Nigel Buesst
Nigel Buesst (30 April 1938 – 27 December 2024) was an Australian filmmaker from Melbourne.[1] After graduating B.Com in 1960 from Melbourne University he headed overseas to London and worked as an assistant editor at Shepparton Studios.[2]
On returning to Melbourne in 1962 he worked for some months at the ABC's Ripponlea newsroom,[1] and freelanced as a cameraman on various productions. He also started directing his own films, beginning with “Fun Radio” in 1963.
After the success of his film "Rise and Fall of Squizzy Taylor"[3] he began teaching at the Swinburne University of Technology (1970-1984)[2] while continuing to make films on a diverse range of subjects.
He was also a co-founder and the artistic director of the St Kilda Film Festival from 1986 to 1990.[4]
Buesst has been described as "a living legend of Melbourne's film scene"[5] and was a figure in the "Carlton wave" of Australian filmmaking.[6] He died in December 2024, at the age of 86.[7]
Select credits
Director on all titles, unless otherwise noted.
- Fun Radio (1963)
 - Dancing Class (Dir: Tom Cowan 1964) – photography
 - The Twentieth (1966)
 - The Making of a Gallery, NGV (1967) – photography
 - The Rise and Fall of Squizzy Taylor (1969)
 - Nothing Like Experience (1970) – photography
 - Bonjour Balwyn (1970)
 - Dead Easy (1970)
 - Destruction of St Patrick's College (1971)
 - Come Out Fighting (1973)
 - Jacka VC (Dir: Ross Cooper 1977) – photography
 - Glenn's Story (Dir: Arnold Zable 1979) – photography
 - Jazz Scrapbook (1983)[8]
 - Compo (1989)
 - Benny Featherstone (Prince Good Fellows) (1996)[9]
 - Black Sheep Gather No Moss (1997)
 - The Loved One - Gerry Humphrys (2000)
 - Talking With Ade (2000)[10]
 - Carlton + Godard = Cinema (2003)[11]
 - Darwin Harbour (2010)
 - Ballarat Jazz Convention (2015)
 - Point Lonsdale Plaque Unveiling (2018) – editor
 
References
- ^ a b "Nigel Buesst". Melbourne Independent Filmmakers.
 - ^ a b "Filmnews (Sydney NSW: 1975-1995)". Filmnews. Vol. 13, no. 7. New South Wales, Australia. 1 July 1983. p. 8. Retrieved 1 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
 - ^ "Darkest Before the Dawn: Australian films of the 1960s". Ozflicks.
 - ^ "The St. Kilda Film Festival: Looking Back". Senses of Cinema.
 - ^ Martin, Adrian (May 2003). "Carlton + Godard = Cinema". Film Critic.
 - ^ Bruce Hodson, 'The Carlton Ripple and the Australian Film Revival', Screening the Past Archived 18 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed 17 September 2012
 - ^ ‘A legendary figure’: Nigel Buesst, filmmaker and educator, dead at 86
 - ^ "JAZZ Scrapbook". Filmnews. Vol. 13, no. 7. New South Wales, Australia. 1 July 1983. p. 9. Retrieved 1 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
 - ^ "BENNY FEATHERSTONE: PRINCE OF GOOD FELLOWS" (PDF).
 - ^ "Talking with Ade".
 - ^ Wilson, Jake. "Carlton + Godard = Cinema: An Interview with Nigel Buesst". Senses of Cinema.
 
External links
- Nigel Buesst at IMDb
 - 2003 Interview at Senses of Cinema
 - Nigel Buesst profile at Inner Sense
 - Tribute to Nigel Buesst
 - Nigel Buesst at Australian Screen Online
 - Nigel Buesst at Screen Australia
 - Nigel Buesst at AustLit
 - Nigel Buesst at Letterbox DVD
 - Nigel Buesst at BFI