Horace Ové

Horace Ové
Born 1939 (age 7778)
Belmont, Trinidad
Occupation Director, producer
Notable work Pressure (1975)
Children Indra Ové; Zak Ové Ezana Ové Kaz Ové

Horace Ové, CBE (born 1939), is a British filmmaker, photographer, painter and writer, one of the leading black independent film-makers to emerge in Britain since the post-war period. Ové holds the Guinness World Record for being the first black British film-maker to direct a feature-length film, Pressure (1975).[1][2] In its retrospective history, 100 Years of Cinema, the British Film Institute (BFI) declared: "Horace Ové is undoubtedly a pioneer in Black British history and his work provides a perspective on the Black experience in Britain."

Ové has built a prolific and sometimes controversial career as a filmmaker, documenting racism and the Black Power movement in Britain over many decades through photography and in films such as Baldwin's Nigger (1968), Pressure and Dream to Change the World (2003). His documentaries such as Reggae (1971)[3] and Skateboard Kings (1978) have also become models for emerging filmmakers.

The actress Indra Ové is his daughter and artist Zak Ové is his son.

Early years

Born in 1939 in Belmont, Trinidad, where he grew up, Horace Ové came to Britain in 1960 to study painting, photography and interior design. His entry into the film world was working as a film extra on the set of the 1963 Joseph L. Mankiewicz epic Cleopatra after its production moved to Rome.[4]

On returning to London, Ové went to study at the London School of Film Technique.

As film director

In 1966 Ové directed The Art of the Needle, a short film for the Acupuncture Association. In 1969 he made another short film, Baldwin's Nigger, in which African-American novelist James Baldwin — in conjunction with civil rights activist and comedian Dick Gregory — discusses Black experience and identity in Britain and America.[5] Filmed at the West Indian Students Centre in London, the film documents a lecture by Baldwin and a question-and-answer session with the audience.[6][7]

Ové.s next film, shot at a concert in Wembley Arena in 1970, was a documentary called Reggae,[8][9] which was successful in cinemas and was shown on BBC television. Ové subsequently did other documentaries for the BBC, including King Carnival (1973) in The World About Us series. Then in 1975 he directed the film for which he is best known, Pressure – the first full-length drama feature film by a Black director in Britain. Telling the story of a London teenager who joins the Black Power movement in the 1970s, Pressure featured scenes of police brutality that ostensibly led to its banning for two years by its own backers, the British Film Institute, before it was eventually released to wide acclaim.

Ové's other television work has included directing A Hole in Babylon (co-written with Jim Hawkins, featuring a cast including T-Bone Wilson, Trevor Thomas and Archie Pool), made for the BBC's Play for Today series, and transmitted on 29 November 1979; four episodes of the pioneering series Empire Road in 1979, an episode of The Professionals ("A Man Called Quinn", 1981) and The Equalizer (shown on 8 January 1996 in the BBC series Hidden Empire),[10] about the 1919 Amritsar Massacre, which won two Indian Academy Awards in 1996.

His film Playing Away (1987, with a screenplay by Caryl Phillips),[11] starring Norman Beaton and other notable actors such as Joseph Marcell, Ram John Holder, Brian Bovell, and Stefan Kalipha (incidentally, Ové's cousin),[1] centres on the residents of the fictional British village of Sneddington, who invite the "Caribbean Brixton Conquistadors" (from South London) for a cricket match to commemorate "African Famine Week".[12]

His 2003 film Dream to Change the World (edited by Pete Stern)[13][14] was a documentary about the life and work of the late John La Rose, the Trinidad-born activist, publisher and writer and founder of New Beacon Books in London.

As photographer

In parallel to his career in films is Ové's photography, which has been variously exhibited internationally over the decades, including at UCLA, the British Film Institute and the University of Tuebingen, Germany.[15] In 1984 he had the first solo exhibition by a black photographer at The Photographers' Gallery, entitled "Breaking Loose: Horace Ove",[16] followed up by another exhibition focusing on his images of Trinidad Carnival, "Farewell to the Flesh", at Cornerhouse in Manchester,[15] from 28 February to 5 April 1987.[17]

In 2001 he was invited to exhibit his works in "Recontres de la Photographie" in Bamako, Mali.[15]

In 2004, the exhibition "Horace Ove 'Pressure'", described as "the first in-depth look at his photographic back catalogue", curated by Jim Waters and David A. Bailey, in association with Autograph ABP,[18] toured Britain, starting at Nottingham Castle museum, moving to the University of Brighton Gallery, the Norwich Gallery, Aberystwyth Arts Centre in Wales and the Arts Depot in London.[15] According to a description of that exhibition:

"1960's Britain was a hotbed of political and creative activity, writers and thinkers came from around the world to discuss civil rights issues and form new movements. Horace Ové was at many of the meetings and captured the events as they unfolded, including the first Black Power meeting with Stokely Carmichael, Allen Ginsberg and Michael X, founder of the black power movement in the UK with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. He also photographed figures of the period including C L R James, James Baldwin and Darcus Howe as well as Sam Selvon, Andrew Salkey and John La Rose the founding members of the Caribbean Artists' Movement. Ové also recorded the birth of the Notting Hill Carnival and charted its growth through the 1970's and 1980's from the early beginnings with the first Windrush generation to the pumping sound systems, fashions and street dancing of the younger generation. He has also recently brought his work up to date with new portraits of people like Sir Trevor MacDonald and Professor Stuart Hall."[18]

Ové had an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, London, in 2005, as well as work exhibited at London's Victoria and Albert Museum, Tate Liverpool, the Whitechapel Gallery and a retrospective of his film and photographic work at the Barbican.[19][20] His work also featured in the Tate Britain exhibition "How We Are: Photographing Britain".[21]

Interviewed in 2010 by The Guardian about his iconic 1967 photograph of Michael X with bodyguards at Paddington Station, Ové said: "I'm a film-maker as well as a photographer, and I live in a visual world. I've always been an active photographer – if there's anything going on socially or politically, I want to know about it. So the late 1960s and early 70s were a very busy time for me."[22]

As theatre director

During the course of his career Ové has also directed stage plays, including in 1973 Blackblast written by Lindsay Barrett, the first black play to be shown at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts, The Swamp Dwellers by Wole Soyinka, and in 1993 The Lion by Michael Abbensetts, for Talawa Theatre Company at the Cochrane Theatre[23] (also on British Council tour to Jamaica, performed at the Ward Theatre, Kingston, 30 September–23 October, 3 November–13 November),[24][25][26] starring Madge Sinclair, Stefan Kalipha and Danny Sapani.[15]

Directing style

In terms of style as a director, Ové admits to being heavily influenced by neo-realism, having studied European filmmakers such as De Sica, Antonioni, Buñuel and Fellini during his time living in Rome.[27][28] He acknowledges influences from African-American political leaders of the 1960s and 1970s such as Malcolm X and Stokeley Carmichael but has been somewhat disparaging of contemporary black politics in Britain: "In black British politics there are still lot of things that are missing, that are not said."[27]

Awards, honours and recognition

Ové has been the recipient of the Scarlet Ibis medal from the Government of Trinidad and Tobago in recognition of his international achievements in television and film, and in 1986 was named Best Director for Independent Film and Television by the British Film Institute,[15] awarded for his "contribution to British culture".[29]

In 2006 he was one of five winners of the £30,000 Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award for Visual Arts.[30]

In the 2007 Queen's Birthday Honours he was made a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his contributions to the film industry in the UK.

In November 2011, three young filmmakers competing on Dragons' Den as part of the 55th BFI London Film Festival Education Events, First Light, won £2000 funding and professional mentoring having successfully pitched their idea to make a short documentary about Horace Ové.[31]

At the 2012 Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival, Ové was honoured as a "T&T Film Pioneer".[32][33]

A "Tribute to Horace Ové" was presented by Birkbeck Institute for Social Research in collaboration with Birkbeck Institute for the Moving Image on 23 and 24 January 2015.[34]

Selected filmography

Publications

References

  1. 1 2 Josanne Leonard, "An Interview with Horace Ove – Film-Maker 7/09/08. The Boy from Belmont", 22 March 2009. From Trinidad and Tobago Review, October 2007.
  2. "The British Connection – Great films from the Queen's Jubilee years", FilmClub.
  3. Reggae at IMDb.
  4. "Horace Ove CBE", The British Blacklist.
  5. Horace Ové biography, BFI Screenonline.
  6. "Baldwin's Nigger (1968)" at IMDb.
  7. "Baldwin's Nigger (1969)", BFI Screenonline.
  8. "One of the first and best reggae documentaries ever made", Dangerous Minds.
  9. "Reggae Wembley 1970 Boss Sounds!!" on YouTube.
  10. BFI Film & TV Database.
  11. "Playing Away (1987)", IMDb.
  12. Playing Away page at Screenonline.org.uk.
  13. "Dream to Change the World -- A Tribute to John La Rose", Vimeo.
  14. "Dream to Change the World - A Tribute to John La Rose" at petestern.com.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Horace Ove – Filmography", Caribbean360, 5 October 2007.
  16. "Exhibition 407...14/09/1984 – – 13/10/1984", Photographers' Gallery, London.
  17. Derek Bishton and Ten.8 Catalogue - Connecting Histories.
  18. 1 2 "Horace Ove 'Pressure'", University of Brighton Gallery, 2004.
  19. Horace Ové biography, Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival 2007.
  20. Kim Janssen, "Horace’s life in black power", Camden New Journal, 1 July 2005.
  21. Laura Cumming, "Photography: It's the national family album... and we're all in it" (review of "How We Are: Photographing Britain"), The Observer, 27 May 2007.
  22. Andrew Pulver, "Photographer Horace Ové's best shot", The Guardian, 25 August 2010.
  23. "Lion, The – By Michael Abbensetts", National Theatre, Black Plays Archive.
  24. Geoffrey V. Davis, Anne Fuchs (eds), Staging New Britain: Aspects of Black and South Asian British Theatre Practice, Presses Interuniversitaires Européennes, 2006, p. 98.
  25. "Records of Talawa Theatre Company, 1962-2007: Production management correspondence, 1985-2006", Victoria and Albert Museum: Theatre Collections.
  26. "Production management correspondence for 'The Lion'", The National Archives.
  27. 1 2 Kim Janssen, "Horace's life in black power", New Journal Enterprises, 1 July 2005.
  28. Kafi Kareem, "Trinbagonianness in Film: National Identity in Trinidad and Tobago Cinema", Senses of Cinema, Issue 59, 23 June 2011.
  29. Frow, Mayerlene, "Document resumé: Roots of the Future: Ethnic Diversity in the Making of Britain", Commission for Racial Equality, London (England), 1997.
  30. Paul Hamlyn Foundation, 10 November 2006.
  31. "Young Filmmakers win £2,000 in X-Factor meets Dragon's Den Pitching Competition!" First Light, 4 November 2011.
  32. Leiselle Maraj, "Film festival honours Horace Ove", Trinidad & Tobago Newsday, 5 September 2012.
  33. Tribute to Horace Ové at ttff/12, 18 September 2012.
  34. "BIMI in collaboration with BISR presents Horace Ove", Birkbeck University of London.
  35. "Coleherne Jazz and Keskidee Blues (1972)", BFI Film Forever.
  36. "The Black Safari (24 Nov. 1972)", IMDb.
  37. "The Mangrove Nine", The British Blacklist.
  38. "Play for Today: Season 11, Episode 20 – The Garland (10 Mar. 1981)", IMDb.

Further reading

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