Jack Lee (film director)

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Jack Lee
Born
Wilfred John Raymond Lee

(1913-01-27)27 January 1913
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Occupations
  • Film director
  • screenwriter
  • editor
  • producer
FamilyLaurie Lee (brother)

Wilfred John Raymond Lee (27 January 1913 – 15 October 2002) was a British film director, screenwriter, editor, and producer, who directed a number of postwar films on location in Asia and Australia for The Rank Organisation.

Biography

Early life

Lee was born in the village of

Stroud, Gloucestershire, the eldest brother of Laurie Lee, author of Cider with Rosie. In childhood, the two boys were close but fell out in later life. Natural rivals, Jack gained a place at the grammar school (Marling School in Stroud); Laurie failed to do so, attending Stroud Central School for Boys.[1]

Career

He directed and co-wrote the screenplay of the pioneering motorcycle speedway film Once a Jolly Swagman (1949) which starred Dirk Bogarde.

Among Jack Lee's other films are

Rolf Boldrewood
".

During the Australian feature film renaissance ushered in with Picnic at Hanging Rock, he served as chairman (from 1976 to 1981) of the South Australian Film Corporation,[4] which started the careers of Bruce Beresford and Peter Weir.

Personal life

Lee was originally engaged to be married to Hilda Lee (no relation) but the wedding was called off weeks before it was due to happen. Lee was married twice, in 1946 to the British casting director Nora Francisca Blackburne (21 April 1914 – 7 July 2009), following her divorce from Adam Alexander Dawson.[5] They had two children before divorcing.[citation needed]

In 1963, he married Isabel Kidman who was an heiress to the Kidman cattle dynasty. She had two children from her previous marriage. She was not allowed to take them out of the country, so he settled in Australia, and although he returned often to Britain, he spent the rest of his life there, dying in Sydney, New South Wales, in October 2002.[citation needed]

References

  1. required.)
  2. ^ Profile Archived 24 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, radiotimes.com; accessed 16 May 2016.
  3. ^ The Making of an Australian Film The Age, 16 June 1976
  4. ^ "The way we were: my life in pictures", in The Times dated 23 August 2005

External links