Source: Some information on this page may have been sourced as part of the 2023 Wikimedia Australia Partnership Projects grant, with the purpose of improving and expanding the use of Wikidata on our website. Wikidata is a free and open knowledge base that can be read and edited by both humans and machines. Read more about this project here.
With a film career spanning over 40 years locally and internationally, award-winning Australian film and documentary director Gillian Armstrong shares her top five favourite films of all time.
Hailing from Melbourne and working on the international stage since the 1970s, Gillian Armstrong is recognised as one of Australia’s best directors. She made a strong feature film debut with My Brilliant Career (1979) for which she won an AFI award for Best Director. She is also known for directing High Tide (1987), The Last Days of Chez Nous (1992), Little Women (1994), Oscar and Lucinda (1997) and Charlotte Gray (2011).
Armstrong is also highly commended for her series of documentaries exploring the lives of young teenage girls in Adelaide. Initially a one-off documentary commissioned by the South Australian Film Corp, Armstrong’s continued interest saw her return after the inaugural Smokes and Lollies (1976), to revisit the girls at ages 18, 26, 33 and 48, resulting in the documentaries Fourteen's Good, Eighteen's Better (1980), Bingo, Bridesmaids and Braces (1988), Not Fourteen Again (1996), and Love, Lust & Lies (2009).
She was awarded the A.M. (Member of the Order of Australia) in the 1984 for her services to the film industry.
Related works
Collection metadata
ACMI Identifier
58094
TMDB-Person
Wikidata
VIAF
LOC Auth
WorldCat
Please note: this archive is an ongoing body of work. Sometimes the credit information (director, year etc) isn’t available so these fields may be left blank; we are progressively filling these in with further research.