Grierson, John

views updated May 11 2018

GRIERSON, John



Nationality: Scottish. Born: Deanston, Scotland, 18 April 1898. Education: Glasgow University, degree in philosophy, 1923. Military Service: Served in Royal Navy, World War I. Family: Married Margaret Taylor, 1930. Career: Travelled to United States to study press, cinema, and other mass media, 1924–27; joined Empire Marketing Board (EMB) Film Unit under Stephen Tallents, London, 1927; produced and directed Drifters, 1928–29; became head of General Post Office (GPO) Film Unit when EMB dissolved and its Film unit transferred to GPO, 1933; resigned from GPO to form Film Centre with Arthur Elton, Stuart Legg, and J.P.R. Golightly, 1937; Film Advisor to Imperial Relations Trust, and to Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand Governments, 1937–40; Film Commissioner of Canada, helped establish National Film Board of Canada, 1939–45; Co-coordinator of Mass Media at UNESCO, 1947; Controller, Films Division of Central Office of Information, London, 1948–50; Joint Executive Producer of Group 3, established by National Finance Company to produce feature films, 1951–54; became member of Films on Scotland Committee, 1954; produced and presented This Wonderful World for Scottish television, 1955–65. Awards: Commander of the British Empire, 1948; Golden Thistle Award, Edinburgh Film Festival, 1968. Died: 19 February 1972.

Films as Director:

1929

Drifters (+ sc)



Other Films:

1930

Conquest (pr, co-ed)

1931

The Country Comes to Town (Wright) (pr); Shadow on the Mountain (pr); Upstream (pr)

1931/32

Industrial Britain (Flaherty) (pr, co-ed)

1932

King Log (pr); The New Generation (pr); The New Operator (pr); O'er Hill and Dale (Wright) (pr); The Voice of the World (pr)

1933

Aero-Engine (pr); Cargo from Jamaica (Wright) (pr); The Coming of the Dial (pr); Eskimo Village (pr); Line Cruising South (Wright) (pr); So This Is London (pr); Telephone Workers (pr); Uncharted Waters (pr); Windmill in Barbados (Wright) (pr)

1934

BBC: Droitwich (Watt) (pr); Granton Trawler (Cavalcanti) (pr, ph); Pett and Pott (Cavalcanti) (pr); Post Haste (pr); Six-Thirty Collection (Watt) (pr); Song of Ceylon (Wright) (pr, co-sc); Spring Comes to England (co-pr); Spring on the Farm (pr); Weather Forecast (pr)

1935

BBC: The Voice of Britain (co-pr); Coalface (Cavalcanti) (pr); Introducing the Dial (pr)

1936

Night Mail (Watt and Wright) (pr, co-sc); The Saving of Bill Blewett (Watt) (pr); Trade Tattoo (pr)

1937

Calender of the Year (pr); Children at School (Wright) (co-pr); Four Barriers (pr); Job in a Million (pr); Line to Tschierva Hut (Cavalcanti) (pr); The Smoke Menace (co-pr); We Live in Two Worlds (pr)

1938

The Face of Scotland (Wright) (pr)

1939

The Londoners (co-pr)

1951

Judgment Deferred (exec pr); Brandy for the Parson (exec pr)

1952

The Brave Don't Cry (exec pr); Laxdale Hall (exec pr); The Oracle (exec pr); Time Gentlemen Please (exec pr); You're Only Young Twice (exec pr)

1953

Man of Africa (exec pr); Orders Are Orders (exec pr)

1959

Seawards the Great Ships (treatment)

1961/62

Heart of Scotland (treatment)



Publications


By GRIERSON: books—


Grierson on Documentary, edited by Forsyth Hardy, revised edition, London, 1966.

By GRIERSON: articles—

"Future for British Film," in Spectator (London), 14 May 1932.

"The Symphonic Film I," in Cinema Quarterly (London), Spring 1933.

"The Symphonic Film II," in Cinema Quarterly (London), Spring 1934.

"One Hundred Percent Cinema," in Spectator (London), 23 August 1935.

"Dramatising Housing Needs and City Planning," in Films (London), November 1939.

"Post-War Patterns," in Hollywood Quarterly, January 1946.

"Prospect for Documentary," in Sight and Sound (London), Summer 1948.

"Flaherty as Innovator," in Sight and Sound (London), October/December 1951.

"The Front Page," in Sight and Sound (London), April/June 1952.

"The BBC and All That," in Quarterly of Film, Radio, Television (Berkeley), Fall 1954.

"Making of Man of Africa," in Films and Filming (London), October 1954.

"The Prospect for Cultural Cinema," in Film (London), January/February 1956.

"I Derive My Authority from Moses," in Take One (Montreal), January/February 1970.

"The Golden Years of Grierson," interview with Elizabeth Sussex, in Sight and Sound (London), Summer 1972.

"Grierson on Documentary: Last Interview," with Elizabeth Sussex, in Film Quarterly (Berkeley), Fall 1972.


On GRIERSON: books—

Rotha, Paul, Rotha on Film, London, 1958.

Rotha, Paul, Documentary Film, 4th Edition, London, 1964.

Lovell, Alan, and Jim Hillier, Studies in Documentary, New York, 1972.

Sussex, Elizabeth, The Rise and Fall of British Documentary: TheStory of the Film Movement Founded by John Grierson, Berkeley, 1975.

Beveridge, J.A., John Grierson—Film Master, New York, 1978.

Hardy, Forsyth, John Grierson: A Documentary Biography, London, 1979.

Evans, Gary, John Grierson and the National Film Board: ThePolitics of Wartime Propaganda, Toronto, 1984.

Ellis, Jack C., John Grierson: A Guide to References and Resources, Boston, 1986.

Nelson, Joyce, The Colonized Eye: Rethinking the Grierson Legend, Toronto, 1988.

Ellis, Jack C., The Documentary Idea, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1989.

Aitken, Ian, Film and Reform: John Grierson and the DocumentaryFilm Movement, London and New York, 1990.

Chittock, John, editor, and Julian Petley, researcher and compiler, Researchers' Guide to John Grierson: Films, Reference Sources,Collections, Data, London, 1990.

Winston, Brian, Claiming the Real: The Griersonian Documentaryand Its Legitimations, London, 1995.

Ellis, Jack C., John Grierson: Life, Contributions, Influence, Carbondale, Illinois, 2000.


On GRIERSON: articles—

Lambert, Gavin, "Who Wants True?," in Sight and Sound (London), April/June 1952.

Ellis, Jack C., "The Young Grierson in America," in Cinema Journal (Evanston, Illinois), Fall 1968.

Ellis, Jack C., "John Grierson's First Years at the National Film Board," in Cinema Journal (Evanston, Illinois), Fall 1970.

Sussex, Elizabeth, "John Grierson," in Sight and Sound (London), Spring 1972.

James, R., "Le Rêve de Grierson," in Cinéma Québec (Montreal), May 1972.

Ellis, Jack C., "Grierson at University," in Cinema Journal (Evanston), Spring 1973.

Dickinson, T., "The Rise and Fall of the British Documentary," in Film Comment (New York), January/February 1977.

Goetz, W., "The Canadian Wartime Documentary," in CinemaJournal (Evanston), Spring 1977.

MacGann, R.D., "Subsidy for the Screen: Grierson and Group Three/1951–55," in Sight and Sound (London), Summer 1977.

Herrick, D., "The Canadian Connection: John Grierson," in CinemaCanada (Montreal), September/October 1978.

Cox, K., "The Grierson Files," in Cinema Canada (Montreal), June/July 1979.

"John Grierson," in Film Dope (London), October 1980.

Ellis, Jack C., "Changing of the Guard: From the Grierson documentary to Free Cinema," in Quarterly Review of Film Studies (New York), Winter 1982.

Pratley, Gerald, "Only Grierson," in Films and Filming (London), March 1982.

Swann, P., "John Grierson and the G.P.O. Film Unit, 1933–39," in Historical Journal of Film, Radio and TV (Abindon, Oxon), March 1983.

Ellis, Jack C., "The Final Years of British Documentary as the Grierson Movement," in Journal of Film and Video (Boston), Fall 1984.

Tomaselli, K., "Grierson in South Africa: Culture, State, and Nationalist Ideology in the South African Film Industry: 1940–41," in Cinema Canada (Montreal), September 1985.

Donald, J., "Machines of Democracy: Education and Entertainment in Inter-War Britain," in Critical Quarterly, vol. 30, no. 3, 1988.

"Grierson Issue" of Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and TV (Abingdon, Oxon), vol. 9, no. 3, 1989.

Forsyth, S., "The Failures of Nationalism and Democracy: Grierson and Gouzenko," in Canadian Journal of Film Studies (North York, Ontario), vol. 1, no. 1, 1990.

Pilard, P., "John Grierson et le cinéma documentaire," in Cinémaction (Paris), no. 60, July 1991.

Acland, C.R., "National Dreams, International Encounters: The Formation of Canadian Film Culture in the 1930s," in CanadianJournal of Film Studies (North York, Ontario), vol. 3, no. 1, Spring 1994.


* * *

More than any one other person, John Grierson was responsible for the documentary film as it has developed in the English-speaking countries. He was the first to use the word documentary in relation to film, applying it to Robert Flaherty's Moana while Grierson was in the United States in the 1920s.

Grierson took the term and his evolving conception of a new kind and use of film back to Britain with him in 1927. There he was hired by Stephen Tallents, secretary of the Empire Marketing Board, a unique government public relations agency intended to promote the marketing of the products of the British Empire.

The first practical application of Grierson's ideas at the EMB was Drifters in 1929, a short feature about herring fishing in the North Sea. Following its success, Grierson established, with the full support of Tallents, the Empire Marketing Board Film Unit instead of pursuing a career as an individual filmmaker. He staffed the Film Unit with young people, mostly middle class and well educated (many were from Cambridge University). Basil Wright, Arthur Elton, Edgar Anstey, and Paul Rotha were among the early recruits; Stuart Legg and Harry Watt came later, as did Humphrey Jennings. Alberto Cavalcanti joined the group shortly after it moved to the General Post Office and served as a sort of co-producer and co-teacher with Grierson.

The training at the EMB Film Unit and subsequently the General Post Office Film Unit was ideological as well as technical and aesthetic. The young filmmakers exposed to it came to share Grierson's broad social purposes and developed an extraordinary loyalty to him and to his goals. It was in this way that the British documentary movement was given shape and impetus.

Grierson wanted documentaries to inform the public about their nation and involve them emotionally with the workings of their government. His assumptions were as follows: if people at work in one part of the Empire are shown to people in the other parts, and if a government service is presented to the population at large, an understanding and appreciation of the interrelatedness of the modern world, and of our dependency on each other, will develop and everyone will want to contribute his or her share to the better functioning of the whole. On these assumptions was based the first phase in Grierson's lifelong activity on behalf of citizenship education. Phase one included some of the most innovative, lovely, and lasting of the British documentaries: Drifters, Industrial Britain, Granton Trawler, Song of Ceylon, Coal Face, and Night Mail. Phase two, which began in the mid-1930s, consisted of calling public attention to pressing problems faced by the nation, insistence that these problems needed to be solved, and suggestions about their causes and possible solutions. Since these matters may have involved differing political positions (and in any case did not relate directly to the concerns of the sponsoring General Post Office), Grierson stepped outside the GPO to enlist sponsorship from private industry. Big oil and gas concerns were especially responsive to his persuasion. The subjects dealt with in this new kind of documentary included unemployment (Workers and Jobs), slums (Housing Problems), malnutrition among the poor (Enough to Eat?), smog (The Smoke Menace), and education (Children at School). Unlike the earlier British documentaries, these films were journalistic rather than poetic, and seemed quite unartistic. Yet they incorporated formal and technical experiments. Most notable among these was the direct interview, with slum dwellers in Housing Problems, for example, presaging the much later cinéma vérité method. The direct interview remains a standard technique of television documentary today.

Grierson's use of institutional sponsorship—public and private—to pay for his kind of filmmaking, rather than depend on returns from the box office, was a key innovation in the development of documentary. A second innovation, complementing the first, was nontheatrical distribution and exhibition: going outside the movie theaters to reach audiences in schools and factories, union halls and church basements.

During the ten years between Drifters and Grierson's departure for Canada in 1939, the sixty or so filmmakers who comprised the British documentary movement made over three hundred films. These films and the system they came out of became models for other countries. Paul Rotha, one of Grierson's principal lieutenants, went on a six-month missionary expedition to the United States in 1937, and film people from America and other countries visited the documentary units in Britain. Grierson, meanwhile, carried his ideas not only to Canada, where he drafted legislation for the National Film Board and became its first head, but to New Zealand, Australia, and later South Africa, all of which established national film boards.

The National Film Board of Canada stands as the largest and most impressive monument to Grierson's concepts and actions relating to the use of film by governments in communicating with their citizens. During his Canadian years he moved beyond national concerns to global ones. The Film Board's The World in Action, a monthly series for the theaters along March of Time lines, expressed some of these concerns. His ideas regarding the education of citizens required in a world at war, and a new world to follow, were expressed in major essays that have inspired many who have read them. "The Challenge of Peace," reprinted in Grierson on Documentary, is one of them.

It is for his many-faceted, innovative leadership in film and in education that Grierson is most to be valued. As a theoretician he articulated the basis of the documentary film, its form and function, its aesthetic and its ethic. As a teacher he trained and, through his writing and speaking, influenced many documentary filmmakers, not only in Britain and Canada but throughout the world. As a producer he was responsible to one extent or another for thousands of films, and he played a decisive creative role in some of the most important of them. In addition, he was an adroit political figure and dedicated civil servant for most of his life. Whether in the employ of a government or not, his central concern was always with communicating to people (of a nation and of the world) the information and attitudes that he thought would help them to lead more useful, productive, satisfying, and rewarding lives.

—Jack C. Ellis

John Grierson

views updated May 29 2018

John Grierson

Canadian and British filmmaker John Grierson (1898-1972) used documentaries to build the National Film Board of Canada into one of the world's largest studios.

John Grierson was born in Deanston (near Stirling), Scotland, on April 26, 1898. His ancestors were lighthouse keepers and his father was a school teacher. He was one of eight children in a family that valued curiosity and delighted in argument. Grierson served as a seaman in World War I and completed a brilliant academic career after the war, graduating with distinction in moral philosophy.

On a Rockefeller scholarship to the University of Chicago, Grierson began his lifelong study of the influence of media on public opinion. He worked with editorial writers on several newspapers and went to Hollywood to study film. There he befriended the American filmmaker Robert Flaherty, whose haunting film Nanook of the North celebrated the daily survival of an Inuit hunter. Grierson was one of the first intellectuals to take film seriously, and in a 1926 review of one of Flaherty's films he coined the term "documentary" to describe the dramatization of the everyday life of ordinary people.

Grierson returned to England in 1927, intrigued with the idea of applying Flaherty's technique to the common people of Scotland. He first sold his idea of documentary film to the Empire Marketing Board, playing on a bureaucrat's love of the sea to pry money for his first film, Drifters, in 1929. This silent depiction of the harsh life and dangerous work of herring fishermen in the North Sea revolutionized the portrayal of working people in the cinema. The film had a profound impact on all who saw it, but Grierson directed only one more film. He decided to devote his energies to building a movement dedicated to using film to see into ordinary things with such perception as to make them as dramatic as the pasteboard excitements of Hollywood.

In 1938 the Canadian government invited Grierson to come to Canada to counsel on the use of film. The Canadian prime minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King, a "fellow Scot" to Grierson, was concerned with the pervasive influence of American magazines, radio, and movies in Canada. Grierson prepared a report, and on his recommendation King created the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) in May 1939 and appointed Grierson its first commissioner in October 1939.

With the outbreak of World War II, Grierson would use film to instill confidence and pride in Canadians. He was general manager of Canada's Wartime Information Board at the same time and thus had extraordinary control over how Canadians perceived the war. Grierson created the NFB from almost nothing. He imported talented filmmakers such as Norman McLaren. In film series such as Canada Carries On and The World in Action he reached an audience of millions in Canadian and American cinemas. By 1945 the NFB had grown into one of the world's largest film studios and was a model for similar institutions around the world.

Grierson's emphasis on realism—he was intolerant of artistic pretension—had a profound long-term influence on Canadian film. "Art is not a mirror," he said, "but a hammer. It is a weapon in our hands to see and say what is good and right and beautiful." Nevertheless, Grierson did not believe that documentary film is a mere public report of the activities of daily life. "For me," he said, "it is something more magical. It is a visual art which can convey a sense of beauty about the ordinary world."

As the war came to a close, Grierson grew weary of Canadian bureaucrats and resigned. In the panic of suspicion surrounding the infamous Gouzenko spy case in Canada, Grierson was brought before a secret tribunal and questioned about his one-time secretary, who was connected to the spy ring. The investigators then threw doubt on Grierson himself for his alleged "communist" sympathies. The shadow of mistrust followed him to the United States where the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) ensured that the State Department lifted his work permit. He moved to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Paris where Europe's documentary filmmakers flocked to his door and rising directors such as Roberto Rosellini paid him homage. He was soon almost forgotten in Canada. He returned to his native Scotland in the mid-1950s. He persuaded Roy Thomson, the Canadian millionaire who owned the independent television network in Scotland, to create a public affairs program, This Wonderful World, which Grierson hosted for ten years. But Grierson had great misgivings about television. Referring to Marshall McLuhan's famous dictum, he described television as "a massage that puts you to sleep … an instrument of domestic ease," the very antithesis of documentary film.

Grierson was nearly broke when McGill University in Montreal invited him to lecture in 1968. He began as a curiosity but soon was attracting up to 800 students to his lectures. Indira Gandhi called him to India to find ways to spread the principles of birth control to the villages. Sick with cancer, he returned home to England where he died at Bath on February 19, 1972.

Grierson was a firebrand whose single-minded devotion to the principle that "all things are beautiful, as long as you have them in the right order" had a profound influence on the history of film, and on the cultural life of Canada in particular.

Further Reading

Grierson's friend H. Forsyth Harding wrote the official biography, John Grierson: A Documentary Biography (1979). There are several books on Grierson's career at the National Film Board of Canada, for example, Gary Evans, John Grierson and the National Film Board (1984), and many others on Grierson's British career, for example, Ian Aitken, Film and Reform: John Grierson and the Documentary Film Movement (1990). Grierson's own thoughts can be read in H. Forsyth Hardy, ed., Grierson on Documentary (1946). The NFB produced an appreciative film on its founder, John Grierson, which is now available on video cassette.

Additional Sources

John Grierson, film master, New York: Macmillan, 1978. □