Peter Ladue

Peter Ladue (born 1950) is an American film director and writer. In 1981, Ladue and Roland Halle' won the Oscar for Best Documentary Short Subject[1] for producing Karl Hess: Toward Liberty. Incorporating interviews, archival footage, and animation, the film chronicles the life of Karl Hess.

Peter Ladue
Born1950
OccupationFilm director
Years active1965–present
AwardsBest Documentary Short Subject
1980 Karl Hess: Toward Liberty

Karl Hess: Toward Liberty

This 26 minute film, Ladue's and Halle's master thesis, was produced at Boston University's College of Communications, Graduate Film Program. The film's style and approach is a reaction to the Direct Cinema movement Direct Cinema and co-called balanced television documentaries of the 1960s and 1970s. Direct Cinema made a claim on objectivity (real stories about real life), while Karl Hess: Toward Liberty tells a transparently subjective story, presenting the point of view of one man who experienced American politics from both the inside and out.

Academy Award

In 1981, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' (AMPAS) AMPAS 53rd award ceremony was delayed, 53rd Academy Awardsalmost cancelled, when President Ronald Reagan was shot on the day of the scheduled event.[2] The following day, the Academy Awards took place with the President addressing the audience via a television remote link-up from his hospital bed. Receiving the award from actors Richard Chamberlain and Lesley-Anne Down, Ladue and Halle' thanked the team of Boston University students and others who collaborated in the making of the film. Karl Hess: Toward Liberty was the first AMPAS Student Film Award-winner[3] to also be awarded an Oscar.

Additional awards

In addition to winning the Oscar, the film also was awarded the FOCUS Student Film Award, in 1980; the AMPAS Student Film Award, in 1980,[4] the CINE Golden Eagle, in 1981,[5] along with 18 additional international festivals, including the American Film Institute's AFI Award, in 1981.[6] Karl Hess: Toward Liberty was screened at the White House and the New York Museum of Modern Art, as a result of the FOCUS Award and toured the world, as part of the CINE program.

Additional productions

Ladue also won an Emmy Award for Best Sports Special, in 1996, for directing The Banner Years: The Official History of the Boston Garden. Just one month after release, Banner Years became the all-time best-selling special interest video in New England.

In 1996, working with local high school students and a team of creative professionals, Ladue directed production of The Civil Right Rap on YouTube, a music video designed to reacquaint young people with the Civil Rights Movement. This educational video was screened at the United Nations, on BET and was distributed to over a thousand high schools.

He also directed production of Saving Place, a widely televised documentary on preserving the character of rural New England, for the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Career

    • 1965 – 1967: Stagehand, Joshua Light Shows, Fillmore East, New York City.
    • 1968 – 1970: Student Manager, Sarah Orne Jewitt Art Center, Berwick Academy, Berwick, Maine.
    • 1974 – 1977: Curator of Exhibits, Polk Public Museum, Lakeland, Florida.
    • 1977 – 1978: Lighting Designer, Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus, Haines City, Florida.
    • 1978 – 1980: Teaching Assistant, School of Broadcasting and Film, College of Communications, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts.
    • 1881 – 1983: Director of the Graduate Film Program / Associate Professor, School of Broadcasting and Film, College of Communications, Boston University.
    • 1983 – 1988: Producer / Director, Vesti Corporation, Boston, Massachusetts.
    • 1991 – 1999: Writer / Director, Cramer Productions, Braintree, Massachusetts.
    • 2000 – 2003: Creative Director / Communications Strategist, Jack Morton Worldwide, Boston, Massachusetts.
    • 2004–present: Communications Consultant: Writer / Creative Director / Strategist, Medford, Oregon.

Honors

References

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