Michael Powell

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Is Michael Powell Dead or Still Alive? Michael Powell Birthday and Date of Death

Michael Powell

Michael Powell Death

Michael passed away on February 19, 1990 at the age of 84 in Avening, Gloucestershire, England, UK. Michael's cause of death was cancer.

Michael Powell death quick facts:
  • When did Michael Powell die?

    February 19, 1990
  • How did Michael Powell die? What was the cause of death?

    Cancer
  • How old was Michael Powell when died?

    84
  • Where did Michael Powell die? What was the location of death?

    Avening, Gloucestershire, England, UK

Michael Powell Birthday and Date of Death

Michael Powell was born on September 30, 1905 and died on February 19, 1990. Michael was 84 years old at the time of death.

Birthday: September 30, 1905
Date of Death: February 19, 1990
Age at Death: 84

Michael Powell's pets, dead or alive?

  • Erik (Dog - Cocker Spaniel)
  • Spangle (Dog - Cocker Spaniel)

Michael Powell - Biography

Michael Latham Powell (30 September 1905 – 19 February 1990) was an English film director, celebrated for his partnership with Emeric Pressburger. Through their production company "The Archers", they together wrote, produced and directed a series of classic British films, notably 49th Parallel (1941), The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943), A Matter of Life and Death (1946, also called Stairway to Heaven), Black Narcissus (1947), The Red Shoes (1948), and The Tales of Hoffmann (1951). His later controversial 1960 film Peeping Tom, while today considered a classic, was so vilified on first release that his career was seriously damaged.Michael Powell Director - A one time studio gofer, still photographer, and comic actor, Michael Powell became one of the most celebrated and controversial directors ever to come out of England. Born in Canterbury, Powell became enamored of films while still a teenager and, after a start in the mid-'20s and a stint shooting stills and serving as a co-scenarist with Alfred Hitchc*ck in the early sound era, Powell broke into directing in low-budget British thrillers and comedies. After directing and writing his first notable movie in 1937, The Edge of the World, he moved to London Films where he began working with Emeric Pressburger, a gifted young author and screenwriter. Their two-decade association began shortly after they left London Films (where they collaborated on The Spy In Black and Powell co-directed The Thief of Bagdad). The wartime thrillers Contraband and Forty-Ninth Parallel -- the latter attracted much attention (including Oscar nominations for Best Picture and best original story) -- resulted in the creation of The Archers, an independent production company.Powell and Pressburger went on to jointly write, produce, and direct The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, A Canterbury Tale, I Know Where I'm Going, and Stairway To Heaven during World War II. The idiosyncratic humor and point-of-view of these films alienated many British critics, but delighted audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. After the war, Powell and Pressburger made a series of movies that emblazoned their names around the world: Black Narcissus, a story of nuns who are nearly destroyed by their own passions while trying to found a convent in the Himalayas; The Red Shoes, a phenomenally successful film about the life and death of a ballet dancer, whose multi-year run in America and multimillion-dollar success made possible such pictures as An American In Paris and The Tales of Hoffmann, an opera/ballet amalgam of unprecedented stylistic flare and daring.The early '50s saw a decline in fortunes for the filmmakers, and their partnership dissolved in 1956. Powell continued to make movies of a fiercely personal nature until 1960, when the critical reaction to Peeping Tom -- about a man who mixes voyeurism, cinema, and murder, and is now considered a classic -- ended his career in England. He worked for American and European television during the 1960s and '70s, and was rediscovered in the late '70s with the help of Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese, who regarded Powell as one of the most important influences on their individual work. Museum retrospectives, restorations, and reopenings of his classic films followed, along with a multi-volume autobiography that he completed prior to his death in 1990.Biography by Bruce Eder [-]

DEAD OR ALIVE?