Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

David Perlov

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Name
  
David Perlov

Role
  
Filmmaker


Ex-spouse
  
Mira Perlov

David Perlov In Jerusalem 50 Annyversary IYMS


Died
  
December 13, 2003, Tel Aviv, Israel

Movies
  
Footsteps in Jerusalem, Memories of the Eichmann Trial, The Pill, Yoman

Similar People
  
Nadav Lapid, Nisim Aloni, Boaz Frankel, Yossi Banai

Children
  
Yael Perlov, Neomi Perlov

David perlov israeli documentary filmmaker


David Perlov (Hebrew: דוד פרלוב) (born June 9, 1930 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; died December 13, 2003 in Tel-Aviv, Israel) was an Israeli documentary filmmaker.

Contents

David Perlov In Jerusalem 50 Annyversary IYMS

Diary david perlov


Biography

David Perlov perlov2jpg

David Perlov was born in Rio de Janeiro and grew up in Belo Horizonte. At the age of 10, he went to live with his grandfather in São Paulo. At the age of 22, he moved to Paris and worked as a projectionist for the newly established Cinematheque. In 1957, he made his first short film, Tante chinoise (Old Aunt China), based on drawings of a 12-year-old girl of the French provincial bourgeoisie of 1890 which he found in the cellar of the Paris house in which he was living. In 1958, Perlov immigrated to Israel, settling with his wife on Kibbutz Bror Hayil. The couple had two daughters.

Film career

David Perlov perlovbiba1gif

In 1963, Perlov made a 33-minute documentary In Jerusalem (בירושלים, Be-Yerushalayim). This film came to be one of the most important films of Israeli documentary cinema. Although Perlov made two feature films by 1972 (The Pill and 42:6), his film proposals were repeatedly rejected by the Israel Broadcasting Authority and Israeli film board, which found his work too lyrical. In early 1973, Perlov bought a 16 mm camera and filmed his everyday life alongside dramatic events that took place in Israel at the time. He continued for 10 years until Channel 4 of British television expressed an interest in the project in 1983. The result was Perlov's work Diary (יומן). From 1973 Perlov taught in the department of film and television at Tel Aviv University.

Awards and recognition

David Perlov Diary David Perlov YouTube

In 1999, Perlov was awarded the Israel Prize for his contribution to cinema.

References

David Perlov Wikipedia