Vancouver Sun

Montreal filmmaker produced more than 100 dramas

Almond received Order of Canada, lifetime achievemen­t awards

- LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES — Paul Almond, a Canadian-born filmmaker whose landmark 1964 documentar­y Seven Up! inspired an extended look at British children’s unfolding lives, has died at age 83.

His longtime friend David Stansfield says Almond died of complicati­ons from heart disease at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on April 9.

The Montreal native started his career at the CBC and went on to produce and direct more than 100 dramas for the network as well as U.S. and U.K. broadcaste­rs.

Almond’s website says he also wrote and adapted plays for TV.

Stansfield said Almond brought the works of Harold Pinter, Tennessee Williams and other famed writers to TV, and his projects featured future stars including Sean Connery, Maggie Smith and fellow Montrealer William Shatner.

His friend said Almond, also a big-screen filmmaker, took great pride in the movies Isabel (1968), Act of the Heart (1970) and Journey (1972), which he wrote and directed. The movies starred Almond’s then-wife, actress Genevieve Bujold.

“He wanted all his life to be a poet. But he had to earn a living and ended up being a producer and director,” Stansfield said.

It was in England that Seven Up! emerged from a pub discussion in which Almond observed that Britain’s social class system was firmly entrenched. His companion cited the maxim, “Give me a child until he is 7, and I will give you the man,” and the idea for the project was born, Almond’s website recounts.

The critically praised Seven Up! in which 14 children from different social and economic background­s talk about their lives and futures, ended up being the foundation for a continuing look at them by filmmaker Michael Apted.

Apted, a researcher on the original film, revisited its subjects every seven years for the documentar­ies including 7 Plus Seven in 1970, 21 Up in 1977 to the latest, 56 Up, released in 2012.

Almond, who received a lifetime achievemen­t award from the Directors Guild of Canada and was appointed an officer of the Order of Canada, turned to writing full-time in 1990. His published works included the Alford Saga, eight adventure novels based on family history.

 ?? PIERRE OBENDRAUF/MONTREAL GAZETTE FILES ?? Paul Almond, seen last May, brought the works of Harold Pinter, Tennessee Williams and other famed writers to TV. His projects featured future stars including Sean Connery, fellow Montrealer William Shatner and Maggie Smith.
PIERRE OBENDRAUF/MONTREAL GAZETTE FILES Paul Almond, seen last May, brought the works of Harold Pinter, Tennessee Williams and other famed writers to TV. His projects featured future stars including Sean Connery, fellow Montrealer William Shatner and Maggie Smith.

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