Basil Millward

From ESAT
Revision as of 15:18, 1 January 2024 by Fogterop (talk | contribs) (Created page with " '''Basil Millward''' (1925 - ****) was a South African film editor. == Biography == Little is known about Basil John Lancelot (Lance) Millward. He was born in Cape Town on...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Basil Millward (1925 - ****) was a South African film editor.

Biography

Little is known about Basil John Lancelot (Lance) Millward. He was born in Cape Town on 17 October 1925 and when he married Valerie Hilda Nebel in Johannesburg his profession was given as film technician. During the 1960s he worked as a film editor, first on a number of shorts produced at the National Film Board, and later on features by Richard Daneel and Percival Rubens. The last credit we have for him dates from 1971, when he was on the production team of Rubens’ Mr. Kingstreet’s War, though on that film the American John Bushelman was credited as editor.

Credits

1964 – Die Hart van ‘n Stad (short) (Director: Adrian Coddington), 1964 – Traffic Officer 174 / Verkeersbeampte 174 (short) (Director: Adrian Coddington), 1964 – W.H. Coetzer (short) (Director: Ralph Loubser), 1965 – Die Munisipale Mark (short) (Director: Adrian Coddington), 1965 – Boys at the Wheel / Kêrels aan die Stuur (short) (Director: Ralph Loubser), 1965 – The Soldier / Die Soldaat (short) (Director: Alex Learmont), 1965 – The South African Coloured Corps / Die Suid-Afrikaanse Kleurlingkorps) (Director: Neil Curry), 1967 – What then? / Wat dan? (short) (Director: Neil Curry), 1968 – The Long Red Shadow (feature) (Director: Percival Rubens), 1969 – Vrolike Vrydag 13de (feature) (Director: Richard Daneel), 1969 – Strangers at Sunrise (feature) (Director: Percival Rubens), 1971 – Mr. Kingstreet’s War (feature) (Director: Percival Rubens).