词条 | Paul Cox (director) |
释义 |
| name = Paul Cox |image = | birth_name = Paulus Henrique Benedictus Cox | birth_date = {{birth date|1940|4|16|df=y}} | birth_place = Venlo, Netherlands | death_date = {{death date and age|2016|6|18|1940|4|16|df=y}} | occupation = Film director photographer writer | website = |imagesize = 150px | spouse = | yearsactive =1964-2015 }}Paulus Henrique Benedictus Cox (16 April 1940{{snd}}18 June 2016) as Paul Cox, was a Dutch-Australian filmmaker, who has been recognized as "Australia's most prolific film auteur".[1] "Cox's delicate films have been pockmarked with life's uncertainty. Loneliness within relationships is a staple of the Cox oeuvre, too". David Wenham states, "There is no one like Cox.... He is unique, and we need him, and people like him.... He is completely an auteur, because everything you see on the screen, and hear, has got Paul's fingerprints all over it."[1] Early lifeCox was born in Venlo, Limburg, the Netherlands,[2] the son of Else (née Kuminack), a native of Germany, and Wim Cox, a documentary film producer.[3][4] CareerCox worked on the 1964 BBC TV docudrama, Culloden.[6] Cox emigrated to Australia in 1965, by which time he had already established a reputation as a photographer.[5] In the late 1960s Cox travelled to Papua New Guinea with Ulli Beier whose interest was indigenous poetry, drama and creative writing. In the resulting book[6] of Cox’s photographs of village life were set to poems written by Beier’s students.[7] Beier and Cox later published a book on Mirka Mora[8] His teaching at Prahran College of Advanced Education in the 1970s with Athol Shmith and John Cato[9] influenced a number of photographers and filmmakers, including Carol Jerrems.[10] Cox collaborated with a number of screenwriters including John Clarke and Bob Ellis. He published Reflections: An Autobiographical Journey in 1998.[11] His film-essay The Remarkable Mr. Kaye (2005) is a portrait of his ill friend, the actor Norman Kaye, who appeared in numerous Cox films, such as Lonely Hearts (1982) and Man of Flowers (1983).[2] In 2006 he became the Patron of the Byron Bay Film Festival.[12] On 26 December 2009 he received a liver transplant. David Bradbury's 2012 documentary, On Borrowed Time, tells this story against the backdrop of his life and work, through interviews with Cox and his friends and colleagues.[13] Cox has also written a memoir, Tales from the Cancer Ward.[14] Rosie Igusti, a fellow transplant recipient he met there, later became his partner.[15] Cox's last film Force of Destiny, with David Wenham and Indian actress Shahana Goswami, was released in July 2015. Wenham plays a sculptor and transplant patient who falls in love with a patient he meets in the hospital ward.[1] Cox attended the American premier of Force of Destiny at the Ebertfest Film Festival in Chicago, having travelled with Rosie via stops in Bangkok, Dubai, and Frankfurt in order to avert the effects of travel on their delicate health. He had been invited to speak after the screening, and did so.[16][17] Cox was named in Phillip Adams' List of 100 National Treasures in April 2015.[18] On 18 June 2016, he died at the age of 76.[19] PhotographyPhotography books
Selected exhibitions
FilmographyFeatures
Shorts
Documentaries
TV
Awards
References1. ^1 2 {{cite web|last1=Dow|first1=Steve|title=Paul Cox: Force Of Life|url=http://issuu.com/theweeklyreview.com.au/docs/bay-bayside-20150415-iss/c/su9cbf0|website=The Weekly Review|date=25 April 2015}} 2. ^1 2 [https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/cinema-has-been-abused-horrifically/article25470629/ " Cinema has been 'abused horrifically'"]. Matthew Hays and Martin Siberok, The Globe and Mail, Sep. 04, 2000 3. ^"Paul Cox Biography (1940-)", Film Reference. 4. ^"Cactus (1986)", Australian Screen. 5. ^Tom Ryan, "Making Silence Speak: Interview with Paul Cox", Cinema Papers, July 1977 pp. 16–19, 94. 6. ^Cox, Paul, & Ulli Beier (1971). Home of Man: the people of New Guinea. Thomas Nelson (Australia), Melbourne 7. ^Stephen Zagala (2012), "Photographing the Pacific" in S. Dupont (2012), Raskols (Postcards from the Rim), Goulburn Gallery, Goulburn Regional Gallery, 20 September - 20 October. 8. ^Beier, Ulli, & Paul Cox (1980). Mirka. South Melbourne, Victoria: Macmillan. 9. ^About whom Cox co-edited a biography {{Citation |author1=Cox, Paul (ed.) | author2=Gracey, Bryan (ed.) | title=John Cato: Retrospective | publication-date=2013 |location=Melbourne|publisher=Victoria Wilkinson Publishing | isbn=978-1-922178-09-1 }} 10. ^King, Natalie, 1966- & Heide Museum of Modern Art (2010). Up Close: Carol Jerrems with Larry Clark, Nan Goldin and William Yang. Heide Museum of Modern Art: Schwartz Media, Melbourne. 11. ^{{Citation | author1=Cox, Paul | author2=Cox, Paul, 1941 |title=Reflections: An autobiographical journey | publication-date=1998 | publisher=Currency Press | isbn=978-0-86819-549-0 }} 12. ^"About Byron Bay Film Festival". 13. ^Margaret Burin and Joanne Shoebridge, "On borrowed time: David Bradbury shares intimate portrait of friend and filmmaker", ABC, 13 June, 2013. 14. ^{{Citation | author1=Cox, Paul | title=Tales from the Cancer Ward | publication-date=2011 | publisher=Transit Lounge | isbn=978-0-9808462-3-2 }} 15. ^Philippa Hawker, "Comebacks", The Age, 16 April 2011, Life&Style, p. 12. 16. ^Tinkering: Paul Cox, John Clarke (satirist), 25/06/2016, accessed 2017-04-11 17. ^1 Comedian John Clarke on his friend film-maker Paul Cox, John Clarke (satirist), 25/06/2016, accessed 2017-04-11 18. ^{{cite web|last1=Adams|first1=Phillip|title=National Living Treasures-I've Got Another List|url=http://m.theaustralian.com.au/life/weekend-australian-magazine/national-living-treasures-ive-got-another-list/story-e6frg8h6-1227318638282|website=The Australian|accessdate=25 April 2015}} 19. ^[https://www.theguardian.com/film/2016/jun/19/paul-cox-australian-film-maker-and-frequent-collaborator-with-david-wenham-dies-age-76 "Paul Cox, Australian film maker and frequent collaborator with David Wenham, dies age 76"], The Guardian, 19 June 2016. 20. ^http://marsgallery.com.au/paul-cox-exhibition/ 21. ^{{cite web|title= 1991 Human Rights Medal and Awards |publisher= Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission |url= http://www.hreoc.gov.au/hr_awards/1991.html |accessdate= 2007-08-11}} 22. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.berlinale.de/en/archiv/jahresarchive/1994/02_programm_1994/02_Programm_1994.html |title=Berlinale: 1994 Programme |accessdate=2011-06-12 |work=berlinale.de}} External links
12 : 1940 births|2016 deaths|Australian film directors|Dutch emigrants to Australia|Dutch people of German descent|Australian people of German descent|Dutch photographers|English-language film directors|Place of death missing|Film directors from Melbourne|People from Venlo|Organ transplant recipients |
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