My friend Margaret Henry, who has died aged 80, was a film-maker and teacher with a passionate belief in fighting for a world free of racism and injustice.
She taught documentary and screenwriting at the London College of Printing from 1994 to 2002, and was then head of screenwriting at the London Film Academy until 2008. She had a significant influence on a generation of film-makers, particularly for her work as a researcher on Blacks Britannica, a landmark film by David Koff (to whom she was previously married) about racism in 1970s Britain.
She taught documentary and screenwriting at the London College of Printing from 1994 to 2002, and was then head of screenwriting at the London Film Academy until 2008. She had a significant influence on a generation of film-makers, particularly for her work as a researcher on Blacks Britannica, a landmark film by David Koff (to whom she was previously married) about racism in 1970s Britain.
- 9/21/2023
- by Stella Dadzie
- The Guardian - Film News
Documentary film-maker and political activist best known for Blacks Britannica and Occupied Palestine
The Oscar-nominated documentary-maker and political activist David Koff, who has died aged 74, was remarkable in that his work made waves on four continents. Best known in Britain for his film Blacks Britannica (1978), which portrayed the UK as a profoundly racist society, he also caused controversy with his trilogy about colonialism and its after-effects in Africa, his documentary Occupied Palestine (1981) – which led to a bomb threat at its premiere – and his more recent exposés of the plight of migrant workers in the Us.
A tall, striking, figure with a pony-tail and beard, he was a familiar sight on picket lines and demonstrations throughout California. Behind the calm and genial manner was a steely resolve. His films, like his politics, were concerned with the underdog, the immigrant or the dispossessed – people who Koff felt did not have a voice.
The Oscar-nominated documentary-maker and political activist David Koff, who has died aged 74, was remarkable in that his work made waves on four continents. Best known in Britain for his film Blacks Britannica (1978), which portrayed the UK as a profoundly racist society, he also caused controversy with his trilogy about colonialism and its after-effects in Africa, his documentary Occupied Palestine (1981) – which led to a bomb threat at its premiere – and his more recent exposés of the plight of migrant workers in the Us.
A tall, striking, figure with a pony-tail and beard, he was a familiar sight on picket lines and demonstrations throughout California. Behind the calm and genial manner was a steely resolve. His films, like his politics, were concerned with the underdog, the immigrant or the dispossessed – people who Koff felt did not have a voice.
- 3/14/2014
- by Duncan Campbell
- The Guardian - Film News
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