Ken Russell, Women In Love director, dies at 84

ken russell
Ken Russell
Film director Ken Russell, who was Oscar-nominated for his 1969 film girls In Love, has died at the age of eighty four.

His son, Alex Verney-Elliott, said he died on Sunday following a series of strokes.

During his career, he became known for his controversial films as well as girls In Love, that featured Oliver Reed and Alan Bates wrestling nude.

He conjointly directed the infamous spiritual drama The Devils and therefore the Who's rock opera, Tommy, in 1975.

"My father died peacefully, he died with a smile on his face," Mr Verney-Elliott said.

Russell's widow, Elize, said she was "devastated" by her husband's death, that had been "completely unexpected".

She said the director had recently agreed to direct a musical feature film of Alice In Wonderland and had been functioning on the script and casting.

"He conjointly had simply completed a piece of writing for the days on a review of the re-release of his film The Devils, therefore he was keeping himself terribly busy," she added.

Glenda Jackson, who gave an Oscar-winning performance in girls In Love and starred during a variety of Russell's alternative films as well as Music Lovers, told the BBC it had been "just wonderful to figure with him and to figure with him as typically as I did".

"He created the type of climate during which actors might do their job and that i loved him dearly."

Jackson added that she believed the director had been overlooked by the British film business, saying it had been "a nice shame".

"It was nearly as if he never existed - I notice it totally scandalous {for thereforemeone|for somebody} who was so innovative and a movie director of international stature," she said.

'Creative force'
Joely Richardson, who starred opposite Sean Bean in Russell's 1993 BBC TV series Lady Chatterley, said: "I will forever feel privileged and honoured to have worked with the great Ken Russell.

"More than that, I was extremely fond of the man himself."

Lord Melvyn Bragg, who first worked as Russell's assistant in 1963 on BBC programme Monitor, said he was "an exceptional man".

"He was a glorious director at his best, his best films will be remembered. He was a tremendous ornament to the rather supine British film industry and he was the glory of the television arts industry," he said.

Film-maker Michael Winner hailed Russell's "duplicity of mind", adding he had made an "enormous contribution" to British cinema.

"He pushed the barriers completely and got away with it sometimes and didn't others, but he made some startling movies," said.

"He had an eye for the composition of each image on the screen - a great eye for imagery and then, of course, he had a great idea for the grotesque."

Friend and cultural commentator Norman Lebrecht said: "Among many achievements that spring to mind, he made British cinema less insular and self-referential.

"He was also a leading creative force in the history of British television. He will be widely mourned."

Russell later returned to more small budget, but no less flamboyant fare, including Crimes of Passion, Gothic, Salome's Last Dance and the cult horror-comedy The Lair of the White Worm, starring Hugh Grant.

The director also made an adaptation of DH Lawrence's The Rainbow followed by the gritty film, Whore, and even tried his hand at music videos, making Nikita for Sir Elton John.

Many of Russell's later films were dismissed as too eclectic and by the 1990s he found it almost impossible to get funding for his work.

He returned to the public eye in 2007, when he appeared on Celebrity Big Brother.

He lasted just four days before quitting the show after a disagreement with fellow contestant, the late Jade Goody.

News by BBC

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