MarketRichard Lowenstein
Company Profile

Richard Lowenstein

Richard Lowenstein is an Australian filmmaker. He has written, produced and directed feature films such as Strikebound (1984), Dogs in Space (1986) and He Died with a Felafel in His Hand (2001); music videos for bands such as INXS and U2; concert performance films, Australian Made: The Movie (1987) and U2: LoveTown (1989); TV adverts, and the documentaries We're Livin' on Dog Food (2009), Autoluminescent (2011), Ecco Homo (2015) and Mystify: Michael Hutchence (2019).

Biography
Richard Lowenstein was born on 1 March 1959 in Melbourne. His mother was the author, oral historian, and activist, Wendy Lowenstein (née Katherin Wendy Robertson, 1927–2006). His father is Werner Lowenstein, also an activist, who had fled Nazi Germany to United Kingdom and was relocated to Australia in 1940 as one of the Dunera boys. and had three children, Peter, Martie and Richard. In 1980 Lowenstein directed a music video, "Leap for Lunch", for the debut single by art punk band, The Ears – he shared a house with their lead singer, Sam Sejavka. In 1982 he directed one for "Talking to a Stranger", a single by rock band, Hunters & Collectors. He followed with "Lumps of Lead" for the same group and "Fraction Too Much Friction" for Tim Finn as his first solo single in 1983. In 1984 he directed his first feature film, Strikebound, a dramatisation of a 1930s coal miners strike, which he wrote based on his mother's book, ''Dead Men Don't Dig Coal (unpublished), and his own research into unionism in the industry. In June that year he directed his first music videos for INXS with "Burn for You", and followed by "All the Voices" and "Dancing on the Jetty" (both in October). At the Countdown Music and Video Awards for 1984 he won Best Promotional Video for "Burn for You". He established a long term relationship with INXS and produced, edited or directed more of their music videos over subsequent years, including The Swing & Other Stories: Collection of Contemporary Classics from INXS (1985), a VHS-format video compilation with additional interviews and documentary. At the Countdown'' Music and Video Awards for 1985 he shared the award for Best Video for "What You Need" by INXS with Lyn-Marie Milbourn. In 1985 he directed White City: The Music Movie, a 60-minute video, for former The Who guitarist, Pete Townshend. It was released with Townshend's concept album, White City: A Novel, and included him discussing the music. In 1986 he wrote and directed a feature film, Dogs in Space, which highlighted late-1970s Melbourne's little band scene with the lead character Sam (portrayed by INXS' lead singer, Michael Hutchence) based on Lowenstein's experiences with The Ear's Sejavka. At the time, Sejavka was a member of new wave band, Beargarden, and objected to Lowenstein and Hutchence's "noxious caricature" of his earlier personality. In 1991 he applied for funding from Film Finance Corporation Australia to adapt Robin Klein's novel, Came Back to Show You I Could Fly, into the children's film, Say a Little Prayer, which he directed in 1993. In 1999 he contributed a chapter, "Telexes in Space: A Tale of Two Films", to the collection, Second Take: Australian Film-makers Talk, edited by Geoff Burton and Raffaele Caputo, which provides an explanation of his film-making style. Lowenstein co-produced the satirical music series ''John Safran's Music Jamboree (2002) as well as John Safran vs God'' (2004) for SBS independent. He is a partner in the Melbourne-based production company, Ghost Pictures. He is also a partner in the feature film production company, Fandango Australia Pty Ltd, along with Italian producer – Domenico Procacci, producer – Sue Murray, lawyer – Bryce Menzies and director – Rolf de Heer. ==Filmography==
Filmography
Evictions (1979) • Strikebound (1984) • White City: The Music Movie (1985) • INXS: The Swing and Other Stories (music video compilation, 1985) • Dogs in Space (1986) • U2: The Best of 1980–1990 (music video compilation, 2002) • ''I'm Only Looking – The Best of INXS'' (music video compilation, 2004) • INXS: Welcome to Wherever You Are (documentary film/concert performance included in the DVD ''I'm Only Looking – The Best of INXS'', 2004) • ''We're Livin' on Dog Food'' (documentary film included in the DVD re-release of Dogs in Space, 2009) • Autoluminescent (documentary film on the life of Rowland S. Howard) • Producer – In Bob We Trust (documentary film about Father Bob Maguire, directed by Lynn-Maree Milburn, 2013) • Ecco Homo (documentary film on the life of Peter Vanessa "Troy" Davies, 2015) • Mystify: Michael Hutchence (a documentary film on the life of Michael Hutchence, lead singer and lyricist of rock band INXS, 2019) ==Music videos==
Music videos
• The Ears – "Leap for Lunch" (1980) • The Church – "It's no Reason" (1983) • Tim Finn – "Fraction Too Much Friction" (1983), "Boy Wonder" (1988) • Crowded House – "Mean to Me" (1986), "Into Temptation" (1988) • Michael Hutchence – "Rooms for the Memory" (1987) • U2 – "Desire" (1988), "Angel of Harlem" (1988) • Max Q – "Way of the World" (1989), "Sometimes" (1990) • Jenny Morris – "Saved Me" (1989) ==Awards and nominations==
Awards and nominations
Erwin Rado Prize • 1980 Erwin Rado Prize, Melbourne International Film Festival, for short film, Evictions Countdown Australian Music Awards Countdown was an Australian pop music TV series on national broadcaster ABC-TV from 1974–1987, it presented music awards from 1979–1987, initially in conjunction with magazine TV Week. The TV Week / Countdown Awards were a combination of popular-voted and peer-voted awards. MTV Video Music Awards ARIA Music Awards The ARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of Australian music. They commenced in 1987. ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com