Don Boyd

Don Boyd
Born Donald William Robertson Boyd
(1948-08-11) 11 August 1948
Nairn, Scotland
Years active 1974 -
Spouse(s) Hilary
Children Amanda, Clare, Kate
Awards Premio Cultura Alava, Vitoria International Film festival 2002

Donald William Robertson "Don" Boyd Hon D.Litt (Exeter) (born 11 August 1948 in Nairn, Scotland) is a Scottish film director, producer, screenwriter and novelist. He is a Governor of the London Film School and a Visiting Professor in Film at Exeter University.[1][2][3]

Biography

Boyd was brought up by his Scottish father and Russian mother in Hong Kong, Uganda and Kenya and educated at the noted Scottish public school Loretto School in Musselburgh, East Lothian.[4] After leaving school in 1965 he trained as an accountant in Edinburgh before enrolling in the London Film School in 1968. He graduated in 1970 and began his career working for the BBC television series Tomorrow's World.[5] After two years directing commercials for the likes of Coca Cola, Shell and Chrysler, he directed his first feature film, Intimate Reflections, which premiered at the London Film Festival in 1975.[6] This was followed by East of Elephant Rock starring John Hurt, which also premiered at the London Film Festival but gathered mainly hostile reviews.[7]

In 1977 Boyd established his own production company, Boyd's Co., which over the next decade produced a series of British films including Alan Clarke's Scum, Derek Jarman's The Tempest, Lindsay Anderson's Look Back in Anger and Julien Temple's The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle. During this time his company featured the work of such actors, writers, directors, producers, cinematographers and musicians as John Hurt, Ray Winstone, Dame Helen Mirren, Tilda Swinton, Stephen Fry, Michael Tolkin, Jeremy Thomas, Sarah Radclyffe, Bridget Fonda, Kathy Burke, The Edge, and The Sex Pistols.

In 1978 Boyd collaborated on and helped finance Ron Peck's and Paul Hallam's 1978 Nighthawks, described by Time Out as "Britain's first committed gay feature film", which attracted controversy in the UK at the time prompting Channel 4 to delay its broadcast until 1984.[7][8]

Many of Boyd's films at this time, including Scum, Sweet William, Derek Jarman's The Tempest and later Honky Tonk Freeway, attracted investors because their financing incorporated tax avoidance schemes devised by his business partner and close friend the tax accountant (also arts patron and benefactor) Roy Tucker.[7] These schemes were funded by the Rossminster banking group.[9][10] Rossminster attracted adverse media attention, especially from the noted Sunday Times financial journalist Lorana Sullivan, and was discussed in parliament[11][12]

At least £100 million in lost taxes is involved. According to Granada's World in Action programme, it could be as much as £1,000 million - equal to more than a penny on income tax for the rest of us.

In 1981 The House of Lords effectively ruled many of Tucker's schemes invalid leaving most of Rossminster's customers, including Boyd's investors, unable to garner any tax relief from his schemes after 1975.[9] The total potential loss to the exchequer before Rossminster's activities were curtailed was eventually estimated at £362 million while the tax eventually returned (with interest) estimated at around £500 million.[9]

Tax avoidance schemes had been commonly used for years by celebrities in the entertainment world to protect their income but Tucker and Boyd were the first to provide them to finance films.[9] The film critic and historian Alexander Walker commented that financing films in such ways became a common practice at the time but suggested that ultimately it was self-defeating because the government of the day might well have concluded that if the British film industry was so good at inventing financial self-help of this sort then it had no need of government assistance.[7] Indeed the 1985 Films Act, pushed through parliament despite all-party protest by Norman Lamont, fellow alumnus of Boyd's at Loretto School, dismantled all subsidies to the British film industry.[7][13]

Boyd moved to Hollywood in the early 1980s for a two-year period, where he worked at both Paramount Pictures and Universal Studios and produced John Schlesinger's 1981 $24 million commercial failure Honky Tonk Freeway. The film was based on an original idea of Boyd's and financed in part by his Rossminster associations.[7] Its eventual $11 million loss to its principal backer Thorn-EMI significantly impacted Thorn-EMI's subsequent fortunes and aspirations.[7][14]

Boyd returned to the UK in 1982 and attempted to resume his directorial career with Gossip, which was to be a satire on celebrity life in the early Thatcher years based on an original treatment by Frances Lynn. The production ran into financial difficulties and was shut down after just two weeks shooting.[15]

Dan North, a lecturer in Film in the Department of English at Exeter University, has chronicled Gossip in Sights Unseen: Unfinished British Films edited by North.[15] Stephen Fry was given his first job in film by Boyd as a script rewriter for Gossip and its story is recounted by him in The Fry Chronicles: An Autobiography.[16][17] Fry is supportive of Boyd in his book

The film collapsed ... The upshot was that poor Don, one of the kindest and best of men, was effectively blacklisted and prevented from participating in film production for three years. Even that didn't end it, for once Don managed to start up again the unions insisted he continue to pay over what negligible producing fees he did earn. By 1992 he was financially wiped out ...

In 1987 Boyd produced the multi-directorial opera film Aria which featured segments by Robert Altman, Bruce Beresford, Bill Bryden, Jean-Luc Godard, Derek Jarman, Franc Roddam, Nicolas Roeg, Ken Russell, Charles Sturridge and Julien Temple. It was in competition for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1987.

After producing Derek Jarman's War Requiem, for the BBC in 1988, which was Laurence Olivier's last film, Boyd returned to his directorial career. He directed low budget independent feature films such as Twenty-One, written by Zoë Heller and featuring Patsy Kensit as female lead; Kleptomania, co-scripted by Christa Lang, the widow of Samuel Fuller; Lucia, in which his daughter Amanda had the lead role; and My Kingdom which featured Richard Harris in his last leading role. He further directed over twenty television documentaries including a BAFTA and Prix Italia nominated film featuring the comedian Ruby Wax in a documentary about Imelda Marcos; Andrew and Jeremy Get Married, a documentary film portrait of a commitment ceremony which had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2004 and was broadcast on the BBC as part of their Storyville documentary series; Full Frontal in Flip Flops, a documentary film portrait of naturism for ITV; and Donald and Luba: A Family Movie, an 'intimate family documentary' in which he and his 22-year-old filmmaker daughter Kate chronicled his parents' failed marriage (inter alia suggesting Boyd's father was a British spy during the Mau-Mau rebellion) and which was filmed on location in Harbin, Hong Kong, Jinja, Kiev, London, Nairobi and Shanghai for the BBC.[18][19][20]

The National Film Theatre presented a season of his films in 1982 culminating in a Guardian Lecture with the film critic Derek Malcolm.[21]

In 2001 Boyd claimed he had been sexually abused by a teacher while a student at Loretto School in the 1960s.[4] The teacher was charged on the basis of other allegations that emerged but the case was later dropped.[22][23][24]

The University of Exeter awarded him an honorary Doctor of Letters (DLitt) in 2009.[25] Previously he had been an Honorary Visiting Professor [26] in the College of Humanities between 2005 and 2015. Boyd had earlier donated his personal and business papers documenting his 30 year film career at that point to the university's Centre for Interdisciplinary Research (CIR).[25][27] He has presented a series of In Conversation events at the CIR with prominent cultural figures such as Mike Leigh and the Director-General of the BBC, Mark Thompson, lectures at least three times annually and was instrumental in the University's academic relationship with the London Film School.

Boyd's internet venture, Hibrow, 'the world’s first independent Internet platform for freshly created content curated and produced by established visual and performing arts', went 'live' on 20 December 2011. It has instigated, produced and published 'free to view' online over 150 hours of arts programming with work involving numerous organisations and luminaries in the arts arenas including the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, the Washington National Gallery of Art, the Tate St Ives, the Traverse Theatre, the British Library, the Klin Tchaikovsky Museum, the Barbican Cinema, the ICA, World Book Night, the Folio Society, Marrakech Biennale, and NODA. Featured in over 400 professionally produced videos is the work and contributions of scores of internationally recognised authors, actors, conductors, artists, directors, dancers, choreographers, poets, singers, musicians and curators. Between 2009 and 2015, Boyd has been personally responsible for the curation, production and presentation of this work funded by private investors and by the Arts Council of England.

Alexander Walker referred to him as 'the Boyd Wonder' in his 1985 book National Heroes: British Cinema in the 70's and 80's while Boyd describes himself in the same text as 'a director-orientated audience-conscious film-marketing editor'.[7] Nevertheless, despite his evident prominence, his films have yet to have the commercial success of some his contemporaries while international critical acclaim has thus far proved equally elusive.[21][28] His last feature film My Kingdom, co-scripted with Nick Davies and drawing on both their researches into the London and Liverpool criminal underworld (which in Boyd's case included the Kray bothers), brought him into conflict with its principal lead Richard Harris, who wanted to rewrite the script.[29][30] The film subsequently received mixed reviews while generally acknowledging a fine performance from Harris who was nominated for a British Independent Film Award.[31][32] Similarly Twenty-One earned Patsy Kensit an Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead nomination but itself received mixed press reviews in the UK (although it was well received at its Sundance premiere earning Boyd a nomination).[33]

Writing

Boyd contributes to The Guardian newspaper, Time Out and The Observer where his personal opinions as an informed insider have been balanced publicly with his championship of indigenous British cinema.[34]

In 2006, in his role as the guest editor of the Directors Guild of Great Britain's annual magazine Direct, he persuaded 22 film-makers including Stephen Frears, Hanif Kureishi, Terence Davies and Charles Dance to contribute articles and interviews to help consolidate the profile and public status of the unique pool of directorial talent in the United Kingdom.

Boyd's first novel Margot's Secrets, a psychological thriller set in Barcelona about a therapist forced to confront her own adulterous secret following a series of violent ritualistic murders involving her clients, was published in 2010.[35] His wife Hilary, a granddaughter of the late Frederick Marquis, 1st Earl of Woolton, also has a forthcoming debut novel Thursdays in the Park due 2011, described by her publisher as 'a beautiful and insightful first novel written by an author who has the perfect experience to write it'.[36]

Filmography

Directed

Produced

References

  1. Staff and Governors (London Film School)
  2. Archives Hub: Don Boyd papers (Bill Douglas Centre, Exeter University)
  3. Don Boyd LinkedIn profile
  4. 1 2 The Observer Life magazine
  5. Information on LFS Graduates
  6. London Film Festival 1975
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Walker, Alexander (September 2005) [1985]. National Heroes: British Cinema in the 70's and 80's. Orion. ISBN 0-7528-5707-X.
  8. Nighthawks (1978) - IMDb
  9. 1 2 3 4 Tutt, Nigel (1985). Tax Raiders: The Rossminster Affair. London: Financial Training Publications. ISBN 0-906322-76-6.
  10. "The Rossminster Affair". World In Action. 1980. Granada.
  11. Lorana Sullivan (18 November 1979). "The Multi-Million Pound Tax Dodge". The Sunday Times.
  12. Mr. Barron quoting The Daily Mirror (July 11, 1984). http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1984/jul/11/tax-avoidance-and-evasion#column_1190 |chapter-url= missing title (help). Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. col. 1190.
  13. "Films Act 1985". www.legislation.gov.uk. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  14. "Greatest Box-Office Bombs, Disasters and Film Flops". Filmsite.org. Retrieved 21 March 2011.
  15. 1 2 Dan North, ed. (January 2008). Sights Unseen: Unfinished British Films. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 1-84718-426-X.
  16. Fry, Stephen (September 2010). The Fry Chronicles: An Autobiography. Michael Joseph. ISBN 0-7181-5483-5.
  17. Chronicling Stephen Fry’s film career
  18. BBC - Storyville - Andrew and Jeremy Get Married
  19. A day in the life of.. Film director Don Boyd
  20. Donald and Luba: A Family Movie
  21. 1 2 screenonline
  22. Teacher, 79, charged with sexual offences against two boys, then aged 11 and 15, which allegedly took place 40 years ago when he taught at Loretto School.
  23. Sexually abused during his time at Loretto School, Don Boyd returns to Edinburgh and launches a book incorporating his abuse
  24. 'I am in total shock. It feels as if I am being hung, drawn, and quartered' Retired teacher hit by abuse allegations shuts door to Herald inquiries
  25. 1 2 University of Exeter: Honorary Graduates
  26. Honorary Appointments: University of Exeter
  27. Bill Douglas Centre Archives
  28. RottenTomatoes: Don Boyd
  29. Shooting? That was too good for Billy...
  30. The directors: Don Boyd on directing Richard Harris
  31. My Kingdom (2001) at Rotten Tomatoes
  32. British Independent Film Awards 2002
  33. Twenty-One (1991) - IMDb
  34. Guardian awards article
  35. Margot's Secrets
  36. Thursdays in the Park

External links

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