Joshua Dugdale
Joshua Dugdale, FRSA (Birmingham 20 September 1974), is a British documentary film-maker. He studied economics at the University of Manchester.
Joshua Dugdale | |
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Born | Joshua Dugdale 20 September 1974 Birmingham, UK |
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | since 2000 |
Website | www |
His 2002 film for the BBC, LAPD Blues, won the highest ratings of that year for a BBC current affairs documentary.
In 2005–2008 he made a three-year biopic of the fourteenth Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso, The Unwinking Gaze. In this film he recorded the Dalai Lama as a leader of the Tibetan people, rather than portraying him as spiritual leader in Tibetan Buddhism as is done customarily. Notable awards given Dugdale were the Mammoth Best Documentary award in 2008 as well as the runner up in the Best Documentary section for the Foreign Press Association in 2008. The Guardian suggested that 'it could force China into a more civil and humanitarian stance towards Tibet.'
Dugdale is currently working on a series on empire, through the history of his ancestors' business, the maritime and religious publishers, Mount and Page. Dugdale is also one of the founders of Medicine Festival which is based at his home on the Wasing estate.
Dugdale is the son of former Aston Villa chairman Sir William Dugdale, 2nd Baronet, a descendant of the Noble House of Stratford, and his wife, Cecilia (Cylla) Mary, daughter of Sir William Mount, 2nd Baronet of Wasing Place in Berkshire which he inherited in 2014. Dugdale is also a cousin of former Conservative Party leader and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, David Cameron.[1]
Filmography
Film | Year | Remark |
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Pepe and his Cuban Heels | 1996 | On life in Cuba |
LAPD Blues | 2002 | Reporter |
The Unwinking Gaze | 2008 | Director/producer; biography of Tenzin Gyatso |
External links
- Times, Article
- IMDB, profile
- BBC, LAPD blues
- Presskit, Unwinking Gaze