George Duffield (film-maker)

George Duffield is a British award-winning film producer and wildlife photographer. He is best known for the documentary film The End of the Line and is a co-founder of the marine charity, the Blue Marine Foundation.

Life and education

Duffield is the son of Dame Vivien Duffield, the British-Jewish philanthropist, and the financier John Duffield.[1][2][3][4] He graduated from Harvard University.[5][6] He is married to actress Natasha Wightman.[7]

Career

Duffield co-founded Arcane Films with Meg Thomson.[6] Among the company's most successful films was the documentary The End of the Line which changed the attitudes of individuals and companies such as Pret a Manger and Marks & Spencer.[8][9][10] The End of the Line was inspired by the book The End of the Line: How Overfishing Is Changing the World and What We Eat by Charles Clover, the journalist and columnist.[11] The documentary followed him as he investigated how overfishing is having a dramatic effect on the number, quantity and types of fish in the seas.[12] It was described by the Chicago Tribune as "an apocalyptic documentary that is as beautiful as it is damning".[13]

In 2011 the low-budget film won the inaugural Puma Creative Impact for its success in changing consumer behaviour.[14][15] A study by the Channel 4 Britdoc Foundation found that it had been seen by more than 1 million people and had created press and media attention worth more than £4 million.[15][16] Among the places it has been screened are 10 Downing Street,[17] the United Nations General Assembly,[18] and the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas.[19]

He produced the 3D IMAX film Jerusalem with Daniel Ferguson (Writer, director, Producer), Taran Davies (Producer) and Jake Eberts (Executive Producer). The film is narrated by Benedict Cumberbatch[20] and focuses on the cultural, political and religious importance of Jeursalem.[21] It was released in 2013.[22]

Other films produced by Duffield include the 2009 documentary Wild Art: Olly & Suzi that was made for the BBC and is about two contemporary artists – Olly Williams and Suzi Winstanley – who travel the world to meet and paint predators in their natural environment, often at risk to themselves.[23] He also produced Dot the i starring Gael Garcia Bernal[23] which was premiered at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival and won the 2003 Deauville Film Festival Audience Award.[24]

Duffield is on the board of trustees of the Grierson Trust which promotes documentary film-making and celebrates the work of John Grierson.[25][26]

Aside from documentary films, Duffield is an award-winning wildlife photographer. In 2005 he won the Underwater Worlds category of the Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year.[27][28]

Blue Marine Foundation

George and Chris Gorell Barnes, the executive producer of The End of the Line, co-founded the Blue Marine Foundation as a legacy project of the film.[29][30][31] It was formed with the aim of fixing what it describes as "the largest solvable problem on the planet – the crisis in the oceans".[32][33]

Among Blue's biggest achievements was in securing the funding needed to enforce the protection of the no-take marine reserve created by the UK government around the Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. At the time of creation in 2010 it was the world's biggest marine reserve. The money came from the Bertarelli Foundation and covered the first five years after which the government promised to internalise the costs and enforce the reserve.[34][35][36]Henry Bellingham, a UK junior Foreign Office minister, described the initiative as a "great example" of government and the private sector working together and said the reserve would "double the global coverage of the world's oceans benefiting from full protection".[37][38]

On a smaller scale, BLUE was instrumental in July 2012 in the creation of a unique alliance between fishermen and conservationists in the UK that is designed to protect Lyme Bay, on the southern coast of the UK and part of England's first natural World Heritage Site.[39] Scallopers and dredgers were banned from part of Lyme Bay, an important reef habitat, but overfishing continued. The deal brokered by BLUE and the Lyme Bay Working Group is designed to ensure fishing communities can continue to fish while the fragile ecosystem is protected and conserved.[40][41][42]

The charity also played a central role in the creation of a marine reserve around the Turneffe Atoll, off Belize, which is part of the world's biggest coral reef system after the Great Barrier Reef.[32][43][44][45][46][47]

References

  1. Article in Daily Telegraph
  2. Article in London Evening Standard
  3. Article in Daily Mail
  4. Article in Tower of David Museum
  5. Profile from Zoominfo
  6. 1 2 Article in Screen Daily
  7. Kay, Richard (1 December 2003). "Who's the gorgeous actress with Sir J?". Daily Mail. Retrieved 15 March 2016 via HighBeam. (subscription required (help)).
  8. Article in Daily Mail
  9. Article in The Guardian
  10. Article in London Evening Standard
  11. Article in Sunday Times
  12. Article on Green Party (New Zealand) site
  13. Article in Chicago Tribune
  14. Press release on Puma site
  15. 1 2 Article from Fish2fork restaurant guide
  16. Link to the study
  17. Blog on Greenpeace UK site
  18. Article on Greenpeace USA site
  19. Article on Sustainable Sushi site
  20. Article on CBS News
  21. Article on Canadian Newswire
  22. Article in the Washington Post
  23. 1 2 IMDb entry
  24. IMDb announcement
  25. Article on Grierson Trust site
  26. Article in Daily Telegraph
  27. Article on National History Museum site
  28. Article on Grierson Trust site
  29. Article on Spear’s
  30. Article in Superyacht Times
  31. Profile on Slow Life Symposium
  32. 1 2 Article on International Coral Reef Initiative site
  33. Blue Marine Foundation site
  34. Article on BBC
  35. Press release from Pew Environment Group
  36. Article on Bertarelli Foundation site
  37. Article in The Independent
  38. Article in Liverpool Daily Post
  39. Article in The Guardian
  40. Article in Bridport News
  41. Article in Dorset Echo
  42. Article in Western Morning News
  43. Article in Sunday Times
  44. Article on Bertarelli Foundation site
  45. Article on Flora and Fauna International site
  46. Article on Open Channels
  47. Article on Fish2fork restaurant guide

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.