Franco Rosso (29 August 1941 – 9 December 2016)[1][2] was an Italian-born film producer and director based in England. He is known for making films about Black British culture, and in particular for the 1980 cult film Babylon, about Black Jamaican youth in south London,[3] which was backed by the National Film Finance Corporation.[4]
Franco Rosso | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 9 December 2016 | (aged 75)
Education | Camberwell School of Art Royal College of Art |
Occupation(s) | Film producer and director |
Notable work | Babylon (1980) |
Life and career
editRosso was born in Turin, Piedmont, Italy, but grew up in London, where his parents (who had been Fiat workers in Turin) brought him when he was aged eight.[3] After attending comprehensive school in Battersea,[3] Rosso went on to Camberwell School of Art and the Royal College of Art (at which he was a contemporary of Ian Dury).[5][6]
He was assistant on Ken Loach's 1969 film Kes,[7] and Rosso's subsequent career as a filmmaker encompassed feature films, as well as television documentaries and series, working as an editor, producer, director and writer.[8] Following early productions at the Royal College of Art, Rosso made his notable directorial debut with the documentary The Mangrove Nine, about the resistance to police attacks on the popular Mangrove restaurant in the early 1970s, scripted by John La Rose and narrated by Andrew Salkey.[9][10] According to Martin Stellman's obituary of Rosso, The Mangrove Nine film was "so uncompromising in its portrayal of police racism that the BBC delayed its transmission. For several years afterwards, Rosso could not get work with the corporation and firmly believed he had been blacklisted."[2]
In 1981, Rosso won an Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Film-Maker for his drama Babylon,[11] which was called by New Britain fanzine "one of the best British films ever made, not just one of the best 'Black' or 'Youth' films".[10]
Selected filmography
edit- 1967: Rainbows Are Insured against Old Age – Royal College of Art (director)[12]
- 1968: Dream Weaver – Royal College of Art (director)
- 1973: The Mangrove Nine — documentary about the Mangrove Nine (director; co-producer Horace Ové, scripted by John La Rose)
- 1979: Dread Beat an' Blood — documentary for Omnibus (BBC television), featuring Linton Kwesi Johnson (director)[1][13]
- 1980: Babylon — drama (director, writer)
- 1983: Ian Dury – biopic (director)
- 1983: Salt on a Snake's Tail – BBC TV (director)
- 1984: The Caribbean in Crisis: The West Indies One Year after the Grenada Invasion – documentary for Channel Four (producer)
- 1985: Sixty-Four Day Hero: A Boxer's Tale (director)
- 1986: Struggle for Stonebridge — documentary for 40 Minutes, BBC Two (director)
- 1988: The Nature of the Beast (director)
- 1991: Lucha Libre — for television (director)
- 1995: Money Drugs Lock-up (director)
References
edit- ^ a b Bill Douglas Centre, "Franco Rosso 1942-2016", Babylon, 27 December 2016.
- ^ a b Martin Stellman, "Franco Rosso obituary", The Guardian, 2 January 2017.
- ^ a b c Miguel Cullen, "30 years on: Franco Rosso on why Babylon's burning", The Independent, 11 November 2010.
- ^ "BABYLON (Dir. Franco Rosso, 1980, UK) - Streets of Fire" Archived 30 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Ellipsis, 17 May 2011.
- ^ "Franco Rosso", Babylon website.
- ^ "Chris Salewicz meets two of the people behind the controversial 'Babylon' – Director Franco Rosso and Aswad's Brinsley Dan", Franco Rosso and Brinsley Ford speak to the NME.
- ^ Simon W. Golding, Life After Kes, Andrews UK Limited, 2014.
- ^ "Franco Rosso", BFI.
- ^ "The Mangrove Nine", IMDb.
- ^ a b Dave Phillips, "Interview with Franco Rosso", New Britain, mid-1990s.
- ^ Stephen Bourne, Black in the British Frame: The Black Experience in British Film and Television, A&C Black, 2005, p. 202.
- ^ "Rainbows Are Insured against Old Age (1967)", BFI.
- ^ "Dread, Beat an' Blood", Learning on Screen, British Universities Film & Video Council.
External links
edit- Franco Rosso at IMDb