Colin Frederick George Wills[1] (17 January 1906 – 1965) was an Australian journalist, poet, broadcaster, war correspondent, scriptwriter and travel writer.
Born in Toowoomba, Queensland, Wills grew up on the North Shore of Sydney.[2] During the 1920s and 1930s he worked as a reporter for the Daily Guardian, Smith's Weekly and the Daily Telegraph.[1]
In 1933, he published a collection of poetry with illustrations by the cartoonist "WEP" (William Pidgeon): Rhymes of Sydney.[3][1]
Wills left Australia in 1939,[1] to work as a journalist and broadcaster in Europe.
During World War II, Wills reported from front-line areas for outlets including the BBC, Chronicle and Mirror. His assignments included the North African campaign and D-Day, which Wills covered from a landing craft,[4] as it carried Canadian soldiers to Juno Beach, in Normandy. He visited Belsen concentration camp, in north-west Germany, soon after it was liberated by Allied forces.[1]
In mid-1945 Wills and Richard Crossman wrote the script of German Concentration Camps Factual Survey, a feature-length documentary about the Nazi concentration camps. The de facto co-directors of the film were Alfred Hitchcock (who was credited as a "treatment advisor") and Sergei Nolbandov ("production supervisor"). Post-production was halted for political reasons after several months and the film was not completed and released until 2014.[5][6][7]
Wills later authored three non-fiction books: White Traveller in Black Africa (1951), Who Killed Kenya? (1953) and Australian Passport (1953), all of which were published in London by Dennis Dobson Ltd. Australian Passport combined autobiography with social commentary regarding Australia.
He died at Westminster, London, in 1965.[8]
Footnotes
- 1 2 3 4 5 Colin Wills, AustLit (2012), 4 July 2018.
- ↑ Colin Wills (1953). Australian Passport. London; Dennis Dobson.
- ↑ Colin Wills & WEP (1933). Rhymes of Sydney. Sydney; Frank Johnson.
- ↑ Colin Wills, (1944). In An Infantry Landing Craft: 6 June 1944 (sound recording), (4 July 2018).
- ↑ Stuart Jeffries (2015). "The Holocaust film that was too shocking to show [9 January]". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 February 2015.
- ↑ Imperial War Museum (n.d.). "About the film: German Concentration Camp Factual Survey". Archived from the original on 1 March 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
- ↑ Peter Bradshaw (2014). "Night Will Fall review – unflinching footage reveals true hell of the Holocaust [18 September]". The Guardian.
- ↑ FamilySearch (2012), "Colin F G Wills", (1965). England and Wales Death Registration Index 1837-2007 (4 September 2014).