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  • Sir David Lean (1908-1991)
David Lean being presented with an Award by Princess Anne at the Film and Television Awards in the Royal Albert Hall on 6 March 1974. Sir Sidney Samuelson looks on. BAFTA Archive

Sir David Lean (1908-1991)

28 May 08

A master of visual storytelling and one of the early champions of the Academy in the 1940s, David Lean retains a special place in the history of British Film.

From a love-struck couple in a Lancashire station cafe to a tiny figure shimmering on a desert horizon, the films of Sir David Lean have provided cinema with some of its most memorable moments. Although he directed only 16 feature films in a 40 year career, Lean remains one of Britain’s most revered and inspirational film-makers.

Born on 25 March 1908 in Croydon, Surrey, David Lean started his career in film in the late 1920s as a clapper boy before editing around twenty-five films including The Night Porter (1930), Pygmalion (1938) and Michael Powell’s 49th Parallel (1941) and One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1942).

His first film in the director’s chair saw him work in partnership with Noel Coward on In Which We serve (1942) and he worked with Coward twice more before going solo in 1945 with Brief Encounter.

It wasn’t until 1957 that Lean moved towards a more 'epic' style of film-making, producing and directing The Bridge On the River Kwai which won him enormous commercial and critical success. Over the next ten years or so he produced or directed three more big-budget epics including Lawrence of Arabia (1962), Doctor Zhivago (1965) and Ryan’s Daughter (1970).

Lean’s final film, A Passage to India, was completed in 1984 and won him a host of BAFTA nominations. He was knighted the same year but died seven years later of pneumonia on 16 April 1991 whilst preparing to film his adaptation of Joseph Conrad's Nostromo.

A Founding Father

As well as creating films with sweeping historical narratives, Sir David also had a huge impact on the history of the Academy. He was among the eminent film industry members who established the British Film Academy on 16 April 1947 and became Chairman soon afterwards, guiding the BFA in its early years.

Recognising his unique contribution to the film industry the Academy made Lean a Fellow of the Academy in 1974 and a year later he donated the royalties from Dr Zhivago and The Bridge on the River Kwai to the Society of Film and Television Arts (later to become BAFTA).

This year sees centenary anniversary celebrations of Lean’s birth, which is fitting, as his legacy is still part of the Academy’s ongoing work and focus on excellence. It was telling that in our 60th anniversary year, BAFTA Members voted Lawrence of Arabia their favourite film of all time.

  • More about the David Lean Centenary
  • David Lean Filmography
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David Lean

The ambition and quality of his work from 1930 to 1984 confirms Sir David Lean as one of cinema's most exceptional...

David Lean with Cornell Borchers and Anthony Havelock-Allan in 1954

Famed producer, Sir Anthony Havelock-Allan recollects a long association with Sir David Lean in an edition of BAFTA...

Lord Puttnam CBE receiving his Academy Fellowship in 2006.

Speaking at the opening ceremony of The David Lean Room at 195 Piccadilly in 1999, the Academy’s then Vice-President...

St Paul's Cathedral by the amanda, http://www.flickr.com/photos/the_amanda/301081453/

Sir David Lean passed away on 16 April 1991. BAFTA News covered the moving memorial ceremony held later that year...

Lord Attenborough and Sir David Lean.

From one British cinema legend to another: Lord Attenborough pays tribute to Sir David Lean.

Sir Sydney Samuelson, Lady Lean and John Box at the opening of the David Lean Room in 1999.

We recall the grand opening of the newly-refurbished David Lean Room, described as “A fitting Tribute to one of the...

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