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Bill Marshall, co-founder of the Toronto International Film Festival, died on January 1 at the age of 77 from a cardiac arrest while in hospital in Toronto. The Australian Cinematographers Society in January announced that cinematographer Louis Irving ACS died peacefully on December 31, 2016. Irving was born in Queensland in 1950 but was brought up and educated in Melbourne, Victoria. In late 1970, he was one year into a three-year course in film and television at the Swinburne Institute of Technology when he saw a vacancy for a camera assistant at a local television drama production company known as Crawford Productions. He applied and got the job where he stayed for a few years before going freelance to broaden his experience and worked with Australia’s foremost cinematographers either as camera operator or shooting second unit. He was director of photography on the 1989 feature film Mushrooms for which he won a Gold Australian Cinematographers Society award and was nominated for an AFI Award for Best Achievement in Cinematography. Irving shot some of Australia’s best known television productions including 124 episodes of Water Rats, and his other credits include

Marshall immigrated to Canada from Glasgow in 1955 and was a proud Canadian and Member of the Order of Canada, an honour he received for his many contributions to the arts. A visionary in the Canadian film industry, Marshall produced 13 feature films, including the award-winning Outrageous, along with hundreds of documentaries. He was an accomplished writer, journalist, novelist and speech writer to royalty and heads of state. He also produced numerous live theatre productions, including the Toronto production of the hit musical Hair. As an industry leader, Marshall was a driving force behind the establishment of numerous industry organizations, including the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, the Toronto Film and Television Office, and was past president of the Canadian Association of Motion Picture Producers. He also played a significant role in shaping the political landscape of Toronto, where he served as campaign manager and chief of staff for three different Toronto mayors. He is survived by his wife Sari Ruda, his children Lee, Stephen and

Australian Cinematographers Society Announces Passing of Louis Irving a c s

Shelagh, and six grandchildren. Bastard Boys and 20 episodes of the Dr Blake Mysteries. Louis joined the ACS on July 25, 1995, was awarded ACS accreditation on September 7, 1997, and was inducted into the ACS Hall of Fame in May 2016.

NFB Gets New Home in Toronto’s Entertainment District

In December, the National Film Board of Canada’s award-winning Ontario Studio in Toronto moved to a new home in the Entertainment District, a custom-designed space that meets its changing needs for film and interactive media creation. The new location at 145 Wellington Street West, Suite 1010, has six digital editing suites, a 20- seat screening room and a virtual reality lab. Recent successes from the Ontario Studio include Stories We Tell, directed by Sarah Polley and shot by associate member Iris Ng. The Ontario Studio is also the new space for the NFB’s Canadian Francophonie Studio (Studio de la Francophonie canadienne), headed by Dominic Desjardins, which produces French-language works from Ontario and the West that serve a vital need in supporting and strengthening Canada’s French-language communities.

Ontario Partnering with Digital Media Industry Leader to Expand Operations

Ontario is partnering with Deluxe’s Stereo D to help the company expand its digital media operations in Toronto, growing to a total of 358 jobs. Stereo D, a subsidiary of Deluxe Entertainment Services Group, specializes in 3D conversion. Its high-profile projects include converting many Hollywood blockbusters from 2D to 3D, such as Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Star Trek Beyond and San Andreas. The 358 jobs include artists, management, administration, and editorial and production staff needed not only to build the company’s 3D operations in Ontario initially, but also to support its expansion into computer-generated animation. Ontario will invest up to $4.5 million through the Jobs and Prosperity Fund to support the company’s expansion in the province. Deluxe’s Stereo D plans to invest about $143 million in total in Ontario over five years.

ON SET

Paul Sarossy csc, asc, bsc has been filming Tin Star (Sky Atlantic), starring Tim Roth, which wrapped just before Christmas. Shot in Calgary, here is a picture of the camera team: L to R: top row: Carey Toner ("A" op), Cherise Keown ("B" 2nd), Arthur Lefroy (trainee), Carly Stinn ("A" 2nd), Meghan Consenzo (video playback), Danny Quesnel (DIT), Regan Enderl ("B" op). L to R: seated: Cory Budney ("B" AC), Paul Sarossy csc, asc, bsc, Nicholas McKenzie ("A" AC). Absent: Dale McCready (alternating DP).

CSC Annual General Meeting

Monday, February 6, 2017 at 6:30 pm Technicolor Toronto. Boardroom No. 1 49 Ontario Street

ACCEPTANCES / AWARDS / NOMINATIONS /

Greg Biskup, Associate Member (DP) The Sublet (feature), winner for Best Cinematography at Blood in the Snow Film Festival, December, 2016, Toronto Guy Godfree csc (DP) Maudie (feature), Cinematic Vision: Collaborative Design panel, 16th annual Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival, January 2016, Toronto

Following the meeting we will have a light dinner and refreshments, courtesy of the good folks at Technicolor. Great opportunity to meet and chat with your fellow cinematographers! Hope to see you there, CSC member!

Cole Graham, Associate Member (Cinematographer) PUP “Sleep in the Heat” (music video), named one of Pitchfork’s top 25 Music Videos of 2016

Nicholas de Pencier csc (producer) Manufactured Landscapes (documentary), “Canada on Screen,” and Canada’s Top Ten Industry Forum, 16th annual Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival, January 2017, Toronto

The CSC Awards Gala will be held at the Arcadian Court in Toronto on April 1, 2017.

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