Basil Wright
Pioneering British documentarian who helped John Grierson forge the movement in the early 1930s, first at the Empire Marketing Board and then at its successor, the GPO film unit. In the mid-1930s Wright directed "Song of Ceylon" (1934) and "Night Mail" (1936, with words by W.H. Auden); the films combined lyricism (the influence of Robert Flaherty) and social realism (the influence of Grierson) and remain landmarks of the documentary genre.
Filmography
Movies
Credit | |||||
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A Diary for Timothy | Producer | - | 1945 |
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Night Mail | Director | - | 1936 |
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The Song of Ceylon |
Director, Cinematographer, Film Editing |
- | 1934 |