Christopher Monger
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Christopher Monger has won awards for directing theatre, feature films, and screenwriting. He has directed eight feature films and written over thirty screenplays.
He was born in Ffynnon Taf, Wales. His great grand-father, David Davies of Lisvane was a famous 'hwyl' preacher. His father, Ifor David Monger was the local doctor and published author and playwright, working under a variety of pseudonyms One of David Monger's short stories "The Man Who Lost His Boswell" is still in print, in a collection of Celtic Short Stories. Both Christopher Mongers' parents painted, and his father was also a keen amateur photographer and filmmaker.
Christopher Monger with his younger brother Antony and friend Alan Field, started a village newspaper (The Taff's Well Times) when they were still children. It ran for two years and garnered them interviews on BBC and HTV television. Their newspaper (crudely produced by mimeograph) extolled the Surrealists as a local political party, printed fake photographs in which local landmarks had been demolished, and never printed a story based in truth. It was immensely popular.
Christopher first professionally exhibited paintings at the age of sixteen in the South Wales Group at the National Museum of Wales. After attentding boarding school in Taunton, Somerset, he went to the Chelsea School of Art, London, where he won the Bidduph Scholarship for painting. He spent his prize money on a 16mm camera, because he had started to make short films.
His graduation short, a comic rendering of the life of 8th Chinese poet Han Shan, “Cold Mountain”, was the opening film of the first ever British Festival of Independent Film in 1974.
After graduating he returned to Wales and was a founding member of the Chapter Film Workshop – a full production facility that allowed local talent to make films. In its first five years the workshop produced eight feature films and over fifty shorts.
Monger made his first no-budget features there including the controversial “Voice Over” (1981) which played festivals and was sold throughout the world.
At the same time he was film and video-maker for the avant-garde theatre company MOVING BEING, regularly touring throughout Western Europe with such acclaimed shows as “Brecht In 1984” and “The Influence of the Moon on the Tides”.
After the success of “Voice Over” he was invited to show his films at the Museum Of Modern Art in New York, and shortly thereafter he moved to Los Angeles to work with producer Ed Pressman of “Badlands” fame.
His produced credits include: "The Englishman Who Went Up A Hill But Came Down A Mountain", for Miramax Films, starring Hugh Grant, Colm Meaney & Tara Fitzgerald; "Waiting For The Light starring Shirley McLaine & Teri Garr; "Crime Pays" for Film Four International, starring Ronnie Williams & Veronica Quilligan; and "Voice Over" starring Ian McNeice.
He also wrote the extraordinarily popular and record-breaking television film "Seeing Red" for Granada and WGBH, for which he received a Christopher Award; and wrote and directed “Girl From Rio” which won the Hollywood Film Festival.
His labour-of-love documentary, Special Thanks To Roy London, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival to great critical acclaim.
Apart from his film work he still paints and is a member of the PHARMAKA group of painters in Los Angeles who opened one of the first galleries in L.A. Downtown Gallery Row.