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Paul Wilmshurst

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Occupation
  
Television Director

Name
  
Paul Wilmshurst

Role
  
Television Director


Paul Wilmshurst iamediaimdbcomimagesMMV5BMTcwODI0NTE3NV5BMl5

Full Name
  
Paul Dominic Wilmshurst

Born
  
15 December 1961 (age 62) (
1961-12-15
)
London, England

Education
  
Churchill College, Cambridge

Movies
  
Hiroshima: BBC History of World War II, Mob Law, Forgiven

Similar People
  
Lucy Cohu, Mike Tucker, Garry Cooper, Gareth Edwards, Ed Bishop

Bbc hiroshima paul wilmshurst interview


Paul Wilmshurst is a British television director. He has worked on three seasons of the Sky/Cinemax action-adventure series Strike Back and directed on the first series of David S. Goyer's historical fantasy series Da Vinci's Demons for StarZ and BBC America. He has received an International Emmy Award and two BAFTA nominations.

Contents

Paul Wilmshurst PAUL WILMSHURST PERSONAL WEBSITE

Education

Paul Wilmshurst Paul Wilmshurst Biography Television director United Kingdom

He attended The Leys School, studied English at Churchill College, Cambridge and took a post-graduate course in journalism at City University, London.

Career

After graduating, Wilmshurst started working in news and current affairs, then worked for a number of years as a researcher and director in formatted factual programmes, before persuading Channel 4 to send him to Las Vegas to make an authored documentary about a mafia lawyer. Mob Law was joint runner-up for the Joris Ivens Award at IDFA and won awards at the Las Vegas and San Francisco film festivals. He went on to make feature documentaries collaborating with novelist Luke Rhinehart and comedian Frank Skinner, before directing two separate year-long, three-part series for Channel 4: White Tribe (with Darcus Howe) and The Gambler (with Jonathan Rendall). He then wrote and directed a handful of dramadocs: about cocaine dealing; pseudocide; the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge; alcoholism in the workplace; and being kidnapped by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, telling the story of Chris Moon. Wilmshurst also wrote, produced and directed the 90-minute BBC dramatised documentary Hiroshima - shown in over 30 countries on the 60th anniversary of the bombing - which won an International Emmy for Best Documentary and a BAFTA for Best Visual Effects, shared between Gareth Edwards, Mike Tucker and Red Vision.

In November 2008 actress Lucy Cohu won an international Emmy award for Best Actress for her role in the true-life drama Forgiven. The drama was well reviewed at the time and was later listed as one of the 50 Best Television Programmes of the Decade in The Times: "32: Forgiven (2006) It is easy to condemn child abuse. It is much harder to try to understand it, to engage with the abuser and stop it from happening. Paul Wilmshurst’s harrowing drama with Lucy Cohu showed unbelievable courage." He also wrote and directed the CBBC miniseries Runaway, produced and directed the BAFTA-nominated children's series "Combat Kids", as well as directing episodes of long-running crime series Law & Order: UK, Silent Witness and Trial & Retribution.

References

Paul Wilmshurst Wikipedia