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Byron Kennedy

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Nationality
  
Australian

Name
  
Byron Kennedy


Byron Kennedy wwwmadmaxmoviescommadmaxcastandcrewbyronk

Born
  
18 August 1949
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Occupation
  
Film producer, cinematographer

Died
  
July 17, 1983, Warragamba Dam, Australia

Awards
  
AACTA Award for Best Sound, Australian Film Institute Jury Prize

Movies
  
Mad Max, Mad Max 2, The Last of the Knucklemen, The Office Picnic, Violence in the Cinema

Similar People
  
George Miller, Brian Hannant, Hugh Keays‑Byrne, David Eggby, Brian May

Nominations
  
AACTA Award for Best Film

Byron kennedy 1999 afi awards biography


Byron Eric Kennedy (18 August 1949 – 17 July 1983) was an Australian film producer known for the Mad Max series of films.

Contents

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Life and career

Kennedy was born in Melbourne. At the age of 18, he formed his own production company named "Warlok Films" and produced many amateur short films under this logo. In 1970, at the age of 21, he won The Kodak Trophy, Australia's Ten Best on Eight, for the short film "Hobson's Bay", a short documentary film about the Melbourne port suburb of Williamstown. This award enabled him to travel overseas and gain invaluable knowledge of the international film/television industry. Upon his return he embarked upon a television and film course at the University of NSW.

Kennedy met George Miller at the University of Melbourne in 1969. The first mini-film made by both was Violence in the Cinema, filmed in Yarraville, Melbourne. The film won international acclaim and this led to the formation of the new film company "Kennedy Miller", which was incorporated in 1975 with both George Miller and Byron Kennedy as co-directors. Their first major movie together was the international smash hit Mad Max (1979). This film set a record for the highest-grossing film relative to budget, a record which was only broken with the advent of The Blair Witch Project (1999). In 1982, Kennedy produced the film The Road Warrior, the sequel to Mad Max, which grossed over $100 million worldwide.

In 1983, at the age of 33, Kennedy was killed at Warragamba Dam in New South Wales, Australia, when the helicopter he was piloting crashed into a lake. Kennedy was seriously injured in the crash and died that night. In his honour, the Australian Film Institute, with George Miller as a panel member, established the Byron Kennedy Award. This award is bestowed upon those whose work is marked by their pursuit of excellence within the film and television industry and is sponsored by Kennedy Miller, Warner Bros., Village Roadshow, Greater Union, Cinemedia, and Steven Spielberg.

The film Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome is dedicated to Kennedy.

His original co-production company, Kennedy Miller, is now called Kennedy Miller Mitchell.

Motion pictures

  • Violence in the Cinema, Part 1 (1971)
  • The Last of the Knucklemen (1977)
  • Mad Max (1979)
  • Mad Max 2 (1981)
  • Mini series

  • The Dismissal (1983), a mini-series produced for Network 10 Australia
  • Bodyline (1984), a mini-series produced for Network 10 Australia
  • The Cowra Breakout (1985), a mini-series produced for Network 10 Australia
  • Vietnam (1987), a mini-series produced for Network 10 Australia
  • The Dirtwater Dynasty (1988), a mini-series produced for Network 10 Australia
  • Bangkok Hilton (1989), a mini-series produced for Network 10 Australia
  • References

    Byron Kennedy Wikipedia