Michael Grigsby
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Michael Kenneth Christian Grigsby (7 June 1936 – 12 March 2013) was an English documentary filmmaker. With a filmography spanning six decades and nearly 30 films, Grigsby occupies a unique position in British documentary filmmaking, having witnessed and commented on many of the dramatic changes in British society (and beyond) from the late 1950s into the next century. As a critic noted, "from Michael Grigsby back to John Grierson runs an unbroken tradition in British documentary-making: a passionate commitment to the poetry of everyday life."


Early life and career

Born in
Reading, Berkshire Reading ( ) is a town and borough in Berkshire, Southeast England, southeast England. Located in the Thames Valley at the confluence of the rivers River Thames, Thames and River Kennet, Kennet, the Great Western Main Line railway and the M4 mot ...
, Grigsby's passion for documentary dates back to his time at
Abingdon School Abingdon School is a day and boarding independent school for boys in Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England. The twentieth oldest independent British school, it celebrated its 750th anniversary in 2006. The school was described as "highly ...
, an independent boarding school for boys, where he attended from 1949 through 1955. There, he ran the school's film society and discovered the films of John Grierson's documentary movement. These had an amazing impact on then 14-year-old boy. While at school, he also talked the headmaster into funding his first attempts at documentary filmmaking. He produced ''Ut Proficias'' in 1953, which was placed with the British Film Institute. Another film, ''No Tumbled House'' (1955), deals with the realities faced by a boy in a boarding school.


Career

After leaving Abingdon, he gained his first job as a trainee assistant editor at Granada Television in Manchester, working with
Harry Watt Harry Watt (18 October 19062 April 1987) was a Scottish documentary and feature film director, who began his career working for John Grierson and Robert Flaherty. His 1959 film ''The Siege of Pinchgut'' was entered into the 9th Berlin Inter ...
, who had co-directed the short film ''
Night Mail ''Night Mail'' is a 1936 British documentary film directed and produced by Harry Watt and Basil Wright, and produced by the General Post Office (GPO) Film Unit. The 24-minute film documents the nightly postal train operated by the London, ...
'' (1936). Unfortunately, Watt left shortly afterwards, and Grigsby was then offered a job as a studio cameraman, which by his own admission was very dull, but gave him a chance to purchase his own 16mm
Bolex Bolex International S. A. is a Swiss manufacturer of motion picture cameras based in Yverdon located in Canton of Vaud. The most notable products of which are in the 16 mm and Super 16 mm formats. Originally Bol, the company was founded by C ...
camera. Along with a bunch of disaffected Granada colleagues, he set up a filmmaking collective, Unit Five Seven, and spent several years shooting and editing ''Enginemen'', a short film about work in a locomotive shed, in his spare time. By chance, the critic and filmmaker
Lindsay Anderson Lindsay Gordon Anderson (17 April 1923 – 30 August 1994) was a British feature-film, theatre and documentary director, film critic, and leading-light of the Free Cinema movement and of the British New Wave. He is most widely remembered for h ...
heard of his project. Anderson was particularly impressed by the rushes, and with fellow filmmaker
Karel Reisz Karel Reisz (21 July 1926 – 25 November 2002) was a Czech-born British filmmaker, one of the pioneers of the new realist strain in British cinema during the 1950s and 1960s. Two of the best-known films he directed are '' Saturday Night and S ...
, he helped Grigsby secure funding from the
British Film Institute The British Film Institute (BFI) is a film and television charitable organisation which promotes and preserves film-making and television in the United Kingdom. The BFI uses funds provided by the National Lottery to encourage film production, ...
to complete the film, which was included in the last
Free Cinema Free Cinema was a documentary film movement that emerged in the United Kingdom in the mid-1950s. The term referred to an absence of propagandised intent or deliberate box office appeal. Co-founded by Lindsay Anderson (but he later disdained the ...
programme at the
National Film Theatre BFI Southbank (from 1951 to 2007, known as the National Film Theatre) is the leading repertory cinema in the UK, specialising in seasons of classic, independent and non-English language films. It is operated by the British Film Institute. His ...
in March 1959, alongside Reisz's ''We Are the Lambeth Boys'' and
Robert Vas Robert Vas (''Vas Róbert'', 3 March 1931 in Budapest – 10 April 1978) was a Hungarian film director who settled in England. He came to England after the Hungarian uprising in 1956. He was committed to documentary, like ''Refuge England'' ...
’ ''Refuge England''. Growing in confidence, Grigsby made another short documentary with the Unit Five Seven, ''Tomorrow’s Saturday'' (1962), about mill workers in
Blackburn Blackburn () is an industrial town and the administrative centre of the Blackburn with Darwen borough in Lancashire, England. The town is north of the West Pennine Moors on the southern edge of the Ribble Valley, east of Preston and north-n ...
, Lancashire preparing for the weekend. After these two well received shorts, he succeeded in persuading Granada to support his work and was finally allowed to direct his first documentary for the company, ''Deckie Learner'' (1965).


Later work

His work continued to demonstrate a fidelity to the concerns and principles embodied in these early films. Grigsby set out to make films about ordinary people, and those at society’s margin. He gained a reputation as a filmmaker who – to use his own words – "gives a voice to the voiceless". Thus, whether he's filming trawlermen (''Deckie Learner'', 1965; ''A Life Apart'', 1973), the survivors on both sides of the Vietnam War (''I Was a Soldier'', 1970; ''The Search'', 1991; ''Thoi Noi'', 1993), ordinary inhabitants of Northern Ireland (''Too Long a Sacrifice'', 1984; ''The Silent War'', 1990; ''Rehearsals'', 2005), families facing up to social disintegration in Thatcher's Britain (''Living on the Edge'', 1987) or the traumatised Lockerbie community 10 years after the Boeing 747 disaster (''Lockerbie, A Night Remembered'', 1998), Grigsby does his utmost to let people speak for themselves. Hence his belief in the importance of long research periods (up to six months) prior to shooting, to gain the participants' trust; hence also the still frames, the long meditative shots and the moments of silence, allowing people the space in which to get their points across. This unhurried pacing appears truly daring when compared to the frenetic filmic vocabulary more favoured today. Grigsby's documentaries have also been compared to free-form jazz; he liked working instinctively, and the structure of his films generally came to him only after he had built a real understanding of the place, the landscape and the people. His films' inner quality also comes from the highly creative way in which he arranged sounds (often a combination of natural sounds, snatches of dialogues, archive material and live or added music) and images, thus creating symbolic contrasts between them, rather than resorting to a didactic voice-over commentary. In short, Grigsby used eminently cinematic techniques more frequently associated with art cinema than with documentary television. Although he addressed political issues (Northern Ireland, labour relations, effects of wars), there is no crude attempt in his films to 'propagandise'. Instead, he utilises the documentary genre in a unique fashion, bringing his humanist vision to bear on problems in society, so that viewers become participants too - involved, engaged and thinking. Influenced by John Grierson's documentary movement, emerging as part of
Free Cinema Free Cinema was a documentary film movement that emerged in the United Kingdom in the mid-1950s. The term referred to an absence of propagandised intent or deliberate box office appeal. Co-founded by Lindsay Anderson (but he later disdained the ...
, his approach reaching maturity during documentary television's golden age, Grigsby at the later stages of his career came full circle. Still as active and enthusiastic as ever despite the current lack of support for independent, imaginative documentaries in British television, amongst a number of new documentary features, he was working to develop his first fiction feature film. He also returned to the place where he made his first film as a pupil, Abingdon School, to set up the AFU
Abingdon Film Unit The Abingdon Film Unit (known as the AFU) is an organisation based at Abingdon School, Abingdon-on-Thames, in Oxfordshire, England that enables pupils to make their own short documentary or animated films under the guidance of a team of industry ...
in 2003 with Jeremy Taylor, the school's Head of Drama, where over thirty boys (and girls from the neighbouring school of St Helen and St Katharine), aged 12 to 18, worked together under their supervision along with several other industry professionals to make a handful of short films each year. He was as proud of this new enterprise as of his finest films; he saw it as his own way of passing on the torch of the great British documentary tradition to the next generation of filmmakers. The
Abingdon Film Unit The Abingdon Film Unit (known as the AFU) is an organisation based at Abingdon School, Abingdon-on-Thames, in Oxfordshire, England that enables pupils to make their own short documentary or animated films under the guidance of a team of industry ...
itself has gained significant press, owing to films such as ''Gravel & Stones'' (2007), a documentary which focuses on the impact of disability on people in Cambodia, a country that, after thirty years of war, has one of the highest rates of disability in the developing world; and also ''One Foot on the Ground'' (2010): a 24-minute film which follows a young Moldovan basketball-player, Andreii Zelenetchii, as he struggles to keep alive his dream of playing professional in Europe's poorest country. The Unit has now produced over 150 films, many of which have been screened at festivals throughout the UK and abroad, with a number winning awards along the way. Festivals include Raindance, the London International Documentary Festival and the British Film Festival in Dinard, France. Awards include Best Documentary and Best Animation at the Future Film Festival in London and the National Young Filmmaker's Award at the Leeds Student Film Festival. In 2012 Grigsby's non-fiction feature, 'We Went to War' was released. Co-authored with creative producer Rebekah Tolley, the film is a follow up to Grigsby's film, ''I Was a Soldier'' (1970), and returns to the stories of the three Vietnam veterans of the earlier film: David, Dennis and Lamar, forty years after their return from combat to their homes in the heartlands of Texas.


See also

*
List of Old Abingdonians Old Abingdonians are former pupils of Abingdon School or, in some cases, Honorary Old Abingdonians who have been awarded the status based on service to the School. The Old Abingdonians also run the Old Abingdonian Club (OA club) which is an organ ...
*
Abingdon Film Unit The Abingdon Film Unit (known as the AFU) is an organisation based at Abingdon School, Abingdon-on-Thames, in Oxfordshire, England that enables pupils to make their own short documentary or animated films under the guidance of a team of industry ...


References


External links


Michael Grigsby & Rebekah Tolley's websiteMichael Grigsby's page on ScreenonlineMichael Grigsby's entry on the dfgdocs website
*
Article on Michael Grigsby's work at the Abingdon School


Selective filmography

1953: ''Ut Proficias''
1955: ''No Tumbled House''
1959: ''Enginemen''
1962: ''Tomorrow’s Saturday''
1965: ''Deckie Learner''
1965: ''Pommies''
1967: ''Death by Misadventure: SS Lusitania''
1969: ''If the Village Dies''
1969: ''Deep South''
1969: ''Stones in the Park'' (one of 5 directors)
1970: ''I Was A Soldier''
1971: ''Freshman''
1972: ''Working the Land''
1973: ''A Life Apart: Anxieties in a Trawling Community''
1974: ''A life Underground''
1976: ''Bag of Yeast''
1976: ''The People’s Land''
1979: ''Before the Monsoon - Roots of Violence''
1979: ''Before the Monsoon - State of Emergency''
1979: ''Before the Monsoon - Seeds of Democracy''
1981: ''For My Working Life''
1984: ''Too Long a Sacrifice''
1987: ''Living on the Edge''
1990: ''The Silent War''
1990: ''Dear Mr Gorbachev''
1991: ''The Search''
1993: ''Thoi Noi''
1994: ''The Time of Our Lives''
1994: ''Pictures on The Piano''
1995: ''Hidden Voices''
1996: ''Living with the Enemy''
1998: ''Lockerbie, A night Remembered''
1998: ''The Score''
1999: ''Billion Dollar Secret''
2001: ''Solway Harvester – Lost at Sea''
2005: ''Rehearsals''
2012: ''We Went to War'' {{DEFAULTSORT:Grigsby, Michael 1936 births 2013 deaths English documentary filmmakers People educated at Abingdon School