • Visions of Europe (fragment "European Showerbath", 2004)
  • Nightwatching (announced, 2006)

Television

  • Act of God (1980) imdb
  • Death in the Seine (French TV, 1988) imdb
  • A TV Dante (mini-series, 1989) imdb
  • M Is for Man, Music, Mozart (1991) imdb
  • A Walk Through Prospero's Library (1992) imdb
  • Darwin (French TV, 1993) imdb

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Peter Greenaway