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Encyclopedia > Philippe Mora

Philippe Mora (born 1949) is a French-born Australian film director. 1949 is a common year starting on Saturday. ... The film director, on the right, gives last minute direction to the cast and crew, whilst filming a costume drama on location in London. ...


Mora is a member of one of Australia’s best known artistic families. His parents, Georges Mora and Mirka Mora, migrated to Australia from France in 1951 and settled in Melbourne, where they quickly became key figures on the Melbourne cultural scene. Georges, a wartime resistance fighter, became an influential art dealer, and in 1967 he founded one of the first commercial art galleries in Melbourne, Tolarno Galleries. Mirka Mora is one of Australia’s most renowned artists. Melbourne is the capital and largest city of the state of Victoria, and the second largest city in Australia (after Sydney), with a population of 3. ...


The Mora family also owned and operated three of Melbourne’s most famous cafés. The Mirka Café was opened in December 1954 at 183 Exhibition St and was the venue for the first major solo exhibition by Joy Hester. It was followed by the Café Balzac at 62 Wellington Pde, East Melbourne and then by the Tolarno in Fitzroy St, St Kilda, which opened in 1966. All three were focal points for Melbourne's bohemian subculture. Joy Hester is an Australian artist who lived a tumultuous, uncompromising and tragic life. ...


Georges and Mirka became close friends and colleagues of many leading names of Australian arts and letters. "Very few of this crowd had any money then," Philippe recalls, "and my parents literally fed artists at our home and in our restaurants." As a result, their three sons had what Philippe describes as "a culturally privileged childhood".


The Mora family's social circle included many Australian artists who subsequently became world-famous -- Ian Sime, Charles Blackman and Barbara Blackman, Fred Williams, John Perceval and Mary Perceval, Albert Tucker, Barrett Reid, Laurence Hope, Arthur Boyd, Sidney Nolan and Joy Hester. The Mora family were especially close friends with renowned art patrons John and Sunday Reed, and spent many weekends at their famous home and artists’ colony, "Heide" (now the Heide Museum of Modern Art) in the outer Melbourne suburb of Heidelberg, and at the Reed's beach house in Aspendale. Charles Blackmans The Cigarette shop (Running home) (1934) Charles Blackman (born 12 August 1928) is an Australian artist. ... Fred Williams, (1927-1982) is an Australian painter, known particularly for his landscapes. ... John Perceval, b. ... Albert W. Tucker was chairman of the mathematics department at Princeton. ... Arthur Merric Bloomfield Boyd (July 20, 1920 - April 24, 1999) was a prominent Australian artist, both as a painter and sculptor. ... Sir Sidney Robert Nolan (April 22, 1917 - 28 November 1992) was one of Australias most well-known painters. ... Joy Hester is an Australian artist who lived a tumultuous, uncompromising and tragic life. ...


Philippe is now a film director of international repute; his younger brother William is a leading Melbourne gallery owner and art dealer (one of only three second-generation art dealers in Australia) and the youngest Mora brother, Tiriel Mora, is a prominent stage and screen actor, with credits including the ABC's classic TV current affairs satire [[Frontline (TV show)|Frontline (as cynical reporter Martin Di Stasio) and as the bumbling lawyer Dennis Denuto in the hit comedy film The Castle. The Castle is a 1997 Australian film that gained widespread acclaim in Australia, but that was not well understood by those unfamiliar with Australian humour and values. ...


Philippe began making films while he was still a child. His first home movie (now preserved by Screensound) was Back Alley, made in 1964 when he was 15. A parody of West Side Story, it was filmed in Flinder’s Lane, just behind his mother’s studio at 9 Collins Street, and it features Philippe, brother William and friends Peter Beilby and the late Sweeney Reed. West Side Story is a musical written by Arthur Laurents (book), Leonard Bernstein (music), and Stephen Sondheim (lyrics), and was originally produced, choreographed, and directed by Jerome Robbins. ...


Sweeney Reed (1945-1979) was one of Philippe’s best friends. He was also a pivotal figure in the complex relationships between the members of the Heide circle. He was the son of artists Joy Hester and Albert Tucker but when he was two years old Hester was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease and was told she had only two years to live. She left Tucker, gave Sweeney up to be adopted by John and Sunday Reed, and moved to London. Ironically, she survived another twelve years and had two more children. To complicate matters even further, author Janine Burke reported that Sweeney eventually discovered that Tucker was not his biological father -- it was probably jazz drummer Billy Hyde (founder of the well-known Melbourne music store, founded in 1962), with whom Hester had a brief affair.


Philippe’s next film, Dreams In A Grey Afternoon (1965) was made as a silent movie but was screened with music prepared by artist Asher Bilu. It was shot on 8mm and blown up to 16mm. The film features stop-motion animation of sculptures by the late Russian-Australian sculptor and painter Danila Vassilieff and includes rare footage of John and Sunday Reed.


His next project, Man In A Film (1966), was a pastiche of Federico Fellini's 8-1/2 and was also influenced by his recent viewing of The Beatles' A Hard Day's Night. Like its predecessor, it was also made as a silent movie, shot on 8mm and blown up to 16mm, and again screened with music prepared by Asher Bilu, starred Sweeney Reed and premiered film at Tolarno Galleries in early 1967. Federico Fellini (January 20, 1920 – October 31, 1993) was a famous Italian film-maker and director. ... The Beatles were a British pop and rock group from Liverpool. ...


Give It Up (1967) again featured Reed, plus Don Watson and Philippe’s younger brother Tiriel and was shot in Fitzroy Street, Melbourne. It symbolised Australians' response to the Vietnam War by depicting a man being repeatedly kicked and beaten in a busy street while onlookers do nothing. The Vietnam War or Second Indochina War was a conflict between the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRVN, or North Vietnam), allied with the National Liberation Front (NLF, or Viet Cong) against the Republic of Vietnam (RVN, or South Vietnam), and their allies—notably the United States military in support of...


Philippe moved to London in late 1967 to pursue painting and filmmaking. He was one of many important Australian artists, writers and others who moved to the UK in this period. He had met Sydney artist Martin Sharp in Melbourne and when he arrived in London, Sharp (who had travelled there in late 1966) invited him to move into The Pheasantry, the renowned artists’ colony in Kings Rd, Chelsea. The clock tower of the Palace of Westminster, which contains Big Ben London is the capital city of the United Kingdom and of England. ... Martin Sharp (born 1944) is an Australian artist, cartoonist, songwriter and film-maker. ... Chelsea can refer to: A neighbourhood in London, see: Chelsea, London A borough in London, see: Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea A football club in London: see Chelsea F.C. A neighborhood in New York City, see: Chelsea, Manhattan A town in Alabama, see: Chelsea, Alabama A town in...


This home was the origin of the name of his production company, Pheasantry Films. Living in or near The Pheasantry was a virtual Who's Who" of London’s underground 'glitterati', including Martin Sharp, Eric Clapton, Germaine Greer, artist Tim Whidbourne, ‘prominent London identity’ David Litvinoff (production adviser on Nicholas Roeg's Performance), writer Anthony Haden-Guest (author of The Last Party: Studio 54, Disco and the Culture of the Night) and another friend from Melbourne, photographer Robert Whitaker, lensman of choice for many leading rock groups on the scene, including The Beatles and Cream. Dr. Germaine Greer, pictured in her middle age Germaine Greer (born January 29, 1939) is an Australian academic, writer, and broadcaster, who is widely regarded as one of the most significant feminist voices of the 20th century. ...


During this time Mora contributed cartoons (as “Von Mora”) to Oz magazine and he assisted Sharp on the landmark "Magic Theatre" edition. He also made his next short film, Passion Play, which was shot in the Pheasantry ca. 1967-68 with Jenny Kee as Mary Magdalene, Michael Ramsden as Jesus, and Mora himself as the Devil. Oz Number 3 Oz was a satirical humour magazine first published between 1963–69 in Sydney, Australia and, in its second and more famous incarnation, from 1967 to 1973 in London, England. ...


Mora began painting immediately on arrival in London, and one of his first London exhibitions was at the gallery of Clytie Jessop, who was the sister of Hermia Boyd (Hermia Lloyd-Jones), wife of noted ceramic artist [David Boyd]]. Jessop was also a well-known actress and director -- she played the sinister Miss Jessell in Jack Clayton's classic supernatural thriller The Innocents (1961), and later directed the film Emma's War (1988) starring Lee Remick and a young Miranda Otto. Jack Clayton (March 1, 1921–February 26, 1995) was a British film director who specialised in bringing literary works to the screen. ... The Innocents, 1961. ... Lee Remick Lee Remick (December 14, 1935 - July 2, 1991), was an American actress admired for her versality and her great beauty. ... Miranda Otto Miranda Otto (born December 16, 1967 in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia) is an Australian actress who has worked mainly in film. ...


Jessop invited Mora to exhibit at her gallery in the Kings Rd, and the show was a great success, garnering excellent reviews and numerous sales -- a situation Mora found rather incredible. By his own admission, he was so impoverished at the time that he had been forced to use house paint impregnated with insecticide for his paintings -- a nececssity he turned to his advantage by telling potential buyers that his paintings were "not only art, but they also kill flies".


More exhibitions at Clytie Jessop's gallery followed, with titles such as "Anti-Social Realism" and "Vomart". Eric Clapton bought one of the paintings from the latter exhibition, which depicted a shot-putter about to throw and simultaneously throwing up -- a style reminiscent of the hilariously provocative Dada art of Barry Humphries. Broadway Poster of Dame Edna Everage John Barry Humphries AO (b. ...


Mora gradually began top make a name for himself in London. He gained support from established figures such as Eduardo Paolozzi and the critic R.C. Kennedy, who championed him in Art International and included his work in a show called "Narrative Painting in Britain in the Twentieth Century" at the Camden Arts Centre in 1970. Artist Alan Aldridge also invited Philippe to contribute to his now-famous book "The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics", for which Philippe illustrated "I Am The Walrus" and "Good Morning, Good Morning". Paolozzis Newton, bronze (1995) in the courtyard of the British Library. ... Alan Aldridge is a UK artist, born in 1943. ...


His next show was at the Sigi Krauss gallery (where Martin Sharp also exhibited); it featured pictures all painted in black and white; the show also included a grey male rat which he had bought from Harrod's. When the rat turned out to be female and gave birth Mora tried (unsuccessfully) to sell the babies as a 'multiples' in a limited edition of eight. The rat show attracted the interest of German avant-garde artist Klaus Stacks, who commissioned Philippe to produce an edition of one hundred screen prints of the mother rat. In February 1971 Joseph Beuys and Erwin Heerich invited Philippe to sign a "Call To Action" manifesto demanding the freeing of the German art market. This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ... Joseph Beuys (pronounced boyce) (May 12, 1921 – January 23, 1986) was a German artist who produced work in a number of forms including sculpture, performance art, video art and installations. ...


His next show was an Easter Crucifixion exhibition at the Sigi Krauss gallery which featured a life-size sculpture of a sitting man, made entirely of meat and offal. (cf. Robert Whitaker's controversial "butcher" cover photos for the Beatles' Yesterday & Today LP in 1966). It was also at this exhibition that Mora screened his 8mm 'film painting' Passion Play, which was projected behind a screen framed in gold leaf. Some of the other items from this exhibition (though none of Mora's) were purchased by Stanley Kubrick's art director and were used in the film A Clockwork Orange -- notably the giant white phallus and the chorus line of dancing Jesus sculptures. Stanley Kubrick (July 26, 1928 – March 7, 1999) was an American film director. ...


Mora's provocative and highly symbolic offal exhibit caused a stir -- a brick was thrown through the gallery window, which led to it being featured on the cover on Time Out, and later, as the piece began to putrify, the police were called after Princess Margaret, who had been dining at the restaurant across the street, complanied about the stench. Detectives from Scotland Yard descended on the gallery and demanded that the sculpture be removed. but Krauss refused. The police claimed it was a health hazard and forced Krauss to move into the garden, where it gradually rotted away. HRH The Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret (Margaret Rose Armstrong-Jones, née Windsor; (August 21, 1930—February 9, 2002) was a member of the British Royal Family, the second eldest daughter of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, and sister of the current British...


Philippe’s next project was his first feature-length film -- Trouble In Molopolis (1970). It was financed by the unlikely partnership of Arthur Boyd and Eric Clapton. It was shot in London and "ever Australian I knew was pulled into the picture" -- it was filmed in Robert Hughes' apartment and at the Pheasantry; Germaine Greer played a cabaret singer, Jenny Kee was 'Shanghai Lil', Martin Sharp played a mime and Richard Neville was a PR man; Tony Cahill from The Easybeats did the music with Jamie Boyd. The film premiered at the Paris Pullman cinema in Chelsea, as an Oz benefit, and it was introduced by George Melly. The star of the film, , John Ivor Greenwood, also made a memorable appearance at the premiere, defecating in the front row and and then passing out in an alcoholic coma. Eric Clapton at the Tsunami Relief concert in Cardiffs Millennium Stadium, January 22nd 2005 Eric Patrick Clapton CBE (born March 30, 1945) is a British guitarist and composer. ... Robert Hughes may be a reference to Robert Hughes (born 1932), British Labour politician, MP for Aberdeen, North 1970-1997, later Baron Hughes of Woodside Robert Hughes (born 1948), Australian actor whose roles include Abba - The Movie and the sitcom Hey Dad Robert Studley Forrest Hughes (born 1938), Australian art... Richard Neville can be: Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, also known as Warwick the Kingmaker, a English noble who fought in the Wars of the Roses. ... The Easybeats were a rock and roll band in the 1960s from Australia. ... George Melly (born: 17 August 1926 in Liverpool, England) is a British jazz and blues singer. ...


In 1973, Mora began an association with producer David Puttnam and Sandy Lieberson which resulted in two award-winning films, both of which featured innovative combinations of documentary and newsreel footage, home movies and fictional films. Swastika (1973) depicted Hitler’s rise to power, and Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? (1975) is an acclaimed documentary on the Depression, both of which he wrote and directed. David Terence Puttnam, Lord Puttnam of Queensgate (born February 25, 1941) is a British film producer and politician. ...


Mora returned to Australia in the mid-'70s. In January 1974 he and his old friend Peter Beilby launched the periodical Cinema Papers, which has been Australia’s premiere film magazine for nearly three decades.


In 1976 Mora wrote and directed the historical bushranger drama Mad Dog Morgan, starring Dennis Hopper and David Gulpilil. It was the first Australian film to receive a wide American release and was instrumental in bringing Philippe to the attention of American studio executives. Dennis Hopper (born May 17, 1936) is an American actor and film-maker. ... David Gulpilil (sometimes given as David Gumpilil) (b. ...


After co-writing the screenplay for Philip Noyce’s acclaimed docu-drama Newsfront (1978), Mora became one of the first Australian directors to relocate to Los Angeles. Two years later he directed the horror film The Beast Within and many of his subsequent films have been in the horror or sci-fi genres. This article is about the largest city in California. ...


His next project was the parodic superhero musical The Return Of Captain Invincible starring Alan Arkin, Christopher Lee and an all-star Australian cast, with songs by Rocky Horror Show creator Richard O’Brien. The film has long been regarded as a cult classic and recently became a minor hit in the US when it was re-released on DVD, due in part to its now-poignant final scene, in which Capt. Invincible flies past the World Trade Centre. Alan Wolf Arkin (born March 26, 1934) is an American actor. ... Christopher Lee Christopher Frank Carandini Lee, CBE (born May 27, 1922 in London) is a legendary and prolific British actor known for his versatility and film longevity. ... World trade centers arose in the United States and Japan in the 1970s, spearheaded by New York Citys World Trade Center. ...


That was followed by A Breed Apart with Rutger Hauer and Kathleen Turner, The Howling II & The Howling III, and the political drama Death Of A Soldier, starring James Coburn, which was based on the infamous Melbourne wartime Eddie Leonski murder case. Rutger Hauer Rutger Hauer (born January 23, 1944, Breukelen, the Netherlands) is an international movie star. ... Turner as private eye V.I. Warshawski Kathleen Turner (born June 19, 1954) is an American actress. ... James Coburn James Coburn (August 31, 1928 - November 18, 2002) was an American movie actor. ... Edward Leonski (1918 - 1942) was a serial killer who committed his crimes in Australia, although Leonski himself was American. ...


Mora's next film was based on the best-selling book by an old friend from his days in London in the late 60s, artist, author and broadcaster Whitley Streiber. Communion (1989) starred Christopher Walken and was based on Strieber’s own alleged encounters with aliens. Christopher Walken in The Dogs of War (1981) Ronald Walken (born March 31, 1943), known professionally as Christopher Walken, is an American film, television, and theatre actor best known for playing menacing or psychologically damaged characters. ...


Mora's 1990s film credits as director (and occasional writer and actor) included the horror spoof Pterodactyl Woman From Beverly Hills (1994) with Beverly D'Angelo, Barry Humphries (in three roles), Moon Unit Zappa and Philippe’s children Georges and Madeleine; Art Deco Detective (1994); Precious Find (1996) a sci-fi version of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, which reunited two actors from Ridley Scott's Bladerunner, Rutger Hauer and the late Brion James. For television, Mora directed Mercenary II: Thick & Thin (1997), and the films Back In Business (1997), Snide And Prejudice (1998), and Burning Down The House (1998). Beverly DAngelo (born November 15, 1951 in Columbus, Ohio) is a singer and actress. ... Broadway Poster of Dame Edna Everage John Barry Humphries AO (b. ... Moon Unit Zappa (born September 28, 1967, in New York City) is the oldest child of late American rock star Frank Zappa and Gail Sloatman; she goes by the name Moon Zappa. ... Ridley Scott Sir Ridley Scott (born November 30, 1937 in South Shields) is an influential British film director and producer. ... Brion James (born February 20, 1945 in Redlands, California, died August 7, 1999 in Malibu, California) was an American character actor. ...


Mora's most recent film project, When We Were Modern, draws in part on his own life and experience. It examines the tangled lives and loves of the Heide inner circle — Sidney Nolan, Joy Hester, Albert Tucker and John and Sunday Reed. Nolan will is played by young Australian actor Clayton Watson (The Matrix) and Sunday Reed will be played by leading Hollywood actress Jennifer Jason Leigh. Jennifer Jason Leigh (born February 5, 1962) is an American actress. ...


In the Forties, on the run after deserting from the army, Nolan lived at the Reed’s famous house "Heide", and it was here that he painted his first Ned Kelly series. While living there he conducted an open affair with Sunday Reed, but Sunday refused to leave her husband and marry Nolan, so he married John’s Reed’s sister, Cynthia Hansen. The marriage eventually broke up, and Cynthia committed suicide in 1976. Her death sparked off the famously bitter feud between Nolan and author Patrick White, who excoriated Nolan for abandoning his first wife (she and White were close friends) and remarrying (to Mary Perceval) very soon after Cynthia's death. Patrick White (May 28, 1912 – September 30, 1990) was an Australian author. ...


While researching the film, Philippe discovered previously unseen home movies of the Heide circle, including the only film of Joy Hester and the only film of the Mirka Café. The film is dedicated to Sweeney Reed, who committed suicide in March 1979, aged only 34. Reed will feature prominently as a character and as a tribute to him, Philippe is reportedly planning to screen some of the footage from Back Alley under the closing credits.


In recent times, as well as his film work, Mora has contributed to Art Monthly Australia including an article detailing his observations on Australians in London in the Sixties, and an essay on the relationships between film and Australian Modernist art.


  Results from FactBites:
 
MILESAGO - People: Philippe Mora (2916 words)
The Mora family were especially close friends with renowned art patrons John and Sunday Reed, and spent many weekends at their famous home and artists’ colony, Heide (now the Heide Museum of Modern Art) in the outer Melbourne suburb of Heidelberg, and at the Reed's beach house in Aspendale.
The Mora children have carried on the tradition and are all prominent in the arts in Australia and internationally.
Philippe moved to London in late 1967 to pursue painting and filmmaking.
Philippe Mora at AllExperts (2188 words)
The Mora family were especially close friends with renowned art patrons John and Sunday Reed, and spent many weekends at their famous home and artists' colony, "Heide" (now the Heide Museum of Modern Art) in the outer Melbourne suburb of Heidelberg, and at the Reed's beach house in Aspendale.
Jessop invited Mora to exhibit at her gallery in the Kings Rd, and the show was a great success, garnering excellent reviews and numerous sales a nececssity he turned to his advantage by telling potential buyers that his paintings were "not only art, but they also kill flies".
Philippe's next project was his first feature-length film it was filmed in Robert Hughes' apartment and at the Pheasantry; Germaine Greer played a cabaret singer, Jenny Kee was 'Shanghai Lil', Martin Sharp played a mime and Richard Neville was a PR man; Tony Cahill from The Easybeats did the music with Jamie Boyd.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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