The Day

‘Chariots of Fire’ director dies at 86

- By JONAH VALDEZ Los Angeles Times

Hugh Hudson, the director of the influentia­l 1981 film and 1982 Oscar best picture winner “Chariots of Fire,” died Friday at age 86.

“Hugh Hudson, 86, beloved husband and father, died at Charing Cross hospital on 10 February after a short illness,” the director’s family said in a statement shared with the Guardian.

Actor Nigel Havers, who starred in “Chariots of Fire,” told the Guardian he was “beyond devastated that my great friend Hugh Hudson, who I have known for more than 45 years, has died.”

“‘Chariots of Fire’ was one of the greatest experience­s of my profession­al life, and, like so many others, I owe much of what followed to him,” Havers said. “I shall miss him greatly.”

The 1981 drama was based on the real-life rivalry between two sprinters, Eric Liddell, a devout Scottish Christian, and the English Harold Abrahams, who was Jewish, in the lead up to the 1924 Olympics.

The film saw commercial and critical success in both the United States and Britain and nabbed four Oscars, including best picture and an award for its memorable score.

In the U.K., “Chariots” was also seen as provocativ­e, with the British Film Institute calling it “one of the decade’s most controvers­ial British films, regarded by its left-leaning makers ([David] Puttnam, Hudson and the writer Colin Welland) as a radical indictment of Establishm­ent snobbery and privilege, but appropriat­ed by others as a conservati­ve paean to Thatcherit­e values of individual­ism and enterprise.”

Hudson followed up his success with “Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes,” which also garnered Oscar nomination­s, and in 1985 “Revolution,” a historical drama starring Al Pacino and Donald Sutherland about the American Revolution­ary War. However, the latter drama bombed at the box office and with critics, earning Hudson a Golden Raspberry award for directing.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? From left, actor Ben Cross, British filmmaker Hugh Hudson and Nigel Havers appear at the Chariots of Fire Great British Premiere in London in 2012. Hudson, who debuted as a feature director with the Oscar-winning drama “Chariots of Fire,” died Friday in London.
AP FILE PHOTO From left, actor Ben Cross, British filmmaker Hugh Hudson and Nigel Havers appear at the Chariots of Fire Great British Premiere in London in 2012. Hudson, who debuted as a feature director with the Oscar-winning drama “Chariots of Fire,” died Friday in London.

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