Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Philip Saville

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Philip Saville


Role
  
Television Director

Philip Saville httpsemmapeelpantsfileswordpresscom201102

Spouse
  
Jane Arden (m. ?–1982), Nina Saville

Children
  
Sebastian Saville, Dominic Saville, Waldo Saville, Elizabeth Saville

Awards
  
British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series

Movies
  
The Gospel of John, Metroland, Family Pictures, Oedipus the King, Count Dracula

Similar People
  
Diana Rigg, Stuart Bunce, Jane Arden, Lee Ross, Sue Miller

more Philip Saville...


Philip Saville (sometimes credited as Philip Savile, 28 October 1930 – 22 December 2016) was a British television and film director, screenwriter and former actor whose career lasted half a century. The British Film Institute's Screenonline website has described Saville as "one of Britain's most prolific and pioneering television and film directors".

Contents

Philip Saville iphone36077942jpg

The Gospel of John • Official HD Movie • English


Early life

Philip Saville httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons77

Saville was born in London in 1930. He studied science at London University and trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA). His National Service in the Royal Corps of Signals was ended by his discharge after he sustained a serious knee injury involving an armoured vehicle.

Career

Philip Saville Philip Saville obituary Television radio The Guardian

From the 1950s, Saville worked in television as a director working on plays such as Harold Pinter's A Night Out (1960) for ABC's Armchair Theatre anthology series. He directed over 40 plays for Armchair Theatre and helped pioneer the innovative visual style it became known for, including rapid and intricate camera movements during the often live productions. The critic John Russell Taylor, however, wrote that Saville had submerged the romance "Duel for Love" (Armchair Theatre, 1961) "under intricate camerawork of exquisite beauty and complete irrelevance".

Philip Saville Philip Saville Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Saville also directed Madhouse on Castle Street (1963) for the BBC, an example "of his interest in psychological states and subjective viewpoints", according to Oliver Wake. The (now lost) production was the first acting appearance of the folk singer Bob Dylan, whom Saville had flown over specifically to take part in the play. Saville's production of Hamlet at Elsinore (1964) for the BBC pioneered the use of videotape for location recording. An anonymous reviewer in The Times wrote that Saville "while creating handsome pictures, did not allow the setting to distract him from the business of the play". He also worked on an episode of Out of the Unknown, a version of the E.M. Forster short story "The Machine Stops" (1966) in this period. This won the main prize at the 1967 Trieste international science fiction film festival.

Later career

Philip Saville Obituary Philip Saville Obituaries The Stage

Other significant programmes on which Saville worked include Boys from the Blackstuff (1982) for which Saville received a BAFTA to add to his earlier BAFTA for Hamlet at Elsinore, and The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (1986).

For the cinema, Saville directed The Fruit Machine (1988, released as Wonderland in the US), Metroland (1997) and The Gospel of John (2003).

He also directed a masterclass studio in London specialising in dramatic improvisation. Saville's documentary on Harold Pinter Pinter's Progress (2009) for Sundance international television channels and UK's Sky Arts features numerous interviews with associates of the Nobel Prize–winning playwright.

Personal life

Saville was married to the actress, film and theatre director Jane Arden from 1947; the couple had two sons, Sebastian and Dominic, but separated in the mid-1960s, although they did not divorce. Arden died in 1982. He also had a daughter, Elizabeth Saville from another relationship. In the 1960s, Saville, while married, had an affair with the artist Pauline Boty, whom he had met towards the end of her student days and who had worked for him. (Their affair is said to have inspired the movie Darling.) He also had an eight-year relationship with actress Diana Rigg in the same period.

From the 1960s onward, he lived in the former home of the artist Augustus John in St John's Wood, London. Philip Saville married his second wife, Nina Francis (née Zuckerman) in 1987 with whom he had a son Waldo Saville. His wife Nina was at his bedside when he died.

Filmography

  • 1948 A Piece of Cake
  • 1948 To the Public Danger
  • 1948 Penny and the Pownall Case (actor: Police Car Driver)
  • 1953 Murder at 3am (actor: Edward/Jim King)
  • 1953 The Straw Man (actor: Link Hunter)
  • 1954 Bang! You're Dead (actor: Ben Jones)
  • 1954 The Night of the Full Moon (actor: Dale Merritt)
  • 1955 Contraband Spain (actor: Martin Scott)
  • 1957 The Great Van Robbery (actor: Carter)
  • 1957 The Betrayal (actor: Bartel)
  • 1958 On the Run (actor: Driscol)
  • 1958 Three Crooked Men (actor: Seppy)
  • 1959 An Honourable Murder (actor: Mark Anthony)
  • 1960 Armchair Theatre: A Night Out (television)
  • 1962 Armchair Theatre: Afternoon of a Nymph (television)
  • 1964 Hamlet (television), (director)
  • 1964 In Camera (television), (director/adaptation)
  • 1966 Stop the World, I Want to Get Off (director)
  • 1968 Oedipus the King (director/screenwriter)
  • 1969 The Best House in London, (director)
  • 1971 Secrets (director/screenwriter)
  • 1977 Count Dracula (director)
  • 1984 Those Glory, Glory Days (director)
  • 1985 Shadey (director)
  • 1986 The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (director)
  • 1987 Mandela (director)
  • 1988 The Fruit Machine (director, US: Wonderland)
  • 1989 Fellow Traveler (director)
  • 1990 Max and Helen (director)
  • 1990 Crash: The Mystery of Flight 1501 (director)
  • 1991 Angels (director)
  • 1991 The Cloning of Joanna May (director)
  • 1993 Family Pictures (director)
  • 1995 The Buccaneers (director, TV miniseries/serial)
  • 1997 Metroland (director)
  • 1998 Little White Lies (director)
  • 2000 My Uncle Silas (director)
  • 2002 The Biographer: The Secret Life of Princess Di (director)
  • 2003 Hans Christian Andersen: My Life as a Fairy Tale (director, film made for TV)
  • 2003 The Gospel of John (director)
  • References

    Philip Saville Wikipedia