The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Famed British filmmaker Parker dies at age 76

- ESTELLE SHIRBON REUTERS

LONDON - British filmmaker Alan Parker, director of movies ranging from “Bugsy Malone”, a gangster comedy featuring children armed with machinegun­s that fired cream, to the tense prison drama “Midnight Express”, died on Friday aged 76.

Parker, who also directed “Fame”, “Mississipp­i Burning”, “Evita”, “The Commitment­s” and other successful movies, died after a lengthy illness, a spokeswoma­n said.

Known for his eclecticis­m, Parker was equally at ease in the worlds of musical comedy and of hard-hitting true crime drama.

“Bugsy Malone”, Parker’s highly original feature film debut in 1976, was a musical parody of Prohibitio­n-era gangster movies, performed entirely by children. It featured a young Jodie Foster as the glamorous singer Tallulah, and other child actors who went on to have successful careers.

Parker followed up with “Midnight Express”, based on the true story of an American man imprisoned in Turkey for smuggling hashish. The film won two Oscars, including one for Oliver Stone, who wrote the script.

Again moving in a different direction, Parker then made the gritty musical “Fame”, about the highs and lows of the lives of performing arts students in New York - a huge commercial success that spawned a spin-off TV series.

He also directed the film “Pink Floyd - The Wall”, which was inspired by the rock band’s hit album of the same name.

Subsequent successes included “Birdy”, a drama about Vietnam War veterans, and “Angel Heart”, a sinister, atmospheri­c thriller set in New Orleans starring Mickey Rourke and Robert De Niro.

The actor Matthew Modine tweeted to say “Being cast in his epic film, Birdy, transforme­d my life. Alan was a great artist whose films will live forever”.

“INCREDIBLE RUN OF HITS”

“Mississipp­i Burning” starred Gene Hackman and Willem Dafoe as FBI agents investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of three civil rights activists in the 1960s. The film was based on true events, although it deviated from the facts in some important ways.

Although widely acclaimed at the time, garnering seven Oscar nomination­s and winning one, the movie was also criticised by some in the Black community. Critics objected to a lack of Black role models, and what they saw as a narrow focus on the white FBI agents.

Parker later returned to music, with commercial success, directing “The Commitment­s”, a comedy about a short-lived soul band in Dublin, and “Evita”, based on an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical and starring Madonna in the title role.

Lloyd Webber said Parker was “one of the few directors to truly understand musicals on screen”.

Parker also made a film version of “Angela’s Ashes”, based on the bestsellin­g memoir of the same name by Frank McCourt.

British filmmaker Edgar Wright, director of “Shaun of the Dead” and “Baby Driver”, was among many figures from the world of cinema who named Parker as an influence.

“His incredible run of hits as a British filmmaker gave immense inspiratio­n to me,” said Wright, adding that he had twice parodied Parker’s “beguiling” debut “Bugsy Malone” and wanted one of the songs from that film played at his funeral.

Parker received honours in Britain for his achievemen­ts in filmmaking, including a knighthood in 2002. His films won a total of 19 British film academy awards (Baftas), 10 Golden Globes and 10 Oscars.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which awards the Oscars, called him “an extraordin­ary talent”:

“His work entertaine­d us, connected us, and gave us such a strong sense of time and place.”

Parker is survived by his wife Lisa Moran-Parker, five children and seven grandchild­ren.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Alan Parker celebrates after receiving the Fellowship award at the British Academy of Film and Arts awards ceremony at the Royal Opera House in London in 2013.
REUTERS Alan Parker celebrates after receiving the Fellowship award at the British Academy of Film and Arts awards ceremony at the Royal Opera House in London in 2013.

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