John Hardwick
Born
John Hardwick

1965 (age 5859)
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Director, writer, producer
Years active1990–present

John Hardwick (born 1965) is a British television and film director. He grew up on Merseyside and studied American Studies at Swansea University and Louisiana State University.

In television, he has directed The Trial for Channel 4, Suspects for Channel 5, Delicious for Sky 1, Holby City for the BBC and Nearly Famous for E4. He was commissioned to shoot the third series of The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret for IFC in the USA.

Hardwick has made three feature films: 33x Around The Sun, a low budget art-house picture, described as "a one of a kind vision quest" by Time Out magazine, Svengali, a comedy set in the London music scene starring Jonny Owen and Vicky McClure, and Follow The Money, a documentary that follows a $10 bill for one month as it criss-crosses the United States.

Hardwick having been discovered by the band The Beekeepers then went on and directed music videos for Arctic Monkeys, Blur, Jake Bugg, Manic Street Preachers and Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds.

Hardwick occasionally works as a theatre director and in 2006 he directed the World Premiere of Max Frisch's Gantenbein at the Hebbel am Ufer Theater in Berlin. In 2008, he wrote and directed the afternoon play Death of a Pirate for BBC Radio 4.

Television

Features

  • 33X Around the Sun (2005)[1]
  • Svengali (2013)
  • Follow The Money (2015)

Shorts

  • Wetwork (2000)
  • To Have and to Hold (2000)
  • Mule (2002)
  • Table Dancing (2014)
  • The Pitch (2015)

Awards

  • 2001 Best Director - Buenos Aires International Film Festival, Argentina - To Have And To Hold
  • 2001 Best Short - Audience Award - Cambridge Film Festival, UK - To Have And To Hold
  • 2002 Best Short Film - Melbourne International Film Festival, Australia - Mule
  • 2002 Best Short Film - East End Film Festival, London - Mule
  • 2007 Nominated for The Total Theatre Award - Edinburgh Festival - An Audience With Adrienne
  • 2013 Nominated for The Michael Powell Award for best new British feature at EIFF - Svengali

References

  1. "Discussion about the film "33x around the sun"". Guardian Talkboard. 13 December 2005. Retrieved 3 April 2009.
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