Agnes Mary Field Explained

Agnes Mary Field
Birth Date:24 February 1896
Birth Place:Wimbledon, London, England
Death Place:Worthing, West Sussex, England
Alma Mater:Bedford College
Institute of Historical Research (MA)
Occupation:Filmmaker

Agnes Mary Field (24 February 1896 – 23 December 1968) was an English film producer and director, particularly associated with documentary, educational, and children's films.

Early life and education

Agnes Mary Field was born in Wimbledon, Surrey, on 24 February 1896,[1] the second daughter of Evelyn Lucy Daniel and Ernest Field, a solicitor. She attended Surbiton High School and Bedford College, London.[2] She earned an master of arts from the Institute of Historical Research with a distinction in Commonwealth history.[3] [4]

Career

Mary Field joined British Instructional Films in 1926, as its education manager. She went on to work for the Gaumont Film Company. In 1928, she took over from F. Percy Smith and writing, directing, and editing the Secrets of Nature, a short black-and-white documentary film series, consisting of 144 films produced by British Instructional Films, with titles including "The Private Life of a Gull", "Plants of the Underworld", and "Mighty Atoms".[5] She traveled to the Farne Islands to film birds, and made another film at the London Zoo. The timing of her career meant that she was one of the first British women to be an established, professional film director and producer,[6] and she oversaw the transition to sound in instructional films.[7]

In 1944, she created and became executive producer of the Children's Film Division of J. Arthur Rank, remaining until the division closed in 1950. She worked on children's matinées, undertook advisory work, toured the commonwealth in 1954, and was a consultant for UNESCO's Centre of Films for Children. In 1950, she visited Australia for six weeks, on a lecture tour sponsored by the Victorian Council for Children's Films and Television. She returned to Australian in 1954.[8] In 1956, she wrote an article, "Children's Taste in Films", for the Quarterly of Film Radio and Television.[9] She was billed as "the western world's foremost authority on films and television for children" when she toured Canada for four weeks in 1960.[10] [11]

She was made a CBE in 1951. In 1954, she was awarded an OBE for her services to educational and children's film. From 1950, she served on the British Board of Film Censors.[12]

Personal life

Field was a Soroptimist and a founder member of SI Greater London Club, which was chartered in 1923. In 1950, she became President of the 90,000 strong British arm of the International Federation of Business and Professional Women, succeeding Caroline Haslett in the role. She married Gerald Hankin, a Ministry of Education official in 1944 but was widowed in 1952.

She died on 23 December 1968, aged 72 years, in Worthing.[13]

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Easen . Sarah . Field, Mary (1896-1968) . BFI Screenonline . 3 March 2020.
  2. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography . 2004 . en . 10.1093/ref:odnb/33121.
  3. Book: Uglow, J. . The Palgrave Macmillan Dictionary of Women's Biography . Palgrave Macmillan . 2005 . 978-1403934482 . 211.
  4. News: Littlefield. Joan. 1936-01-19. English Woman Director Films Unusual Educational Subjects. 15. Dayton Daily News. 2020-05-02. Newspapers.com.
  5. https://www.britishpathe.com/programmes/secrets-of-nature "Secrets of Nature"
  6. News: 1937-10-16. Monotony Banned from the School Room. 43. The Age. 2020-05-02. Newspapers.com.
  7. News: 1935-11-30. Demand for Instructional Films. 5. The Guardian. 2020-05-01. Newspapers.com.
  8. News: Gepp. Kathleen. 1954-08-18. Film Making for Child Audiences. 2. The Age. 2020-05-02. Newspapers.com.
  9. Field. Mary. 1956. Children's Taste in Films. The Quarterly of Film Radio and Television. 11. 1. 14–23. 10.2307/1209806. 1209806. 1549-0068.
  10. News: 1960-03-16. Child Film Authority to Tour Canada. 4. Star-Phoenix. 2020-05-02. Newspapers.com.
  11. News: 1960-05-07. 'Good Guys' Must be Under 30!. 9. Edmonton Journal. 2020-05-02. Newspapers.com.
  12. News: 1954-08-08. Mary Field, Pioneer Film-Maker, Here Soon. 64. The Sydney Morning Herald. 2020-05-02. Newspapers.com.
  13. Web site: Broadbent . Lizzie . 2023-03-08 . Mary Field (1896-1968) . 2023-03-31 . Women Who Meant Business . en.
  14. Book: Field. Agnes Mary. Secrets of Nature, Etc. [On the Making of Natural-history Films. With Plates.].]. Smith. Percy John Delf. 1934. Faber & Faber. en.