Julian Biggs (1920–1972) was a director and producer with the National Film Board of Canada and its first Director of English Production. Over the course of his 20-year career, he created 146 films, two of which (Herring Hunt (1953) and Paddle to the Sea (1966)) were nominated for Academy Awards. His film 23 Skidoo (1964) received two BAFTA nominations, including the BAFTA United Nations award. Biggs was born and raised in Port Perry, in southern Ontario. When World War II broke out in 1939, he joined the Canadian Army and then transferred to the Canadian Navy, where he spent the rest of the war serving on mine-sweepers. He then attended the University of Toronto and, in 1951, was hired as a production assistant by the National Film Board of Canada. He directed his first film, The Son, a year later. From 1956 to 1958, Biggs produced the Perspective series (paralleled by the similar series in French Passe-partout), which was 35 30-minute dramas with an emphasis on social themes such as alcoholism, drug addiction, adolescence, the elderly, racial problems etc. One such film, Monkey on the Back, directed by Biggs, was a bleak, tragic story of man's unsuccessful struggle to free himself from drug addiction. Similar to Robert Anderson's Drug Addict (1948), which had been banned in the U.S., it was the type of film that caused the NFB to reconsider its role in producing socially relevant films. There was an unwritten policy and priority to shift away from social realism to the 'art' of film.
Birthday: February 24, 1920
Death: December 04, 1972
January 01, 1970
January 01, 1954
January 01, 1964
January 01, 1964
January 01, 1961
January 01, 1961
March 06, 1958
January 01, 1956
January 01, 1957
February 03, 1952
January 01, 1956
October 16, 1953
January 01, 1965
January 01, 1966
January 01, 1957
January 01, 1961
January 01, 1959
December 31, 1962
January 01, 1961
January 01, 1962
January 01, 1963
January 01, 1957
January 01, 1957
January 01, 1951
February 01, 1966
September 25, 1957
June 20, 1965
January 01, 1957
October 30, 1965