• Source: Michael Relph
    • Michael Leighton George Relph (16 February 1915 – 30 September 2004) was an English film producer, art director, screenwriter and film director. He was the son of actor George Relph.


      Films


      Relph began his film career in 1933 as an assistant art director under Alfred Junge at Gaumont British then headed by Michael Balcon. In 1942, Relph began work at Ealing as chief art director, where his designs included the influential 1945 supernatural anthology Dead of Night.
      He worked mainly on Basil Dearden's films, and in 1949 was nominated for an Academy Award for art direction for his work on the Stewart Granger vehicle Saraband for Dead Lovers (1948).


      Theatre


      Michael Relph also designed for the theatre, particularly the West End in the 1940s, including The Doctor's Dilemma, A Month in the Country, and The Man Who Came to Dinner.


      Producer


      Relph is largely known as a film producer. He served as associate producer on the Ealing comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949); and had a significant 20-year partnership with Basil Dearden beginning in 1949 and ending with Dearden's death in 1971. Their work included a series of social problem films examining issues such as racism (Pool of London and Sapphire), juvenile delinquency (Violent Playground), homosexuality (Victim), and religious intolerance (Life for Ruth). Relph believed that because film was "genuinely a mass medium," it therefore had "social and educative responsibilities as well as artistic ones." In their review of Life For Ruth, The New York Times wrote, "in avoiding blatant bias, mawkish sentimentality and theatrical flamboyance, it makes a statement that is dramatic, powerful and provocative."
      From 1972 to 1979, Relph was chairman of the British Film Institute's Production Board.
      Simultaneously he was the Chairman of the Film Production Association of Great Britain, and went on to be Head of Production for Boyd's Company in the 1980s, where he helped foster the emerging talents of Derek Jarman (The Tempest) and Julien Temple (The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle).


      Family


      His son, Simon Relph, was also a film producer and former chairman of BAFTA. His daughter, Emma Relph, had several parts on television and in the films as an actress during the 1980s. His stepson Mark Law is a former Fleet Street journalist and author of The Pyjama Game, A Journey Into Judo.


      Selected filmography



      Producer

      The Captive Heart (1946)
      Frieda (1947)
      Saraband for Dead Lovers (1948)
      Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949)
      Train of Events (1949)
      The Blue Lamp (1950)
      Cage of Gold (1950)
      Pool of London (1951)
      The Gentle Gunman (1952)
      The Square Ring (1953)
      The Rainbow Jacket (1954)
      Who Done It? (1956)
      The Smallest Show on Earth (1957)
      Violent Playground (1958)
      Sapphire (1959)
      The League Of Gentlemen (1960)
      Victim (1961)
      The Secret Partner (1961)
      All Night Long (1961)
      Life for Ruth (1962)
      The Mind Benders (1963)
      Scum (1979)
      An Unsuitable Job for a Woman (1982)
      Heavenly Pursuits (1986)
      Torrents of Spring (1989) (production consultant)
      Art director

      They Drive by Night (1938)
      Went the Day Well? (1942) (assistant)
      The Bells Go Down (1943)
      My Learned Friend (1943)
      Champagne Charlie (1944)
      My Learned Friend (1943)
      The Halfway House (1944)
      They Came to a City (1944)
      Dead of Night (1945)
      The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (1947)
      The Captive Heart (1946)
      Production designer

      Frieda (1947)
      Saraband for Dead Lovers (1948)
      Cage of Gold (1950)
      All Night Long (1961)
      The Assassination Bureau (1968)


      References




      External links



      Michael Relph at IMDb
      Michael Relph at the BFI's Screenonline
      The Cinema of Basil Dearden and Michael Relph, amazon.com. Accessed 12 February 2024.
      "Michael Relph: Multi-talented film producer and set designer", independent.co.uk. Accessed 12 February 2024.

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