Patricia Lovell

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Patricia Lovell is an Australian film producer whose work within the that country's film industry led her to receive the Longford Life Achievement Award in 2004 from the Australian Film Institute (AFI).[1] One of her productions, Gallipoli, received an AFI Award in 1982 as best film. Two of her earlier films, Break of Day and Monkey Grip, were AFI Best Film nominees.[1]

She has also received producing credits for the following films:[1]

Lovell began her career in radio and television. She was Miss Pat on ABC TV's Mister Squiggle.[2] In 1964 she became what she characterized as "one of the minor beauties"[2] on the panel of Beauty and the Beast. When The Today Show began in 1969), she joined that show; it was there as an interviewer where she met Peter Weir, the director with whom she would produce her two best-known films, Picnic at Hanging Rock and Gallipoli.[2]

[edit] Personal life

Lovell was likely born in either Artarmon or Willoughby, the second child and first daughter of Luticia Evelyn Forsythe and Harold George.[2] Lowell's childhood was a painful one, marked by the deaths of three of her siblings (one of whom died the day she was born) and the divorce of her parents.[2] She attended Presbyterian Ladies' College, Armidale but "didn't do well in the Leaving at all" and failed to get a university pass.[2]

Lovell met her husband, the actor Nigel Lovell, through the Metropolitan Theatre in Sydney; the two had two children.[2] Because Patricia and Nigel were both well known names in the Australian television and film industry, their divorce became front page news in The Sun.[2]

[edit] References

General references:

  • Patricia Lovell (1995). No picnic : an autobiography. Sydney : Pan Macmillan. ISBN 0-732-90823-X. 
  • Brian McFarlane, Geoff Mayer, Ina Bertrand (Ed.) (1999). The Oxford companion to Australian film. Melbourne, Australia ; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553797-1. 

Specific references:

  1. ^ a b c Patricia Lovell at the Internet Movie Database
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Transcript of an April 2006 interview on Talking Heads
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