Christopher Miles
Christopher Miles (19 April 1939 – 15 September 2023) was a British film director, producer, and screenwriter whose career spanned over five decades, beginning with experimental short films in the early 1960s.[1][2][3] Born in London to a family involved in the arts, Miles studied film at the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC) in Paris, where he honed his craft before returning to the UK.[2][1] He was the elder brother of actress Sarah Miles, whom he directed in several projects, including the 1970 adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's The Virgin and the Gypsy.[4][3] Miles gained early recognition with his 1963 short film The Six-Sided Triangle, which explored artistic collaboration among figures like painter Bridget Riley and earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Subject.[1][4] His feature films often adapted literary works, such as Jean Genet's The Maids (1974) starring Glenda Jackson and Susannah York, and D.H. Lawrence's biography in Priest of Love (1981) with Ian McKellen and Janet Suzman.[4] Later works included the period comedy The Clandestine Marriage (1999) and documentaries like Love in the Ancient World (1997).[1][4] Throughout his career, he balanced commercial projects with independent endeavors, serving as a professor of film at the Royal College of Art from 1989 to 1993.[1] Miles' contributions to British cinema emphasized visual storytelling and literary fidelity, though he occasionally faced production challenges, such as shelving a planned film in Egypt following the 2001 terrorist attacks.[5] He published memoirs reflecting on his experiences and remained active into his later years, directing Fire from Olympia in 2012.[6][4]Early Life and Education
Family and Upbringing
Christopher Miles was born on April 19, 1939, in London, England, as the eldest of four children to John Miles, a civil engineer from a family of engineers, and Clarice Remnant, a local councillor.[3][1] The family's engineering heritage on the paternal side provided a stable, technically oriented household amid the disruptions of World War II, with Miles experiencing the immediate post-war austerity of rationing and reconstruction in Britain during his early years.[1] His younger sister, Sarah Miles (born December 31, 1941), later became a prominent actress, fostering a sibling dynamic centered on shared creative inclinations toward performance and visual storytelling, though the parents' professions emphasized practical engineering over artistic pursuits.[3] This familial environment, influenced by the paternal grandfather's post-World War I interest in home screenings of films, exposed Miles to early cinematic experimentation using 8mm and 16mm equipment at home.[7] By age 14, around 1953, Miles demonstrated precocious engagement with film technology, becoming the first person to broadcast 8mm footage on the BBC, reflecting how post-war access to affordable amateur equipment shaped his formative hobbies in a resource-constrained Britain recovering from wartime shortages.[8] These hands-on activities, rather than formal family artistic traditions, causally directed his initial development toward filmmaking amid the era's emphasis on self-reliant innovation.[7]Academic and Artistic Training
Miles attended Winchester College from 1953 to 1957, where he developed an early interest in filmmaking by experimenting with 8mm films.[9] At age 16, while still a student there, he became the first individual to broadcast 8mm footage on British television, airing on 6 April 1957, which demonstrated his nascent technical skills in amateur cinematography.[7] These extracurricular activities honed his foundational abilities in visual storytelling and equipment handling, laying groundwork for analytical approaches to narrative construction without formal instruction at the time.[9] Following secondary education, Miles pursued specialized training at the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC) in Paris from 1961 to 1962, focusing on film direction.[9] [7] This prestigious institution provided rigorous instruction in core filmmaking disciplines, including directing and screenwriting techniques essential for professional production.[4] During his studies, he engaged in practical exercises such as producing student films, which served as controlled experiments to apply theoretical principles like shot composition, editing rhythms, and script-to-screen adaptation, fostering proficiency in causal narrative progression.[7] These formative experiences at IDHEC established the technical bedrock for his subsequent career, emphasizing empirical mastery over creative intuition alone.[9]Personal Life
Family Ties and Relationships
Christopher Miles was the eldest child of John Miles, a consulting civil engineer from a family of engineers, and Clarice Remnant, a local councillor. Born on April 19, 1939, in London, he grew up in a household that emphasized technical proficiency through his father's profession, though Miles himself pursued artistic endeavors from an early age.[1][3] The Miles family consisted of four siblings, with Christopher as the oldest. His younger sister Sarah Miles, born December 31, 1941, became a prominent actress known for roles in films such as Ryan's Daughter. Another brother, Martin Miles, pursued a career as an artist, while the youngest sibling, Vanessa Miles, worked as an actress and writer. These familial ties provided a network of shared creative interests, with public records indicating ongoing connections among the siblings despite their individual paths in the arts.[7][3][2]Marriage and Later Years
Miles married Susan Helen Howard Armstrong, an artist known as Suzy, in 1967, and the union produced one daughter, Sophie Miles, who pursued painting as a career.[2][1][10] The marriage endured for over five decades, reflecting sustained personal stability amid his professional commitments in film and theatre.[2] By the early 2000s, Miles and his family had relocated to a rural property near Calne in Wiltshire, England, selected for its ample space to accommodate home studios for his wife and daughter's artistic work alongside his own study for film-related materials.[8] This arrangement supported a balanced lifestyle in later adulthood, aligning with reduced urban demands following his peak directorial projects in prior decades. No public records indicate subsequent relocations or disruptions to family life post-1980s.[8]Death and Tributes
Christopher Miles died on 15 September 2023 at the age of 84 from cancer.[3] Obituaries, including one in The Times, noted his passing and reflected on his career in independent filmmaking, emphasizing his adaptations of literary works such as those by D.H. Lawrence, with whom he maintained a long association as vice-president of the D.H. Lawrence Society.[3] No public details emerged regarding a funeral or memorial service.[3] Tributes from contemporaries were limited in immediate coverage following his death; earlier commendations, such as film critic Dilys Powell's description of his 1981 film Priest of Love as a "work of deep understanding and devotion," underscored peer recognition of his directorial approach to biographical subjects.[3] No verifiable mentions of final or unpublished projects surfaced in estate-related reports at the time.[3]Professional Career
Entry into Filmmaking
Miles trained at the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC) in Paris during the late 1950s, immersing himself in continental cinematic techniques that contrasted with the more rigid structures of the British industry.[4] This exposure to the improvisational and auteur-driven ethos of the French New Wave equipped him with skills in low-budget experimentation, enabling a departure from the resource-intensive studio models prevalent in Britain, where short films often required securing limited grants or private funding amid a monopolistic distribution system favoring features.[11] His debut short, A Vol d'Oiseau (1962), shot in France, demonstrated early proficiency in narrative economy, relying on a modest crew and non-professional locations to bypass initial access hurdles in the UK scene.[7] Building on this, The Six-Sided Triangle (1963) represented a pivotal breakthrough, a 29-minute experimental piece exploring psychological tension through abstract geometry and human interplay, produced independently with a budget under £5,000—far below typical British feature outlays exceeding £100,000 at the time.[11] The film earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Subject (Live Action) in 1964, validating Miles' approach amid an industry where shorts comprised less than 5% of cinema program slots by the mid-1960s due to declining double bills and exhibitor preferences for American imports.[1][11] These early works highlighted Miles' strategic navigation of barriers like scarce equipment loans and festival submissions, achieved without major studio backing or familial leads initially, though The Six-Sided Triangle featured emerging actor Nicol Williamson alongside personal ties.[7] By prioritizing script-driven innovation over spectacle, he circumvented the era's funding droughts, where independent shorts often folded without completion due to inconsistent BFI allocations averaging £1,000-£2,000 per project.[11]Major Directorial Projects
Miles's entry into feature filmmaking occurred with Up Jumped a Swagman (1965), a surrealist musical comedy starring Australian singer Frank Ifield as an entertainer entangled in a spy plot involving counterfeiting records. At age 26, Miles became the youngest director to helm a British feature, opting for an experimental fusion of pop music performances and absurd espionage elements to appeal to a youthful audience amid the swinging London era. This directorial emphasis on whimsy over conventional narrative coherence yielded modest box office returns and signaled his early willingness to prioritize stylistic innovation, though the film's uneven pacing limited its lasting impact.[7][12] In the 1970s, Miles adapted D.H. Lawrence's novella The Virgin and the Gypsy (1970), directing Joanna Shimkus as the repressed protagonist Yvette and casting Italian actor Franco Nero as the seductive gypsy to evoke the story's erotic tension and class contrasts. Screenwriter Alan Plater's script maintained fidelity to Lawrence's themes of Victorian repression and instinctive liberation, with Miles's choices—such as location shooting in the English Midlands to mirror the novella's provincial setting—contributing to critical acclaim, including selection as Best Film by the London Evening News British Film Awards in 1971. The film's restrained sensuality and avoidance of explicitness preserved the source's symbolic flood climax, fostering positive reception for its atmospheric authenticity over sensationalism. Later in the decade, That Lucky Touch (1975) represented a pivot toward mainstream comedy, featuring Roger Moore as an arms dealer romanced by a journalist amid NATO exercises; Miles's direction leaned into light farce and international co-production to broaden appeal, but the result drew mixed reviews for diluting satirical bite in favor of star-driven humor.[7][3][13][14] By the 1980s, Miles returned to literary adaptation with Priest of Love (1981), a biopic of D.H. Lawrence produced under his own Milesian banner and co-financed by Stanley J. Seeger, focusing on the author's censorship battles and expatriate life. Directing Ian McKellen as Lawrence, Miles selected international locations including Oaxaca, Mexico; Santa Fe, New Mexico; and Florence, Italy, alongside Shepperton Studios interiors, to causally link visual authenticity to the narrative of Lawrence's nomadic quest for creative freedom. Incorporating family collaboration by casting sister Sarah Miles alongside Ava Gardner and John Gielgud, the film prioritized biographical detail from Harry T. Moore's source over dramatic embellishment, yet its deliberate pacing and emphasis on intellectual dialogue elicited divided responses, with Roger Ebert critiquing the uneven integration of personal and artistic strands despite strong performances. This project underscored Miles's trade-off of arthouse prestige for biopic accessibility, achieving festival screenings but limited commercial traction reflective of the era's challenges for literary dramas.[7][15][16][17]Theatre and Documentary Work
Miles directed stage productions in the 1970s, including a version of Jean Genet's The Maids in London featuring Glenda Jackson and Susannah York, which he later adapted into a 1975 film on a limited budget.[3] He also helmed Thornton Wilder's The Skin of Our Teeth in the United States, starring his sister Sarah Miles in her U.S. stage debut as Sabina alongside Bruce Davison, emphasizing live ensemble dynamics distinct from the controlled environments of film sets.[3] [18] These works highlighted his ability to manage real-time performer interactions and audience immediacy, skills that contrasted with the post-production precision of cinema.[1] In documentary filmmaking, Miles pursued historical and cultural subjects with a focus on archival research and on-site investigation. His 1986 production Lord Elgin and Some Stones of No Value, co-written with Brian Clark and Andreas Staikos, examined the controversial acquisition of the Parthenon Marbles, drawing on primary documents to challenge prevailing narratives around cultural repatriation.[1] Similarly, Love in the Ancient World (1997) explored erotic themes in classical antiquity through artifacts and texts, while Fire from Olympia (initially produced in 2004 and re-edited for 2012 release) documented the origins of the Olympic Games, incorporating footage from archaeological sites to underscore empirical evidence over mythic embellishment.[4] These projects demonstrated Miles's commitment to evidentiary rigor, differing from theatre's interpretive flexibility by prioritizing verifiable historical data.[1] ![Christopher Miles directs his sister Sarah Miles in 1980][float-right] Theatre engagements sharpened Miles's expertise in unscripted contingencies and actor-driven pacing, elements less prominent in documentaries' structured narratives but evident in his cross-medium transitions.[19]Filmography
Short Films and Early Experiments
Miles began experimenting with filmmaking in his youth, using 8mm and 16mm equipment at home to develop technical skills.[7] At age 15, he became the first person to screen 8mm film on television, invited by the BBC to show his work at Winchester College.[3] He later trained at the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC) in Paris starting in 1961, where he studied alongside figures like Claude Miller and Louis Malle, though he departed early to focus on production; during holidays, he shot 16mm tests incorporating New Wave influences.[7] His IDHEC-era output included the short A Vol d'Oiseau (1962), a television production by Milesian Film Productions and CBS, co-directed with Patrice Laffont and featuring Jean Mitry, which explored the "life" of a Parisian umbrella and earned the Foreign Section prize at the San Francisco Film Festival.[7] Subsequent pre-feature shorts demonstrated evolving narrative and stylistic approaches:- The Six-Sided Triangle (1963): A theatrical short released by Milesian and British Lion Films, starring Miles's sister Sarah Miles and Nicol Williamson; it parodied national filmmaking styles in a triangular domestic drama and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Short Subject as well as second prize at the Oberhausen Film Festival.[7]
- Rhythm 'n' Greens (1964): A 32-minute theatrical short distributed by Associated British-Pathe and ABPC, featuring Cliff Richard and The Shadows, which humorously examined British beach culture through prehistoric-to-modern rhythmic parallels.[7][20]
Feature Films
- Up Jumped a Swagman (1965): Miles' debut feature film as director, starring Frank Ifield, Maria Britton, and Ruth Dunning.[7]
- The Virgin and the Gypsy (1970): Directed by Miles, adapted from D.H. Lawrence's novella, starring Joanna Shimkus and Franco Nero.[21]
- A Time for Loving (1971): Directed by Miles, featuring Joanna Shimkus, Mel Ferrer, and Britt Ekland.[22]
- The Maids (1975): Directed and co-written by Miles, starring Glenda Jackson and Susannah York.[23]
- That Lucky Touch (1975): Directed by Miles, with Roger Moore, Susannah York, and Lee J. Cobb in lead roles.[24]
- Priest of Love (1981): Directed by Miles, biographical film about D.H. Lawrence starring Ian McKellen and Janet Suzman.[25]
- The Clandestine Marriage (1999): Directed by Miles, adapted from the 18th-century play, featuring Nigel Hawthorne, Joan Collins, and Timothy Spall.[26]