Alan Parker

Director

Popular As Alan William Parker

Birthday February 14, 1944

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Islington, London, England

DEATH DATE 2020-7-31, London, England (76 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#22257 Most Popular

1944

Sir Alan William Parker (14 February 1944 – 31 July 2020) was an English film director, screenwriter and producer.

His early career, beginning in his late teens, was spent as a copywriter and director of television advertisements.

After about ten years of filming adverts, many of which won awards for creativity, he began screenwriting and directing films.

Parker was known for using a wide range of filmmaking styles and working in differing genres.

Parker was born on 14 February 1944 into a working-class family in Islington, North London, the son of Elsie Ellen, a dressmaker, and William Leslie Parker, a house painter.

He grew up on a council estate of Islington, which always made it easy for him to remain "almost defiantly working-class in attitudes" said the British novelist and screenwriter Ray Connolly.

Parker said that although he had his share of fun growing up, he always felt he was studying for his secondary school exams, while his friends were out having a good time.

He had an "ordinary background" with no aspirations to become a film director, nor did anyone in his family have any desire to be involved in the film industry.

The closest he ever came, he said, to anything related to films was learning photography, a hobby inspired by his uncles: "... that early introduction to photography is something I remember."

Parker attended Dame Alice Owen's School, concentrating on science in his last year.

He left school when he was 18 to work in the advertising field, hoping that the advertising industry might be a good way to meet girls.

His first job was office boy in the post room of Ogilvy & Mather an advertising agency in London.

But more than anything, he said, he wanted to write, and would write essays and ads when he got home after work.

His colleagues also encouraged him to write, which soon led him to a position as a copywriter in the company.

Parker took jobs with different agencies over the next few years, having by then become proficient as a copywriter.

One such agency was Collett Dickenson Pearce in London, where he first met the future producers David Puttnam and Alan Marshall, both of whom would later produce many of his films.

1968

By 1968, Parker had moved from copywriting to successfully directing numerous television advertisements.

1970

In 1970, he joined Marshall to establish a company to make advertisements.

That company eventually became one of Britain's best commercial production houses, winning nearly every major national and international award open to it.

Among their award-winning adverts were the UK Cinzano vermouth advertisement (starring Joan Collins and Leonard Rossiter), and a Heineken advert which used 100 actors.

Parker credited his years writing and directing adverts for his later success as a film director: "Looking back, I came from a generation of filmmakers who couldn't have really started anywhere but commercials, because we had no film industry in the United Kingdom at the time. People like Ridley Scott, Tony Scott, Adrian Lyne, Hugh Hudson, and myself. So commercials proved to be incredibly important."

1971

Parker credited Puttnam with inspiring him and talking him into writing his first film script, Melody (1971).

After writing the screenplay for the Waris Hussein film Melody in 1971, Parker shot his first fictional film titled No Hard Feelings in 1973, for which he wrote the script.

The film is a bleak love story set against the Blitz in London during the Second World War, when the Luftwaffe bombed the city for 57 consecutive nights.

Parker was born during one of those bombing raids, and said "the baby in that [film] could well have been me".

With no feature film directing experience, he could not find financial backing, and decided to risk using his own money and funds from mortgaging his house to cover the cost.

1975

The BBC producer Mark Shivas had, in the interim, also contracted Parker to direct The Evacuees (1975), a Second World War story written by Jack Rosenthal which was shown as a Play for Today.

The work was based on true events which involved the evacuation of school children from central Manchester.

The Evacuees won a BAFTA for best TV drama and also an Emmy for best International Drama.

1976

He directed musicals, including Bugsy Malone (1976), Fame (1980), Pink Floyd – The Wall (1982), The Commitments (1991) and Evita (1996); true-story dramas, including Midnight Express (1978), Mississippi Burning (1988), Come See the Paradise (1990) and Angela's Ashes (1999); family dramas, including Shoot the Moon (1982), and horrors and thrillers including Angel Heart (1987) and The Life of David Gale (2003).

His films won nineteen BAFTA awards, ten Golden Globes and six Academy Awards.

The film impressed the BBC, which bought the film and showed it on television a few years later in 1976.

Parker next wrote and directed his first feature film, Bugsy Malone (1976), a parody of early American gangster films and American musicals, but with only child actors.

Parker's desire in making the film was to entertain both children and adults with a unique concept and style of film:

1984

His film Birdy was chosen by the National Board of Review as one of the Top Ten Films of 1984 and won the Grand Prix Spécial du Jury prize at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.

2000

In 2000, he received the Royal Photographic Society Lumière Award for major achievement in cinematography, video or animation.

2002

Parker was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his services to the British film industry and knighted in 2002.

He was active in both British cinema and American cinema, along with being a founding member of the Directors Guild of Great Britain and lecturing at various film schools.

2013

In 2013, he received the BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award, the highest honour the British Film Academy can give a filmmaker.

2015

Parker donated his personal archive to the British Film Institute's National Archive in 2015.