George Ogilvie, Co-Director of 'Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome,' Dies at 89
He was not on the list.
Russell Crowe, whom he guided in his film debut, called him
"a gifted teacher in art, theater and life."
George Ogilvie, who co-directed the 1985 action film Mad Max
Beyond Thunderdome with George Miller and guided Russell Crowe in his
big-screen debut, has died. He was 89.
Ogilvie died Sunday of cardiac arrest at the Braidwood
Hospital in New South Wales, his niece Heather Ogilvie told The Hollywood
Reporter. He had been suffering from emphysema for years.
It was in the 1990 Australian romantic drama The Crossing
that Crowe, then 26, first appeared on a film screen.
Ogilvie recalled Crowe arriving late to his audition
disheveled and out of breath. "He was desperate, but from the moment he
walked in he knew he belonged there," he said in 2016.
"He was a force. He worked hard, but he did expect
everyone around him to work hard as well, there was no give and take. None of
the crew liked him, thought he was an arrogant little pisspot."
Ogilvie also was instrumental in the growing popularity of
the miniseries in Australia, directing an episode of the 1983 political drama
The Dismissal and the 1984 historical cricket series Bodyline, both produced by
Miller and Byron Kennedy.
In the 1980s, Miller gave into temptation and began crafting
a third film in his acclaimed Mad Max series. His producing partner Kennedy had
died at 33 in a 1983 helicopter crash, and Miller needed to "do something
just to get over the shock and grief of all that."
As a result, Ogilvie, his colleague and mentor, stepped in
as co-director on Beyond Thunderdome. It was his first feature.
"And it, in a way of all the films, it's the one I have
most affection for of the [first] three films," Miller said in an oral
history.
Thunderdome starred Mel Gibson, Bruce Spence, Frank Thring
and Tina Turner, whose power ballad "We Don't Need Another Hero
(Thunderdome)" received a Golden Globe and Grammy nomination.
Ogilvie also directed the 1987 miniseries The Shiralee,
starring Bryan Brown and Noni Hazlehurst, and 11 episodes of the cop drama Blue
Heelers.
His other features were Short Changed (1986) and The Place
at the Coast (1987).
Crowe called Ogilvie in a tweet "a gifted teacher in
art, theatre and life" and said it was was "a deep privilege to have
known" him.
"There is still a resonance daily in my life from the
things he taught me. Ah precious Mr Ogilvie, this is a sad moment indeed. The Shiralee, Short Changed, The Crossing.
Brilliant man."
A gifted teacher
in art, theatre and life.
A deep privilege
to have known George.
There is still a
resonance daily in my life from the things he taught me.
Ah precious Mr
Ogilvie , this is a sad moment indeed.
The Shiralee,
Short Changed, The Crossing. Brilliant man. https://t.co/rYdzQt7hC6
— Russell Crowe
(@russellcrowe) April 5, 2020
Ogilvie was born a twin to Scottish parents on March 5,
1931, in Goulburn, New South Wales.
At age 20, he and his mother set sail for England.
Determined to break through as a theater actor, he ended up at a family
theatrical company called Jimmy James, where he learned his craft in front of
an audience each night.
"I have never forgotten the fact that for me creativity
— in terms of entertainment or performing or whatever — is a family affair, has
always been, whether it's in my family or in the family I found in
England," he said in 2006. "And ever since then as an actor and a
director, I think I've searched for family."
While in Europe, he studied mime under French stage coach
Jacques Lecoq.
Upon his return to Australia, he was urged by noted theater directors
Walt Cherry and John Sumner to consider directing. He was reluctant to forgo
the acting career but "began to understand and realize that everything
that I'd learned, both in music and dance and in the theater, seemed to come
together as a director, and I began to enjoy it."
Sumner persuaded him to become associate director of the
Melbourne Theater Company. Ogilvie directed 23 plays and received three
Melbourne Theater Critics Awards before transitioning to artistic director of
the South Australian Theatre Company.
In the mid-1970s, Ogilvie had a spiritual awakening, studied
Siddha Yoga and flew to an Indian ashram where he meditated for one month. Upon
his return, he began a pilgrimage to Israel, camping next to the Sea of
Galilee.
In 1979, the New South Welshman was approached by British
ballet dancer and teacher Peggy van Praagh to direct a revival of the 19th
century comic ballet Coppélia for the Australian Ballet Company. He returned to
the show's 2016 revival as an adviser.
Appointed a member of the Order of Australia in 1983 for
services to the theater and performing arts, he received the Byron Kennedy
Award in 1988 from the Australian Film Institute for services to the film
industry. In 2006, he published his autobiography, Simple Gifts — A Life in the
Theatre.
His final film credit was a bit part in The Water Diviner
(2014), a drama directed by Crowe.
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