Biography:
An
avant-gardist who earned surprising access to the mainstream, Peter Greenaway
is among the most ambitious and controversial filmmakers of his era. Trained
as a painter and heavily influenced by theories of structural linguistics,
ethnography, and philosophy, Greenaway's films traversed often unprecedented
ground, consistently exploring the boundaries of the medium by rejecting
formal narrative structures in favor of awe-striking imagery, shifting meanings,
and mercurial emotional tension; fascinated by formal symmetries and parallels,
his material displayed an almost obsessive interest in list-making and cataloguing,
earning equal notoriety for its provocative eroticism as well as its almost
self-conscious pretentiousness.
Born
April 5, 1942, in Newport, Wales, Greenaway was raised primarily in nearby
Chingford. After deciding at the age of 12 to become a painter, he entered
the Walthamstow College of Art, where among his classmates was the future
post-punk musician Ian Dury. By 1965, Greenaway had begun working as a
film editor for the Central Office of Information, where within a year
he started making his own experimental short features. Typical of his
work of the period was 1966's Train, which featured footage of a steam-powered
locomotive arriving at Waterloo Station recast as a mechanical ballet
with a musique concrete score.
The
first of Greenaway's experimental short films to gain widespread distribution
was 1969's seven-minute Intervals. He continued releasing work sporadically
throughout the first half of the 1970s, ranging in length from 1974's
four-minute Windows to 1976's 40-minute Goole by Numbers (an early hint
of the fascination with numerology which would consume much of his later
work). With 1978's A Walk Through H and Vertical Features Remake, Greenaway
first garnered festival notice, and with 1980's The Falls, a "documentary"
set in the future, he made his long-awaited feature debut. The 1982 17th
century drama The Draughtsman's Contract was his critical breakthrough,
and the film launched him to the forefront of the global experimental
film community.
In
1983, Greenaway helmed documentaries on the American composers Robert
Ashley, John Cage, Philip Glass, and Meredith Monk for Britain's Channel
Four television network. Over the next two years he produced only three
short films (Making a Splash, Inside Rooms -- 26 Bathrooms, and A TV Dante
Canto 5) and did not return to feature filmmaking prior to 1985's superb
A Zed and Two Noughts. Two years later he released The Belly of an Architect,
its focus on themes of obsession clearly mirroring Greenaway's own persona.
Even more detailed was 1988's Drowning by Numbers, which stuffed its blackly
comic tale of a murderous family with numerological references ranging
in tone from broad visual puns to nods to Dante's Divine Comedy.
With
1989's more accessible The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, Greenaway
made his American breakthrough. A corrosive
allegory of life in contemporary England, the film became the subject
of much controversy in the U.S. when it fell subject to the MPAA's new
"NC-17" rating, consequently winning the biggest audiences of
the director's career. The follow-up, 1991's Prospero's Books, was his
most experimental feature yet. A radical reinterpretation of Shakespeare's
The Tempest, it employed a revolutionary new device called an electronic
paintbox which allowed Greenaway to fill the screen with an intricate
series of intertextual double exposures and transparent overlays, eliciting
some of his most extreme viewer response yet. Greenaway then returned
to television for the next two years, helming 1991's M Is for Man, Music,
Mozart and the 1993 revisionist biopic Darwin. Also in 1993 he returned
to feature films with the highly controversial The Baby of Macon, a grim,
violent satire of life in the 17th century which failed to find an American
distributor. Two years later Greenaway directed Stairs 1 Geneva, a documentary
commissioned for Swiss television, as well as The Pillow Book, an erotic
fable again utilizing the electronic paintbox first seen on Prospero's
Books. In 1997 the film was finally picked up for American release, where
it garnered some of Greenaway's most favorable response to date. In 1999,
he released 8 1/2 Women, a black comedy about the roots and consequences
of male sexual fantasy.
by Jason Ankeny
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