Rudall Hayward

Rudall Hayward
MBE
Born Rudall Charles Victor Hayward
(1900-07-04)4 July 1900
Wolverhampton, Staffordshire, England
Died 29 May 1974(1974-05-29) (aged 73)
Dunedin, New Zealand
Education Wanganui Collegiate School
Waihi School of Mines
Occupation Film director and producer
Years active 192074
Notable work The Amazing Dolphin of Opononi (1956)
To Love a Maori (1972)
Spouse(s) Hilda Maud Moren (192343)
Patricia Rongomaitara Te Miha, aka Patricia Miller
(194374)

Rudall Charles Victor Hayward MBE (4 July 1900 – 29 May 1974) was a pioneer New Zealand filmmaker from the 1920s to the 1970s, who directed seven feature films and numerous others.

Biography

Hayward was born in Wolverhampton, England, and died in Dunedin while promoting his last film.

He was the son of Rudall and Adelina Hayward, who came to New Zealand in 1905. With Henry John Hayward (1866–1945) Rudall senior’s brother, his parents were involved with entertainment and silent cinema in New Zealand, in West’s Pictures and The Brescians.

Rudall (junior) was educated at Wanganui Collegiate School from 1916 to 1917 and the Waihi School of Mines. He worked in Australia c1920 under Raymond Longford (who in 1915-16 was filming in New Zealand), on some of Longford's films: The Sentimental Bloke, On Our Selection, and Rudd’s New Selection.

He made his first two-reel comedy The Bloke from Freeman’s Bay in 1920 (which his uncle Henry offered him £50 to burn). He was prosecuted by the Auckland City Council in the Police Court and fined £1 on each of two charges for putting up posters for The Bloke from Freeman’s Bay in unauthorised places contrary to city by-laws, in October 1921.[1]

His first feature was My Lady of the Cave (1922), then Rewi’s Last Stand (1925), The Te Kooti Trail (1927), and The Bush Cinderella (1928).

In 1928-30 he made 23 two-reel "community comedies" with local settings and actors at various towns, and titles like: Tilly of Te Aroha, Hamilton’s Hectic Husbands, A Daughter of Dunedin, Winifred of Wanganui, Natalie of Napier, and Patsy of Palmerston. Lee Hill worked with Haywood on these, then went into competition with him.

His first sound film was On the Friendly Road (1936) with Colin Scrimgeour, and he remade Rewi’s Last Stand with sound (1939).

His films were made on a shoestring budget, and in an interview from 1961 Hayward explains, “We had a sound camera which I built up with the help of friends who had lathes. Other parts I had made by Auckland companies, and I laboriously paid off the cost because no one was earning very much. We had a sound engineer, Jack Baxendale, a brilliant pioneering ham radio enthusiast, and he built not only the recording side but also the microphones. It was a major task for anyone to build condenser microphones in those days.”[2]

After World War II he worked in England, then made his most successful film The Amazing Dolphin of Opononi about Opo the dolphin. He made educational films in New Zealand and overseas, then his final film To Love a Maori (1972), which was shot on 16 mm.

In the 1973 Queen's Birthday Honours, Hayward was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire for services to the community.[3]

References

  1. "Local and general news". New Zealand Herald. 10 December 1921. p. 8. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  2. THE LAST STAND at ARCHIVING PRACTICE, FILM, NZ HISTORY accessed 5 Aug 2016
  3. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 45985. p. 6509. 2 June 1973. Retrieved 14 July 2014.

Celluloid Dreams: a century of film in New Zealand by Geoffrey Churchman etc. (1997, IPL Books, Wellington) ISBN 0-908876-96-3

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.