Geoffrey Barkas
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Geoffrey Barkas (born Geoffrey de Gruchy Barkas, 27 August 1896 – 3 September 1979) was an English film maker active between the world wars. Barkas led the British
Middle East Command Camouflage Directorate The British Middle East Command Camouflage Directorate (also known as the Camouflage Unit or Camouflage Branch) organised major deception operations for Middle East Command in the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War. It provided camo ...
in the Second World War. His largest "film set" was
Operation Bertram Operation Bertram was a Second World War deception operation practised by the Allied forces in Egypt led by Bernard Montgomery, in the months before the Second Battle of El Alamein in 1942. Bertram was devised by Dudley Clarke to deceive Erwin ...
, the army-scale deception for the
battle of El Alamein There were two battles of El Alamein in World War II, both fought in 1942. The Battles occurred in North Africa, in Egypt, in and around an area named after a railway stop called El Alamein. * First Battle of El Alamein: 1–27 July 1942 * Secon ...
in October 1942.


Early life

Barkas was born in 1896 to parents from
Jersey Jersey ( , ; nrf, Jèrri, label= Jèrriais ), officially the Bailiwick of Jersey (french: Bailliage de Jersey, links=no; Jèrriais: ), is an island country and self-governing Crown Dependency near the coast of north-west France. It is the l ...
families. His father was Albert Atkin Barkas (b. 1861) and his mother was Anna Julia de Gruchy (b. 1863); both were from St. Helier. In the
First World War World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
, he served in the 1915 Gallipoli campaign at Suvla Bay, and then in the later part of the Battle of the Somme in France, where he won a
Military Cross The Military Cross (MC) is the third-level (second-level pre-1993) military decoration awarded to officers and (since 1993) other ranks of the British Armed Forces, and formerly awarded to officers of other Commonwealth countries. The MC ...
.


Film

Between the wars, Barkas worked on silent films and then feature films, starting as a writer and producer, and then directing his own films such as ''The Manitou Trail'' and ''The Lumberjack'' (1925) and ''The Third Gun'' (1929), the latter being a three-reel short filmed in the
Phonofilm Phonofilm is an optical sound-on-film system developed by inventors Lee de Forest and Theodore Case in the early 1920s. Introduction In 1919 and 1920, Lee De Forest, inventor of the audion tube, filed his first patents on a sound-on-film proce ...
sound-on-film process. He co-directed with Michael Barringer (''Blockade'', ''Q-ships'', ''The Infamous Lady''),
Anthony Asquith Anthony William Landon Asquith (; 9 November 1902 – 20 February 1968) was an English film director. He collaborated successfully with playwright Terence Rattigan on ''The Winslow Boy'' (1948) and '' The Browning Version'' (1951), among oth ...
(''Tell England''),
Berthold Viertel Berthold Viertel (28 June 1885 – 24 September 1953) was an Austrian screenwriter and film director, known for his work in Germany, the UK and the US. Early career Viertel was born in Vienna, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but later ...
(''Rhodes of Africa'') and
Milton Rosmer Milton Rosmer (4 November 1881 – 7 December 1971) was a British actor, film director and screenwriter. He made his screen debut in '' The Mystery of a Hansom Cab'' (1915) and continued to act in theatre, film and television until 1956. I ...
(''The Great Barrier''), he also edited '' Red Ensign'' directed by
Michael Powell Michael Latham Powell (30 September 1905 – 19 February 1990) was an English filmmaker, celebrated for his partnership with Emeric Pressburger. Through their production company The Archers, they together wrote, produced and directed a seri ...
. Work became increasingly difficult to find in the economic depression of the 1930s, and after directing the critically acclaimed African exteriors for Robert Stevenson's ''
King Solomon's Mines ''King Solomon's Mines'' (1885) is a popular novel by the English Victorian adventure writer and fabulist Sir H. Rider Haggard. It tells of a search of an unexplored region of Africa by a group of adventurers led by Allan Quatermain for the ...
'' in 1937, it dried up altogether. In 1927 he married scriptwriter Natalie Webb (1899–1979) in Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. She wrote an account in 1934 of the production of Barkas' film ''Palaver''.


WWII camouflage


Learning to teach camouflage

Having found life hard in the film industry during the depression in 1937, Barkas joined Shell-Mex/BP under
Jack Beddington John Louis Beddington (1893–1959) was a United Kingdom advertising executive, best known for his work as publicity director for Shell in the 1930s and as head of the Ministry of Information Films Division during World War II. Biography Earl ...
, who guided Barkas into military camouflage. In May 1940, he was rapidly drafted into the Royal Engineers with a summary 10-day basic training course, followed by a camouflage course at the Royal Artillery camp at Larkhill, where modern concerns such as hiding from aerial and infrared photography were taught alongside traditional techniques. He began in Northern Ireland in 1940, teaching army drivers how to camouflage their vehicles. He found that they regarded their camouflage nets as "cloak[s] of invisibility", and in consequence would park trucks out in the open, covered by nets not "garnished" with the provided strips of canvas or hessian. His response was to print a training pamphlet, designed to be entertaining as well as instructive. It contained "an instructional poem" called ''The Sad Story of George Nathaniel Glover''. Glover was a driver who "never, never could be made/ To Park his Lorry in The Shade" and who uses a net "Which he had thrown across the bonnet, With not a stitch of garnish on it." The result is that a bomb falls exactly on target, and when his friends come to find him "Not One Trace did they discover/ Of Driver George Nathaniel Glover". The army allowed the pamphlet to be published, and it became popular enough to spread from Northern Ireland across all British Army commands. Barkas's next step was to run popular demonstrations of camouflage. He would assemble about 60 trucks, coaches and smaller vehicles and discuss with the non-commissioned officers how to hide these from the air. They would agree that a line of trucks could be parked by a hedge and all together draped with nets to appear as a thick belt of vegetation, or arrange a vehicle as a pitched-roof outhouse to a building. Then the commanders would arrive, and Barkas would give a speech about camouflage methods to defeat aerial reconnaissance. He would then signal the start, the unit would hide all its vehicles, and a moment later, using his film-making skill with timing, an aircraft would arrive and start observing. It rarely found more than a few of the vehicles. The experience in northern Ireland gave Barkas the idea that every theatre of war is Patterns in nature, naturally patterned. When an army unit goes against the grain of the pattern, he reasoned, it becomes conspicuous; to hide, it has to go with the pattern. He developed a simple illustration of this point, by dropping a collar stud on a carpet. When it fell on a plain area, it was easy to see; when in a patterned area, it had to be searched for.


Director of Camouflage

At the end of 1940, Barkas and his List of camoufleurs, camoufleurs were sent to Egypt, where he arrived on the ''Andes'' on New Year's Day 1941. He arranged a flight to observe the desert from the air, noting patterns that he named as "Wadi", "Polka Dot" and so on that he hoped to use for camouflage. During 1941 the structure of the camouflage unit changed and grew rapidly, at first with little official recognition and constantly shifting names. To get his fledgling unit recognised, he printed an unusually elegant booklet called "Concealment in the Field" in Cairo, the idea being to produce something clear, readable, and above all obviously different from the mass of army manuals. He was surprised to have this at once recognised as an "operational requirement" by the British Army's Middle East command, that is, as an essential item for every army unit. Barkas set up the Middle East Camouflage Development and Training Centre (CDTC.ME) at Helwan, Egypt in November 1941, with the zoologist Hugh B. Cott as his chief instructor. He was promoted to the new position of "Director of Camouflage", with the rank of lieutenant-colonel.


Dummy railhead for Operation Crusader

Barkas further built up his unit's ability in deception by getting one of his best officers, the artist Steven Sykes (artist), Steven Sykes to build a convincing dummy railway at Misheifa to divert enemy attention from the real railhead at Capuzzo bringing ''materiel'' for Operation Crusader. This complex piece of deception involved 6 miles of dummy railway, a dummy train, dummy sidings, and a selection of dummy tanks to look as if they had been delivered by the railway. More than 100 bombs were dropped on the Misheifa railhead, at least halving the attacks on the real thing at Capuzzo. Barkas noted that "camouflage men must be among the few otherwise sane beings who yearn to be bombed." The pioneering effort's success was achieved in a few weeks, amidst severe shortages of men and raw materials.


Deception for El Alamein

Barkas' camouflage unit helped Bernard Montgomery, Montgomery to victory at Second Battle of El Alamein, El Alamein through a large scale deception codenamed
Operation Bertram Operation Bertram was a Second World War deception operation practised by the Allied forces in Egypt led by Bernard Montgomery, in the months before the Second Battle of El Alamein in 1942. Bertram was devised by Dudley Clarke to deceive Erwin ...
which ran from August 1942 until the actual battle in October. Among other things, 600 tanks were disguised as supply lorries in the northern sector, while dummy tanks, supplies and a complete dummy pipeline were deployed in the south. The deception succeeded, leading Rommel's staff to believe the allied attack would be in the south, and to deploy substantial forces there. Barkas made Tony Ayrton his deputy for Bertram. Ayrton worked tirelessly to put in place all the complex schemes, and to repair them when they were hit by a dust storm. Barkas described Operation Bertram as


Post-war

After the war, Barkas returned to film-making, working for the Rank Organisation making children's films including ''The Little Ballerina''. He was made an ''Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire'' (OBE). Barkas and his wife Natalie wrote about his experiences in his book ''The Camouflage Story (from Aintree to Alamein)''. The book explains the inside story of the use of camouflage to deceive the enemy as described by Winston Churchill in his speech on 11 November 1942, announcing victory after the Second Battle of El Alamein, Battle of El Alamein:


Reception

Alan Burton writes that "Ultimately, though, [Barkas's film] ''Tell England'' extols the British class system: if modern war is unpleasant, young gentlemen, forged in the public schools, can nonetheless be counted upon to make the ultimate sacrifice and do their duty." Burton also quotes W.D. Routt who describes ''Tell England'' as "a compounded act of disinheritance" of Australia's part in World War I, but who also notes the "multiple expositions" of the film, "artistic, committed, sexy, evil". Routt justifies these descriptions with reference to the film's ambiguity about the morality of the war, and its supposedly improper sexual subtexts. In other words, concludes Burton, we should not dismiss all such early "Great War" films as simple and naive. Stephen Bourne (writer), Stephen Bourne writes that "Contemporary critics praised the quality of the African locations [in ''King Solomon's Mines''], filmed by Geoffrey Barkas, and the tense atmosphere created in the scenes set in the African village and mines." Barkas won an Oscar ("Best Live Action Short Film") in 1936 for his direction of ''Wings Over Everest''. ''Wings over Everest'' was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2014, in partnership with the UCLA Film and Television Archive.


Filmography

* ''Secrets of Nature'', 1922 * ''White Water Men'', 1925 * ''The Manitou Trail'', 1925 * ''Random Flakes'', 1925 * ''Prospectin' Around'', 1925 * ''Palaver, a Romance of Northern Nigeria'', 1926 * ''The Somme'', 1927 * ''Blockade (1928 film), Blockade'', 1928, with Michael Barringer * ''Q-ships'', 1928, with Michael Barringer * ''The Infamous Lady'', 1928, with Michael Barringer * ''The Third Gun'', 1929 * ''Tell England (film), Tell England'', 1931, with
Anthony Asquith Anthony William Landon Asquith (; 9 November 1902 – 20 February 1968) was an English film director. He collaborated successfully with playwright Terence Rattigan on ''The Winslow Boy'' (1948) and '' The Browning Version'' (1951), among oth ...
(''The Battle of Gallipoli'' in USA) * ''A Symphony of the Sea'', 1933 * ''Secrets of India: The Fair City of Udaipur'', 1934 * ''Wings Over Everest'', 1934, with Ivor Montagu * '' Red Ensign'', 1934; directed by
Michael Powell Michael Latham Powell (30 September 1905 – 19 February 1990) was an English filmmaker, celebrated for his partnership with Emeric Pressburger. Through their production company The Archers, they together wrote, produced and directed a seri ...
, edited by Barkas * ''Rhodes of Africa'', 1936, directed by
Berthold Viertel Berthold Viertel (28 June 1885 – 24 September 1953) was an Austrian screenwriter and film director, known for his work in Germany, the UK and the US. Early career Viertel was born in Vienna, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but later ...
; Barkas had shot the African location footage and battle scenes for the film a year prior * ''The Great Barrier (film), The Great Barrier'', 1937, (uncredited) with
Milton Rosmer Milton Rosmer (4 November 1881 – 7 December 1971) was a British actor, film director and screenwriter. He made his screen debut in '' The Mystery of a Hansom Cab'' (1915) and continued to act in theatre, film and television until 1956. I ...
* ''
King Solomon's Mines ''King Solomon's Mines'' (1885) is a popular novel by the English Victorian adventure writer and fabulist Sir H. Rider Haggard. It tells of a search of an unexplored region of Africa by a group of adventurers led by Allan Quatermain for the ...
'', 1937, directed by Robert Stevenson; Barkas directed the African exteriors * ''Rogue's March (film), Rogue's March'', 1953; directed by Allan Davis (1913-2001), Allan Davis, but featuring 15 minutes of second unit footage shot in India by Barkas in January–February-March 1935 in film, 1935 (prior to shooting his ''Rhodes of Africa'' footage) for an unproduced film version of ''Soldiers Three (film), Soldiers Three'' for Gaumont British


Notes


References


Sources

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External links


British Film Institute: Geoffrey Barkas

Colonial Film: Moving Images of the
British Empire. Palaver: A Romance of Northern Nigeria]
IMDb: Geoffrey Barkas

British Newspaper Archive: Geoffrey Barkas
(behind paywall) {{DEFAULTSORT:Barkas, Geoffrey 1896 births 1979 deaths Military personnel from Surrey British filmmakers British film directors English filmmakers English film directors Camoufleurs Royal Engineers officers Recipients of the Military Cross British Army personnel of World War I British Army personnel of World War II