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Nigel Randell Evans

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Name
  
Nigel Evans

Grandparents
  
Percy Evans

Siblings
  
Judith Evans

Died
  
2014

Role
  
Film-maker


Movies
  
Silent Minority, The Skin Horse

Parents
  
Pauline Evans, Donald Randell Evans

People also search for
  
Donald Randell Evans, John Samson, Nabil Shaban, Judith Evans, Ricki Green, Percy Evans

Nigel Randell Evans (often credited simply as Nigel Evans) (born 1943-2014) was a British author, campaigner for people with disabilities and film maker, with over 40 social documentaries to his credit, including Walter the feature film screened on the inaugural night of the UK’s Channel 4.

Contents

Biography

Nigel Randell Evans was the eldest son of Air Chief Marshal Sir Donald Randell Evans (1912-1975) and Pauline Evans.

In 1973 he was awarded a Churchill Fellowship to explore new approaches to raising public awareness to the plight of marginalised people. As a result he founded a charity One-to-One that aspired to break the marginalisation of people in mental hospitals. His campaigning work with people with disabilities has been a regular theme in his film making since the start of his career at the beginning of the 1970s. He has subsequently made over 40 social documentaries including Silent Minority (1981) which received national attention in the UK with its exposure of the neglect and abuse of patients in British mental hospitals. When Channel 4 was launched in 1982, as the fourth national TV service in the UK, joining the two public BBC channels and commercial network ITV, his film ‘Walter’, directed by Stephen Frears and starring Ian McKellen, was the feature film on its inaugural night. His 1983 film, The Skin Horse, a film essay exploring the sexual and emotional needs of people with a disability, won Channel 4 its first Royal Television Society Award. The film's other awards include the George Foster Peabody Broadcasting Award from the University of Georgia. He was commissioned by Channel Four to make its first documentary drama in sign language, Pictures in the Mind, in 1987,. In 1995 Evans was asked to make the BBC's contribution to World Aids Day. The resulting film, "The Age of Innocence", was reviewed in the Times as "the best programme yet made about Aids in this country". He marked his retirement from television in 1996 with a celebration of life for the over sixties, Grey Sex

After two decades of film making, he then qualified as a psycho-geriatric social worker in the mid 1990s and practiced in West London.

His first book, The White Headhunter, an historical study of castaway James Renton in the Pacific's Solomon Islands, was published in 2003 under the name Nigel Randell. He published his second Pacific book, Boys from the Sky – the curious genesis of the world’s first ethnography, also as Nigel Randell, in 2013.

Evans retired to the Pacific island of Tonga.

Selected filmography

  • 1975 Seeds of a New Life. British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
  • 1977 Dismantling a Dream. Independent Television (ITV)
  • 1978 Memories of Violence ITV
  • 1980 We're Outsiders Now. ITV
  • 1981 Silent minority ITV
  • 1982 Walter, Channel 4 (Ch4)
  • 1983 The Skin Horse Ch4
  • 1984 Taking the Lid Off ITV
  • 1986 In the Name of Charity ITV
  • 1986 The Madness Museum Ch4
  • 1987 Pictures in the Mind Ch4
  • 1987 Borderland ITV
  • 1988 Monsters and Rainbows BBC
  • 1989 Catching Alight Ch4
  • 1990 The Fifth Gospel BBC
  • 1990 The African King Ch4
  • 1991 Fantastic Invasion BBC
  • 1992 Cowboys in the South Pacific BBC
  • 1992 A Different Hand Ch4
  • 1993 Excuse Me for Living Ch4
  • 1994 The Widowmakers Ch4
  • 1995 The End of Innocence BBC
  • 1996 Grey Sex BBC
  • Non fiction books (published under the name Nigel Randell):

  • The White Headhunter. Constable /Carroll & Graf, New York 2003 ISBN 978-0786714599
  • Boy from the Sky – the curious genesis of the world’s first ethnography. Thistle Press. Bellevue 2013. ISBN 978-1909609112
  • References

    Nigel Randell Evans Wikipedia