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[Commlist] CFP: Bryan Forbes at 100: British Cinema’s‘RenaissanceMan’
Sun May 17 21:25:39 GMT 2026
A brief reminder that the deadline to submit a proposal for the ‘Bryan
Forbes at 100: British Cinema’s ‘Renaissance Man’ symposium is Friday 29
May.
Full details below - please send 300 word abstracts and a brief author
bio to both (paul.moody /at/ brunel.ac.uk) and (josephine.botting /at/ bfi.org.uk)
Bryan Forbes at 100: British Cinema’s ‘Renaissance Man’, 4 September
2026, BFI Southbank, London.
The symposium will be followed by a ticketed public screening of a new
print of Forbes’ debut film as a director, 'Whistle Down the Wind'
(1961) at BFI Southbank. If you are presenting a paper at the symposium
you will be eligible for a discounted ticket price for this screening.
2026 marks the centenary of the birth of one of the most versatile and
influential figures in postwar British cinema, Bryan Forbes (1926-2013).
Forbes developed a successful and varied career as an actor,
screenwriter, director, producer, photographer and novelist, winning a
BAFTA for his screenplay for 'The Angry Silence' (1960)—but is known
primarily for his direction of films such as 'Whistle Down the Wind'
(1961) and 'The Stepford Wives' (1975). His career generally has been
neglected by academia, with the literature on his work consisting only
of entries in encyclopaedias (McFarlane, 2003), broader studies of the
British film company EMI Films (Moody, 2018) and a few isolated studies
of individual Forbes productions (Lindop, 2022; Botting, 2026; Moody 2026).
Although a handful of other British filmmakers (such as Forbes’
regular collaborator, Sir Richard Attenborough) managed to work in a
similar range of creative roles, Forbes stands out from his middle-class
contemporaries by being born into a working-class household in
Stratford, in the London Borough of Newham. His background assumes
increased significance when placed within the context of the ‘sex, class
and realism’ (Hill, 1986) of 1960s British cinema, for while Forbes’
childhood provided fertile material for similar stories, he would write
and direct across a diverse range of styles, including the comedy 'The
Wrong Box' (1966) and dramas imbued with elements of the horror genre,
like 'Séance on a Wet Afternoon' (1964). A consistent trend in his work
is an interest in stories of vulnerable and marginalised groups,
especially when they intersect with women’s lives, such as in 'The
L-Shaped Room' (1962), 'The Whisperers' (1967) and 'The Raging Moon'
(1971). While this might suggest a left-leaning politics, Forbes became
known for his right-of-centre views, developing a friendship with
Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath and becoming a regular
contributor to The Spectator; in addition, some of his screenplays were
controversial for being politically conservative, such as in the
perceived negative portrayal of the trade union movement in 'The Angry
Silence'.
This one-day symposium will explore these contradictions, building on
recent attempts to reinterpret British filmmaking in the 1960s (Farmer,
Mayne, Petrie, & Williams, 2019; and Petrie, Williams, & Mayne, 2020).
At a time when there is considerable debate about the diversity of the
British film industry and the barriers to entry for working-class
filmmakers, the critical neglect of Forbes’ work is a timely reminder of
the prejudice towards his type of ‘portfolio’ career and a reticence to
engage with some of the perceived ‘low-brow’, commercially successful
aspects of his output.
We welcome proposals from scholars at any career stage for 15-20min
papers. Topics may include: - Authorship: Forbes as a ‘renaissance
man’; Forbes as actor; Forbes as screenwriter; Forbes and his collaborators.
- Class and Taste: Forbes as a working-class filmmaker; the ‘low-brow’
and notions of ‘taste’ in Forbes’ work
- Women and Feminism: Forbes as a ‘women’s director’; Women characters
in Forbes’ films; Nanette Newman and her work in Forbes’ films.
- ‘Britishness’, ‘Englishness’ and Identity: What Forbes’ work says
about British and English identities in cinema; national identity in
Forbes’ American films.
- Production & Reception: Production, marketing and reception of
individual films; Forbes’ unrealised projects.
- Politics & Society: Forbes and postwar British social realism; Forbes’
work on political campaign films; controversies and censorship of
individual films.
- Non-Cinematic Work: Forbes’ television productions, novels, and
photography; Forbes as biographer and essay writer.
Please send abstracts of 300 words and a brief author bio to the
symposium organisers by 29 May 2026: (paul.moody /at/ brunel.ac.uk) and
(josephine.botting /at/ bfi.org.uk) - Notifications of acceptance will be
confirmed by early June.
It is intended that papers from the symposium will be submitted as
part of a proposal for the first book-length edited collection on the
work of Bryan Forbes. We have had initial interest from a publisher for
the topic and will discuss plans for the proposal with contributors at
the symposium.
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