Albert Kish (14 May 1937 – 23 October 2015) was a Canadian documentarian/filmmaker.
Quick Facts Born, Died ...
Albert Kish
Kish, 2007
Born (1937-05-14 ) May 14, 1937Died October 23, 2015(2015-10-23) (aged 78) Nationality Canadian Occupation Documentarian/filmmaker Awards see below
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Kish was born in Albert Kiss in Eger , Hungary, the son of Olga Weisz, a clothing store manager, and Albert Kiss, a customs officer. He became interested in film at an early age and was attending the Academy of Drama and Film in Budapest when the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 forced his family to leave Hungary. They moved to Montreal in 1956 and changed their name to 'Kish'.[1]
Kish found work as a photographer and, in 1964, was hired as an editor at the CBC . In 1967, he was hired by the Canadian National Railway to photograph trains for Expo 67 . National Film Board of Canada director John Howe liked his work and offered him a job.[2] Kish stayed with the NFB until his retirement in 1997, directing, producing and/or editing 33 films.
Outside of the NFB, Kish made three films with Bashar Shbib . He also maintained a life-long interest in photography, and his photographs have appeared in several publications and exhibitions.[3]
Albert Kish, 2013
In 1994, Kish married engineer Katalin Futo. He died of cancer at Toronto General Hospital on October 23, 2015, and was survived by his wife and two sons.[4]
(All for the National Film Board of Canada )[5] [6] [7]
Flight in White - documentary short, William Canning 1968 - editor
Juggernaut - documentary short, Eugene Boyko 1968 - editor
Ports Canada - documentary short 1969 - director, editor
Freeze-in - documentary short, F. Whitman Trecartin 1970 - producer, editor
Bighorn - documentary short, Bill Schmalz 1970 - editor
Occupation - documentary, Bill Reid 1970 - editor
Search into White Space - documentary short, James Carney 1970 - editor
Family House - documentary short, Laurence Hyde 1970 - photographer
City Limits - documentary short, Laurence Hyde 1971 - photographer
This is a Photograph - documentary short 1971 - director, editor, photographer
Time Piece - documentary short 1971 - director, editor, writer
Bannerfilm - documentary short, Donald Winkler 1972 - editor
Louisbourg - documentary short 1972 - director, editor
Our Street was Paved with Gold - documentary short 1973 - director, editor
In Praise of Hands - documentary short, Donald Winkler 1974 - editor
Los Canadienses - documentary 1975 - director, writer, editor
Bekevar Jubilee - documentary short 1977 - director, writer, editor
Hold the Ketchup - documentary short 1977 - director, editor
Paper Wheat - documentary 1979 - director, editor
The Image Makers - documentary 1980 - director, writer, editor
Conspiracy of Silence - documentary short, Nelu Ghiran 1981 - editor
F.R. Scott: Rhyme and Reason - documentary, Donald Winkler 1982 - editor
Muscle - documentary short, Barry Lank 1983 - editor
The Age of Invention - short film 1984 - director, producer, editor
The Scholar in Society: Northrop Frye in Conversation - documentary short, Donald Winkler 1984 - editor
Age of the Rivers - documentary 1986 - director, writer, editor
Al Purdy: A Sensitive Man - documentary, Donald Winkler 1988 - editor
Notman's World - documentary short 1989 - director, editor
To the Queen Mother from Canada with Love - documentary short 1990 - director, editor
Litrosi - documentary, Maria K. Daskalos 1993 - editor
The Summer of '67 - documentary 1994 - producer, editor and (with Donald Winkler ) director
Louisbourg Under Siege - documentary 1997 - director, editor
With Chbib Productions
Bread - short film 1985 - director, editor[8]
Clair Obscur - feature, Bashar Shbib 1988 - editor[9]
Full of Grace - short film, Shernold Edwards 2006 - editor[10]
Ports Canada (1969)[11]
Gold Camera Award, U.S. Industrial Film Festival, Chicago 1970
This is a Photograph (1971)[12]
Los Canadienses (1975)[13]
BAFTA Award for Best Documentary (Robert Flaherty Award), British Academy of Film & Television Arts , London 1976
Silver Hugo Award , Chicago International Film Festival 1976
Special Award for Best Television Film, and Special Mention by the International Federation of Film Critics , International Week of Cinema, Mannheim , Germany 1976
Best Documentary Film, Yorkton Film Festival , Yorkton , Saskatchewan 1976
Blue Ribbon Award, International History & Culture, American Film Festival , New York 1977
TV Award, Best film made specifically for TV, Melbourne Film Festival , Australia 1977
Paper Wheat (1979)[14]
The Age of Invention (1984)[15]
Bread (1985)
Notman's World (1989)[16]