Raymond Menmuir
Raymond Edward "Ray" Menmuir (10 September 1930 - 26 March 2016) was a British-Australian director and producer.[1] His career included producing 44 episodes of The Professionals and directing 12 episodes of Upstairs, Downstairs. He also produced an Australian version of The Professionals called Special Squad for the Ten Network in 1984.[2]
Early life
Menmuir was born in Perth, Western Australia, as the eldest of four children to Edward Menmuir and his wife Dorothy (née Williams). His father ensured Menmuir had a good education, at Wesley College.
Work
His first employment was as a reporter at the Perth Daily News, but he then transferred to the Australian Broadcasting Commission as a radio producer.
He was deeply impressed by European culture, by seeing various films at the 1953 Festival of the Arts in Perth, and then took artistic inspiration from various films including Marcel Pagnol's Cesar, Vittorio de Sica's Bicycle Thieves, and Mikhail Kalatozov's The Cranes are Flying. This came out when he was soon directing dramas at the ABC's television drama department in Sydney. He directed the second play to be televised, J.B. Priestly's The Rose and Crown written specifically for television, and the first play from the new (1958) Gore Hill complex, Barbara Vernon's The Multi-Coloured Umbrella.
Probably his greatest achievement in these years was the 5 October 1960 live production in prime time of the two-hour epic Shakespeare play, The Life and Death of King Richard II, using all three studios at Gore Hill.
In 1961, Menmuir and his then wife Heidi moved to London. Menmuir directed for stage Alan Seymour's play, One Day of the Year, which started his association with many production venues.
His productions included: Z Cars, The Avengers, No Hiding Place, Corridors of Power, and The Duchess of Duke Street. In 1974 he directed the adaptation of the Lord Peter Wimsey story The Nine Tailors for the BBC.
In 1978, he was offered full freedom of control as producer for London Weekend Television's show, The Professionals.
During several returns to Australia, he was responsible for Ned Kelly (1963), and Special Squad and the movie Fortress for Crawford Productions.
Personal life
In the UK, Menmuir lived in rural Buckinghamshire.
In his later years, Menmuir settled in Australia an Mirrabooka on the New South Wales Central Coast.
Menmuir was married twice, to Heidi (née Isenmann) and they had a daughter Anna, and to Jennifer (née Cooper) (d. 2010) with whom he had a daughter Fiona and son Iain. He then had a partner, Wendy Blacklock.[3]
Select Credits
- Shadow of Doubt (1957) - TV play
- The Rose and Crown (1957) - TV play
- The Multi-Coloured Umbrella (1958) - TV play
- Citizen of Westminster (1958) - TV play
- Blue Murder (1959) - TV play
- One Bright Day (1959) - TV play
- Bodgie (1959) - TV play
- The Strong Are Lonely (1959) - TV play
- The Life and Death of King Richard II (1960) - TV play
- Close to the Roof (1960) - TV play
- The Dock Brief (1960) - TV play
- The Square Ring (1960) - TV play
- Swamp Creatures (1960) - TV play
- Turning Point (1960) - TV play
- The Sergeant from Burralee (1961) - TV play
- The Right Thing (1963) - TV play
- Ballad for One Gun (1963) - TV play
- Thirty-One Backyards (1965) - TV play
- Headmaster (1977) (TV series)
- The Professionals (1978-83) - TV series
- Who Dares Wins (1982)
- Special Squad (1984) (TV series)
- Fortress (1985)
- C.A.T.S. Eyes (1986-87) (TV Series)
- Gentlemen and Players (1988-89) (TV Series)
References
- ↑ Schlesinger, Philip (1983). Televising "Terrorism". London: Comedia Pub. Group in assoc[i]ation with M. Boyars, London and New York. p. 73. ISBN 0-906890-39-X.
- ↑ Cribb, Tim (August 19, 1984). "Crawford's Cops Return". The Sydney Morning Herald.
- ↑ Obituary: Ray Menmuir 1930-2016 - ABC television pioneer who went on to direct Upstairs Downstairs and The Avengers, Storey Walton and Tom Jeffrey, Sydney Morning Herald, 8 June 2016
External links
- Raymond Menmuir on IMDb
- Raymond Menmuir at National Film and Sound Archive
- Obituary at Sydney Morning Herald
- Obituary by Storry Walton