Directing
Nigel Lucius Graeme Finch was an English film director and filmmaker whose career influenced the growth of British gay cinema. Finch began working as co-editor for the BBC television documentary series Arena in the early 1970s. He produced and directed many notable programs including My Way (1978), and The Private Life of the Ford Cortina (1982). He rose to prominence with the documentary Chelsea Hotel (1981), which profiled the famed New York hotel, and its legacy of famous gay guests, including Oscar Wilde, Tennessee Williams, William S. Burroughs, Quentin Crisp and Andy Warhol. His documentary subjects include artist Robert Mapplethorpe (1988), filmmaker Kenneth Anger (1991), and artist Louise Bourgeois (1994). Finch went on to direct films such as the BAFTA-nominated drama The Lost Language of Cranes, and the musical soap opera The Vampyr. Finch died from AIDS-related illness in London in 1995 during post-production of his first full-length feature film Stonewall, a docudrama loosely based on events leading up to the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City.
movieStonewall
1995
Director
movieRobert Mapplethorpe
1988
Director
tvScreen Two
1985
Director
tvBergerac
1981
Director
movieArena: Dire Straits
1980
Director
movieThe Errand
1980
Director
movieMy Way
1979
Director
movieVoices from the Island
1994
Executive Producer
movieVan Morrison: One Irish Rover
1991
Executive Producer
movieParis Is Burning
1991
Executive Producer
movieMiller Meets Mandela
1991
Executive Producer
movieOooh Er Missus! The Frankie Howerd Story
1990
Executive Producer
movieThe Tip of the Iceberg
1989
Executive Producer
movieBlackpool Wakes
1989
Producer
movieBBC Arena: Woody Guthrie
1988
Executive Producer
movieThe Confessions of Robert Crumb
1987
Executive Producer
movieMartín Chambi and the Heirs of the Incas
1986
Executive Producer
movieThe Strange Case of Yukio Mishima
1985
Executive Producer
tvArena
1975
Executive Producer
movieStonewall
1995
In Memory Of