David (1951 film) explained

David
Director:Paul Dickson
Producer:James Carr
Starring:D.R. Griffiths
John Davies
Sam Jones
Rachel Thomas
Music:Grace Williams
Cinematography:Ronald Anscombe
Editing:Catherine Morrison
Studio:Regent Films
Runtime:38 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

David is a 1951 British short biographical film about the Welsh miner and poet David Rees Griffiths.[1] It was directed by Paul Dickson, who also wrote the script,[2] shot by Ronald Anscombe, produced by James Carr, and distributed by Regent Films. Leading Welsh composer Grace Williams wrote the score for the film. The film is 38 minutes long and was given a U certificate. It was the Welsh contribution to the Festival of Britain film festival.[3] [4]

Cast

Plot

The central character is a working man, David Griffiths, known in the film as "Dafydd Rhys", a school caretaker for decades and a former miner.[5] Dafydd's later years in Ammanford at Amman Valley Grammar School present an ordinary man with extraordinary virtues. His innate dignity is seen here as an inspiration to the film’s narrator Ifor Morgan, who recalls in adulthood his experiences as a school pupil under David’s wing.

The actual David Griffiths never achieved the fame of his brother, the miners' leader and first Welsh secretary Jim Griffiths, but here represents a traditional Welsh proletarian "type", who communicates a strong sense of his community's worth and retains a fierce loyalty to the memory of his fellow pitmen.

The film’s most poignant section deals with the impact on David of the death of his son, Gwilym, from tuberculosis, and the effect on Ifor and his fellow pupils of the caretaker's temporary estrangement from them as he retreats into himself and his memories. Dafydd is also shown leaving the Eisteddfod after his poem, an elegy to his dead son, has failed to win the coveted Chair. Amanwy did win several other chairs which can be found in church halls around South Wales, and in Ysgol Dyffryn Aman, as the former Amman Valley Grammar School is now called.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.terrynorm.ic24.net/amanwy.htm Biography of David Rees Griffiths
  2. http://www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/498874/ BFI Screenonline
  3. http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/arts/sites/film/pages/films-david.shtml BBC Wales - Arts
  4. Web site: GRIFFITHS, DAVID REES ('Amanwy'; 1882-1953), poet and writer. Gomer Morgan Roberts. Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. 4 October 2018.
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=tGwJ3Yi1418C&dq=dafydd+1951&pg=PA240 Directory of World Cinema, ed. Emma Bell & Neil Mitchel, Intellect, 2012.