Cecil Holmes (director)
Cecil William Holmes was a New Zealand-born film director and writer who worked mainly in Australia. He is known for his 1964 telefilm I, the Aboriginal, based on the 1962 book of the same name.
Biography
Cecil William Holmes was born on 23 June 1921 in Waipukurau, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand.He served in the Royal New Zealand Air Force and British Royal Navy during World War II before turning to filmmaking. He made a number of documentaries for the New Zealand National Film Unit then moved to Australia, where he directed several feature films and a number of documentaries for the Commonwealth Film Unit.
He died on 24 August 1994.
Personal life
His second wife was author and Indigenous Australian advocate Sandra Le Brun Holmes, who contributed an account of the experience of their making I, the Aboriginal to Walkabout, a magazine for which Holmes himself also wrote.Recognition
The Cecil Holmes Award given by the Australian Directors Guild is named after him. The Award was instigated in 1995, and is presented by the ADG board from time to time to honour recipients who have advocated for the role of the director.Selected filmography
- Captain Thunderbolt – director
- Words for Freedom – director
- Three in One – director
- Lotu – directorI, The Aboriginal – director
- Faces in the Sun, a documentary about the mission at Yirrkala in Arnhem Land, produced by the Methodist Overseas Mission
- Gentle Strangers – director
- The Killing of Angel Street – writer
Screenplays
- Feature Film Screenplays 'Call Me by My Proper Name'
- Mackie's in Town
- Morrison of Peking
- ''The Planter of Malaita''
Books
- One Man's Way, Penguin, 1986
- Mask of Smiles, 1994, completed yet unpublished at time of his death.