Cherry Duyns praat over samenwerken, het filmscript en het draaien. …
Destijds uitgezonden in het radio documentaire programma Damokles (KRO/NCRV, 1998). …
(18 July 1921 – 23 March 2011) was a documentary film director and one of the pioneers of Direct Cinema and Cinéma vérité.
Leacock was born in London on 18 July 1921. Leacock grew up on his father’s banana plantation in the Canary Islands till shipped off to boarding schools in England at the age of eight. He had no way of telling his schoolmates what it was like to live in the Canary Islands. He took up photography with a glass plate camera, built a darkroom and developed his pictures, but was not satisfied. At age 11 he was shown a silent film Turk-Sib about the building of the Trans-Siberian Railway. He was stunned, and said to himself “All I need is a cine-camera and I can make a film that shows you what it is like to be there”. Aged 14, he made Canary Bananas (10 min. 16mm, silent) scripted, directed, filmed and edited by him. It tells you all you need to know about growing bananas but did not, in his opinion, give you “the feeling of being there”. He was educated at Dartington Hall School from 1934-38, alongside Robert Flaherty’s daughters, and where David Lack (Life of the Robin) taught biology.
Having filmed in the Canary Islands and then in the Galapagos Islands (1938-9) for ornithologist David Lack’s expedition, he moved to the USA and majored in Physics at Harvard in order to master the technology of filmmaking. Meanwhile he worked as cameraman and assistant editor on other peoples films, notably To Hear Your Banjo Play (1941), filming a folk music festival atop a mountain in south Virginia where there was no electricity, with a 35mm studio camera and 35mm optical film sound recorder using batteries in a large truck, a rare achievement at that time. Three years as a combat photographer in Burma and China followed by 14 months as cameraman on Robert Flaherty’s Louisiana Story, an extraordinary experience of immense value to his future work. Many relatively conventional jobs followed, until 1954. He was then asked to make a reportage on a traveling tent theater in Missouri: the first film that he wrote, directed, photographed and edited himself, since Canary Bananas. This film, Toby and the Tall Corn, went on the American cultural TV program, Omnibus, in prime time and brought him into contact with Robert Drew, an editor at LIFE magazine in search for a less verbal approach to television reportage. Another new contact, Roger Tilton wanted to film an evening of people dancing to Dixieland music spontaneously. Leacock filmed Jazz Dance for him, using hand held combat techniques. The search for high quality, mobile, synchronous equipment to facilitate observation was ongoing. By 1960 this had been achieved, and resulted in Robert Drew’s film Primary, an intimate observation of a primary election with Democratic hopefuls John F. Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey in Wisconsin. A number of films followed made by Drew, Pennebaker, Maysles and their associates. But the US networks were not impressed. In France at the Cinémathèque Française, when Drew and Leacock screened Primary and On the Pole, Henri Langlois introduced the films as “perhaps the most important documentaries since the brothers Lumiere”. After the screening, a monk in robes came up to them and said, “You have invented a new form. Now you must invent a new grammar!” When Drew went to work for ABC-TV, Leacock Pennebaker was formed and produced Happy Mother’s Day, Don’t Look Back, Monterey Pop, A Stravinsky Portrait and many others ending with the remnants of Jean-Luc Godard’s One A.M. – One P.M. (1972).
In 1968 he was invited to join Ed Pincus creating a new, small film school at MIT. Since 16mm filming was becoming so expensive, his group developed super-8 film synch equipment with modified mass-produced cameras that were much cheaper. Many filmmakers emerged from this program, including Ross McElway (Sherman’s March), among others.
In 1989 he retired and moved to Paris, where he met Valerie Lalonde and, together, they made Les Oeufs a la Coque de Richard Leacock (84 minutes), the first major film shot with a tiny Video-8 Handycam to be broadcast on prime-time television in France. Leacock and Lalonde continued making films of their own choice without the pressures of TV producers.
Leacock died on 23 March 2011 at age the age of 89 in Paris.