Peter Faiman

Australian film director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Leonard Faiman[1] AM[2] (born 1944) is an Australian television producer with experience in film, live television and events. He has had a long-standing working relationship with the Nine Network.

Quick Facts AM, Born ...
Peter Faiman
Born
Peter Leonard Faiman

1944 (age 8081)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
NationalityAustralian
Occupations
  • Television executive
  • TV producer
  • film producer and director
Years active1971–present
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Biography

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Faiman was born in Melbourne.[1] He directed/produced the Paul Hogan Show and the Graham Kennedy and Don Lane shows[3] for about six years of its eight-and-a-half-year run.[4] He also produced a show hosted by Bert Newton and one by Ernie Sigley.[4] In 1981, he was awarded the Member of the Order of Australia in the 1981 Queen's New Years Honours List for his services to the media, particularly in the field of television production.[2]

Faiman was involved in several Rupert Murdoch projects, including in the UK as creative and management consultant at BSkyB,[3] and in the US at the Fox Network, where he produced the Emmy Award-winning news magazine program The Reporters and A Current Affair in New York City.[3] He went on to become Vice President of Fox Circle Productions[3] and later President of Programs and Production at 20th Century Fox Television in Los Angeles.[3] He guided the launch of the FX Network in New York in 1994,[3] and was the coordinating director for the opening and closing broadcasts of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games on behalf of the Sydney Olympic Broadcasting Organisation (SOBO).[5]

Faiman directed the 1986 blockbuster film Crocodile Dundee,[4] and the 1991 American comedy Dutch, which was a box office disappointment.[4] He also produced the animated feature FernGully: The Last Rainforest.[4]

Since returning to Australia in 2002, he has been a program consultant for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, acting as a consulting producer on Strictly Ballroom, Spicks and Specks and The Pet Show.[4] Faiman also helped conceptualise the Webby Award-winning multi-platform project SkillsOne.[3]

References

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