Paddy Whannel

Atholl Douglas (Paddy) Whannel
Paddy Whannel
Born (1922-10-17)October 17, 1922
Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland
Died July 8, 1980(1980-07-08) (aged 57)
London, England
Occupation professor, author
Employer British Film Institute, Northwestern University

Atholl Douglas (Paddy) Whannel (born in Pitlochry, Perthshire, 17 October 1922; died 8 July 1980 in London), was a key figure in the educational work of the British Film Institute (BFI) throughout the 1960s. He went on to teach at Northwestern University, Illinois until his death in 1980.

Whannel was hired by the BFI in 1957, having taught history, art, social studies and mass media at various London schools for nine years. His first task as Education Officer was to lecture about film up and down the country; his teaching became an inspiration for a whole generation of film educators. In 1964, he co-authored The Popular Arts with Stuart Hall, in which he showed his interest in popular (particularly Hollywood) film as a serious subject of study, at a time when this kind of cinema was still neglected by traditional British film criticism (including the BFI’s own Sight and Sound) .

Although Whannel hardly ever published about film again, it was under his leadership that the BFI Education Department adopted a new, dynamic policy towards film criticism and film studies that provided a platform for emergent film theory. As Alan Lovell put it, “a grasp of the overall context and an attention to detail combined with democratic inclinations enabled him to create a framework that released other people’s energies and talents while making sure they were used to their best effect”.[1] In the mid-1960s Whannel brought into the Department a new generation of film teachers, theorists and writers, including Alan Lovell, Jim Kitses, Peter Wollen and Victor Perkins, who played a prominent role in shaping the development of film studies and film theory (in particular semiotics and structuralism) in Britain. But the intellectual challenge provided by this new current of thought made Whannel a controversial figure within the BFI. In August 1971, he and five of his colleagues from the Education Department resigned after a Sub-Committee of the BFI Governors had delivered a report which proposed “scaling down the Department’s activity, reducing it to a support and advisory role, and cutting the umbilical cord that linked it to the Society for Education in Film and Television, then publisher of Screen.”[2]

References

  1. Alan Lovell, “Appreciation: Paddy Whannel 1922-1980”, BFI News, no. 45, October 1980.
  2. Geoffrey Nowell-Smith, “The 1970 Crisis at the BFI and its Aftermath”, Screen, 47:4, Winter 2006.
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