Sneha Girap (Editor)

Mick Gold

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Michael Gold

Nationality
  
UK


Name
  
Mick Gold

Role
  
Film-maker

Mick Gold wwwrocksbackpagescompublicimgwriters720jpg

Born
  
August 7, 1947 (age 76) (
1947-08-07
)
London, England

Alma mater
  
Sussex UniversityRoyal College of Art

Occupation
  
documentary film maker, photographer and journalist

Movies
  
Schiele in Prison, Death of Apartheid, Endgame in Ireland

Education
  
Royal College of Art, University of Sussex

Awards
  
News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Historical Programming - Programs

Nominations
  
British Academy Television Award for Best Current Affairs

Similar People
  
Norma Percy, Mick Audsley, Brian Lapping, Edward Petherbridge, David Suchet

Mick Gold (born Michael Gold, London, 7 August 1947) is a British documentary film maker, photographer and journalist.

Contents

Education

Gold studied English literature at Sussex University, followed by a degree in film and TV production at the Royal College of Art.

Work

From 1972 to 1978, Gold photographed and wrote about rock music for a variety of publications including Creem, Melody Maker, and Let It Rock. In 1976, he published Rock On the Road, a collection of photo-essays about rock music and its sub-cultural audiences. Contributors to the book included Simon Frith and John Pidgeon.

The Arts Council of Great Britain funded several arts documentaries directed by Gold, including Europe After the Rain (1978), a history of Dada and Surrealism, and Schiele in Prison (1980), which dramatised the prison diary of Viennese artist Egon Schiele.

Gold co-directed Hostage (1999), a series of three films for Channel Four about the hostage crisis in Lebanon from 1984 to 1991. The series won first prize at the 1999 Festival International du Film d'Histoire, Pessac.

Gold has produced and directed several history series for BBC2, including Watergate (1994), a five-hour series about the downfall of President Nixon which won a Primetime Emmy Award, and a duPont Columbia Award. Gold co-directed Death of Apartheid (US title: Mandela's Fight For Freedom) (1995), a three-hour history of how Nelson Mandela negotiated his way out of prison and into power as the first President of an ANC government of South Africa. The series was written by the South African journalist, Allister Sparks, and it was nominated for an NAACP Image Award in 1996. Endgame In Ireland (2001), won a Peabody Award for its "enlightening exploration of the tortuous complexities of international peace negotiations in Northern Ireland". Gold also produced and directed six episodes of the BBC2 art history series The Private Life of a Masterpiece, focusing on paintings by Velázquez, Goya, Delacroix, Degas, Dalí, and Rogier van der Weyden.

Gold directed four films for the Channel 4 series Dispatches about UK political developments, written and presented by journalist Andrew Rawnsley, ending with A Year Inside Number 10. In 2007, Gold produced and directed a controversial documentary about US foreign policy presented by Richard Perle, "The Case for War", which was broadcast by PBS as part of the series America at a Crossroads. In 2013, Gold produced and directed a series on the history of the blues, Blues America, which was broadcast on BBC Four. In 2016, Gold produced and directed The Arc of History, the fourth film in the series Inside Obama's White House, produced by Brook Lapping for BBC2.

Awards

  • 2002, nominated, BAFTA Awards, Best current affairs, for Endgame in Ireland.
  • 1995, won, Emmy awards, Outstanding Historical Programming, for Watergate
  • References

    Mick Gold Wikipedia