翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Paul Young
・ Paul Young (actor)
・ Paul Young (American football)
・ Paul Young (Desperate Housewives)
・ Paul Young (disambiguation)
・ Paul Young (footballer)
・ Paul Young (motorcycle racer)
・ Paul Young (rugby player)
・ Paul Young (Sad Café and Mike + The Mechanics singer)
・ Paul Young (Vanuatuan footballer)
・ Paul Young discography
・ Paul Younger
・ Paul Younger (engineer)
・ Paul Ysebaert
・ Paul Yu
Paul Yule
・ Paul Yuzyk
・ Paul Yü Pin
・ Paul Zacchias
・ Paul Zacharia
・ Paul Zadro
・ Paul Zahniser
・ Paul Zaloom
・ Paul Zamecnik
・ Paul Zammit
・ Paul Zammit (footballer)
・ Paul Zane Pilzer
・ Paul Zanette
・ Paul Zanetti
・ Paul Zanker


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Paul Yule : ウィキペディア英語版
Paul Yule

Paul Harris Yule is a photojournalist and film maker. He has directed more than 30 films on six continents, often on controversial political and social themes, several of which have won major awards (International Emmy,〔Damned In The USA - Berwick Universal Pictures 1990〕 Royal Television Society,〔a) The House of War, Berwick Universal Pictures 2002 and b) Not Cricket - The Basil D'Oliveira Conspiracy 2004〕 Edward Morrow Prize,〔The House of War, 2002〕 Amnesty International Prize,〔Babitsky's War, 2000〕 etc.) His work has included observational documentary, polemical essays, reality, biography and drama. He founded the production company Berwick Universal Pictures in London in 1980.
==Life and work==
Paul Yule was born in Johannesburg, South Africa〔22 June 1956〕 and his family emigrated to England when he was 8 years old. He studied at Aldenham School and then PPE at Oxford University.
His first outlet for photojournalism was while at Oxford University, working for the magazine ''Isis'' and then documenting the early theatre work of contemporaries Rowan Atkinson, Richard Curtis and others of that generation. After leaving Oxford, and following work in Peru from 1979 onwards, a book of his photographs, "The New Incas", was published in 1983 by The New Pyramid Press. The work was exhibited widely.〔including at The Side Gallery and The Royal Geographical Society
Photography in Peru became the subject of his first documentary film, 'Martin Chambi and the Heirs of the Incas' (1986), made for the BBC's Arena strand, which depicts the life, times, and contemporary relevance of that great Cusqueña photographer of the early 20th century. This was the first of half a dozen documentaries Yule made in Peru over the next two decades, and the start of an award-winning collaboration with the Producer Andy Harries.
In 1990 Yule made "Trains That Passed In The Night", a lyrical film about another photographer, the American O. Winston Link, a subject whose troubled personal story he was to return to and re-assess fifteen years later in "The Photographer, His Wife, Her Lover" (2005).
In 1991-92 Yule's Emmy Award-winning Channel 4 documentary "Damned In The USA", a film about censorship and the arts in the United States which features Rev. Donald Wildmon of the American Family Association, became embroiled in a landmark legal dispute. Though the film had already won the International Emmy, Wildmon and the AFA sued Yule, his co-producer Jonathan Stack, and Channel 4 for $8 million in an attempt to stop the distribution of the film, describing it as "blasphemous and obscene". Yule and his co-defendants fought the lawsuit in court in Mississippi and won the legal right to freely exhibit the film. Lou Reed re-wrote the lyrics to his classic Walk On The Wild Side in support of the case.
The subject matter of Yule's films has included history, politics, religion, sport, education, and the arts. He has collaborated with several writers, including with Nicholas Shakespeare on films about Mario Vargas Llosa (1990) and Bruce Chatwin (1999); with Peter Oborne on exposés of Robert Mugabe (2003) and the conspiracy surrounding the cricketer Basil D'Oliveira (2004); as well as with Darcus Howe, Miranda Sawyer, Paul Morley and others. Shooting his own material, he has also made a number of films in war zones - notably "Babitski's War" (2000, in Chechnya), "The House of War" (2002, in Afghanistan), "Mugabe's Secret Famine" (2003, in Zimbabwe), and "Here's One We Invaded Earlier" (2003, in Afghanistan). Producers with whom he has had notable collaborations have included Jonathan Stack, George Carey, Roy Ackerman, Samir Shah and Markus Davies.
In 2008 Yule returned to South Africa to complete a three-film 60-year history of apartheid and its consequences ("White Lies" 1994 - about the International Defence and Aid Fund; "The Basil D'Oliveira Conspiracy" 2004; and "The Captain and the Bookmaker" 2008 - the latter two of which focus on the political history of South Africa as seen through the prism of cricket, including the downfall of Hansie Cronje).
In 2011 he was invited to teach filmmaking at The University of Cape Town. While there he originated "The Big Picture", an intensive, hands-on documentary film production course aimed at training a new generation of filmmakers and technicians to make fresh, socially relevant, local programming. In conjunction with this, Yule was strategically involved in the re-launch of Cape Town's community television station, CTV.
In 2013 and 2015 he directed two seasons of "Dream School SA", an acclaimed reality series about education in South Africa.〔Broadcast on M-Net and SABC2 and sponsored by MySchool and Woolworths〕 He is currently working on a retrospective exhibition and book of photographs.
Paul Yule is married to the cartoonist Denise Dorrance and has four children.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Paul Yule」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.