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Roger Mirams
Roger Mirams
from Wikipedia

Roger Eastgate Holden Mirams (16 April 1918 – 26 February 2004) was a New Zealand-born film producer and director, whose career extended over 60 years. Mirams co-directed and photographed Broken Barrier, the only local dramatic feature film made in New Zealand in the 1950s, and later won a reputation for the children's television series he produced in Australia.

Key Information

Biography

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Mirams was born in the New Zealand city of Christchurch, New Zealand where he made his first film aged 13, When the Gangsters Came to Christchurch. It screened at a local cinema in 1931.

Mirams joined the New Zealand Army at the outbreak of World War II, working as a war correspondent and cameraman throughout the duration of the war, which saw him travel with the New Zealand Division throughout Italy and the Middle East. Following the end of the war, he travelled to Japan where he filmed a documentary about the war crimes trials that were held there. He then joined the New Zealand National Film Unit as a director and cameraman and later became the Movietone News representative for New Zealand.

In 1948 in New Zealand he formed Pacific Films with former ex-National Film Unit staffer Alun Falconer. With John O'Shea (director), who would later become a partner in the company, he co-directed relationship drama Broken Barrier – the first fictional feature film to be produced in New Zealand since 1940.

In 1956 Mirams founded an Australian branch of Pacific Films. He was involved in film production in Australia with James Stewart and fellow New Zealander Jim Davies. In 1966 he founded a new production company, Roger Mirams Productions. In 1977 he joined the Grundy Organisation.

Mirams had moved to Australia in 1956 to work on coverage of the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. He intended to work in any capacity that he could, but was lucky to secure exclusive film rights.[1] As official Olympic cameraman, much of the filming of the games was his work. He decided to settle in Australia following the Olympics, and spent much of the rest of his career working in Sydney.

The first production by Pacific Films in Australia was a WWII docudrama telling the story of the men who worked as Coastwatchers during World War II. This is sometimes given as one of his inspirations for his later success, Spyforce. [2] He then began to work on a series of children's television shows such as The Terrific Adventures of the Terrible Ten (1959), The Magic Boomerang (1965) and Funny Things Happen Down Under (1965) starring a young Olivia Newton-John. In 1966 Roger Mirams Productions created the successful effort Adventures of the Seaspray (1967), followed by Woobinda, Animal Doctor (1969).

After several years working on children's productions, Mirams decided to return to a more adult genre, and one he knew personally. Taking inspiration from his earlier work The Coastwatchers (1959), he began work on a WWII espionage drama with the working title Spycatchers. Paramount Pictures liked the idea, and offered to fund the project. In 1971, he began working on Spyforce with Ron McLean, and the series was a hit. A second series was produced in 1972.

Mirams returned to the children's genre of which he was so well acquainted with shows such as The Lost Islands (1976) and Secret Valley (1980), the latter of which was a big hit in Australia. In 1986, he produced a spin-off series from Secret Valley, entitled Professor Poopsnagle's Steam Zeppelin, which was successful in Australia and also in parts of Europe – most notably the United Kingdom, where it was shown three times between 1987 and 1998. He continued to make quality children's television into the 21st century, and fulfilled a lifelong dream to do a remake of Oliver Twist, when he made The Fate of the Artful Dodger in 2002. It was his last work before he died in 2004.

Personal life

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Mirams married Gwen Naylor in 1941; they had two daughters, and a son who died in a motorbike accident in 1990. He married Irene in 1986. He was the brother of New Zealand Chief Film Censor, Gordon Mirams.

Although he was a pioneer in Australasian TV projects, especially on location color films, which were successful internationally, Mirams was largely unrecognized by the industry during his lifetime, rarely being nominated for awards.

Filmography

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References and notes

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from Grokipedia
Roger Mirams was a New Zealand-born film producer and director known for pioneering independent production in New Zealand and for his extensive contributions to Australian children's adventure television, including numerous internationally distributed series over a career spanning more than sixty years. Born in Christchurch in 1918, Mirams developed a passion for filmmaking as a teenager, writing, directing, and starring in his first short film, When the Gangsters Came to Christchurch, which screened at a local cinema. He served as an official newsreel cameraman during World War II in the Middle East and Italy, then joined the National Film Unit as a senior cameraman before co-founding the independent Pacific Film Productions in 1948. In 1952, he co-directed and co-produced Broken Barrier with John O'Shea, New Zealand's first post-war feature film, which addressed interracial themes. Mirams relocated to Australia in 1956 to pursue opportunities in the emerging television industry, initially establishing a Pacific Films branch in Melbourne before focusing on independent production. He specialized in action-adventure series for children, often featuring young protagonists in exotic or imaginative settings, and became renowned for international co-productions that secured funding and global sales. His notable works include The Terrific Adventures of the Terrible Ten, The Magic Boomerang, Adventures of the Seaspray, Woobinda Animal Doctor, Spyforce, The Lost Islands, Runaway Island, Mission Top Secret, and Escape of the Artful Dodger. Working with companies such as The Grundy Organisation from 1977 onward, Mirams helped establish Australian children's drama as a commercially viable export genre and provided early opportunities for many actors and crew members. He died in Sydney on 26 February 2004.

Early life and World War II

Childhood and early filmmaking

Roger Mirams was born on 16 April 1918 in Christchurch, New Zealand. He developed an interest in moviemaking during his high school years in Christchurch. At the age of 13, Mirams wrote, directed, acted in, and arranged a local cinema screening for his amateur short film When the Gangsters Came to Christchurch in 1931. The film told a story of robbers and ransom that culminated in a horse chase across Hagley Park. At age 20, Mirams had a brief involvement with Russell Rankin's distribution company Action Pictures (NZ).

World War II service

Roger Mirams joined the New Zealand Army at the outbreak of World War II and served as a war correspondent and cameraman with the New Zealand Division in the Middle East and Italy. His prior experience in amateur filmmaking as a schoolboy hobby brought particular enthusiasm to the role, aiding his effectiveness in capturing newsreel footage during the campaigns. Early in the war, Mirams worked in an Egyptian military hospital. He later became an official newsreel cameraman attached to New Zealand Public Relations. In late 1944, following the New Zealand forces' relocation from the Middle East to the Italian campaign, he was posted to Italy to film with the division. His wartime filming in Italy included items such as Xmas in Italy, which incorporated humour, and Danger in Trieste, which conveyed dramatic tension beyond basic reportage. One of his last stories before returning to New Zealand was Cairo Memories, where he staged a scene in Cairo by enlisting military police and performing a small part himself to illustrate a local quarter.

Post-war return and early documentaries

After World War II, Roger Mirams returned to New Zealand and undertook documentary assignments in Asia focused on the region's postwar developments. He recorded the proceedings of the Tokyo war crimes trials at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East for the newsreel Weekly Review 313. Mirams also travelled across Asia to film an epic mail run supplying New Zealand's occupation forces (Jayforce) stationed in Japan, resulting in the 1947 newsreel Weekly Review No. 310 - Mail Run where he served as cameraman. The Mail Run documented a weekly 17,000-mile air route flown by an RNZAF Dakota aircraft, described as the longest in the world, which carried mail from Auckland to Iwakuni in Japan via stops including Norfolk Island, remote Australian outback locations, Indonesia, the slums of Singapore, Saigon, Hong Kong, Okinawa, and Manila. Shortly after these postwar assignments, Mirams transitioned to the National Film Unit. His prior wartime experience as a cameraman supported this move into professional documentary work.

New Zealand film career

National Film Unit

After World War II, Roger Mirams joined the New Zealand National Film Unit, where he spent almost three years as a senior cameraman. In this role, he shot items for over 70 NFU films, most of which appeared in the unit's newsreel series Weekly Review. Mirams served as cinematographer on Margaret Thomson's Railway Worker, collaborating with cameraman Randal Beattie, and also shot Thomson's The First Two Years at School (1950). He grew frustrated with the National Film Unit's tendency to reject his proposals for films considered too controversial, which ultimately led to his departure from the organization.

Founding Pacific Film Productions

Frustrated by the National Film Unit's rejection of their more controversial film proposals, Roger Mirams and Alun Falconer left the NFU and co-founded the Pacific Film Unit in early 1948 as an independent production company. A generous arrangement from the local branch of 20th Century Fox supplied free film stock and the ongoing use of a Cineflex camera to produce newsreels for Fox Movietone News, with many segments covering hunting and skiing. The Amalgamated Theatres chain—where 20th Century Fox held a controlling interest—provided exhibition support, despite persistent rivalry with the Kerridge chain. Pacific maintained a contractual relationship with the NFU, which continued to commission work from Mirams. Some footage originally captured for Fox Movietone was reused in NFU productions, including Sportsmen's Playground New Zealand, where Mirams received director credit. Alun Falconer left the company in March 1949 to pursue a journalism project in China. Soon afterward, John O'Shea joined, initially to work with Mirams on ideas for a documentary about Māori people. The company was later renamed Pacific Film Productions.

Broken Barrier

Broken Barrier is a 1952 New Zealand dramatic feature film co-directed, co-produced, and co-cinematographed by Roger Mirams and John O'Shea through their company Pacific Films. It marked the first New Zealand dramatic feature produced since 1940 and remained one of only three such films to emerge before 1970. The film explores cultural complications in a cross-cultural romance between a Pākehā journalist (Terence Bayler) and a Māori nurse (Kay Ngarimu), confronting attitudes toward interracial relationships in New Zealand society. Due to severe budget constraints and technical limitations, Mirams and O'Shea shot using silent newsreel cameras—including one Mirams reportedly acquired from wartime sources—and a mobile dolly platform that Mirams constructed himself. Production permitted only one day of sound recording, so the filmmakers avoided synchronized dialogue by structuring the film around voice-over narration to convey characters' internal thoughts, supplemented by music and effects. Released through distributor Kerridge Odeon, Broken Barrier became that circuit's most successful title in its release month, outgrossing some prominent Hollywood productions. Contemporary reviews were largely positive, though some audiences expressed offense at the film's frank depiction of racial mixing.

Relocation to Australia

Move and 1956 Melbourne Olympics

In late 1956, Roger Mirams relocated from New Zealand to Melbourne to cover the 1956 Olympic Games as the official cameraman for Pacific Films, the independent production company he had co-founded in 1948. Pacific Films secured the contract to provide official newsreels for the event, with Mirams responsible for much of the footage captured during the Games. He also obtained exclusive film rights for the Olympic coverage, marking a significant professional opportunity during the first Olympic Games held in the Southern Hemisphere. Mirams' move was driven by his desire to produce entertainment content, particularly for the emerging Australian television market, which offered greater creative scope than the documentary-focused work available in New Zealand. Late in 1956, he established a branch of Pacific Films in Melbourne, bringing a substantial amount of the company's equipment and £2,000 in funds to support the operation. Although the Melbourne branch proved short-lived, Mirams chose to remain in Australia after the Olympics concluded.

Establishing production in Australia

Following his coverage of the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, Roger Mirams settled in Melbourne in 1957 and established an Australian subsidiary of Pacific Films in partnership with Chris Stewart, who later became CEO of the Bank of Melbourne, and expat New Zealand sound recordist Jim Davies. Pacific Films' first Australian production was the 1960 World War II television drama The Coastwatchers, which explored the wartime experiences of coastwatchers in the Pacific and later influenced the development of the wartime espionage series Spyforce. After this initial dramatic venture, Mirams transitioned to specializing in children's adventure television series, many of which were designed for international markets and achieved successful overseas sales.

Children's television career

Early Australian children's series (1950s–1960s)

After relocating to Australia in late 1956, Roger Mirams focused on producing entertainment television, particularly for children. He began this phase with The Terrific Adventures of the Terrible Ten, which premiered in 1960 and featured over 100 15-minute episodes in which he served as producer. The series followed a group of children who create their own make-believe town and became one of the first Australian children's programs to achieve sales to multiple territories overseas. In 1965, Mirams produced the feature film Funny Things Happen Down Under as an extension of the Terrible Ten concept. The film included his daughter Joanna Mirams in the cast, along with performer Howard Morrison, and marked the big-screen debut of Olivia Newton-John. Mirams continued producing children's series throughout the mid-1960s. He created The Magic Boomerang, centered on a boy whose boomerang could stop time, and the program was sold to England and Canada. Also in 1967, he produced Adventures of the Seaspray, a color series backed by a subsidiary of Columbia Pictures that followed a widower and his children roaming the Pacific. The production involved extensive location shooting, including eight months in Fiji and various New Zealand sites, and featured a native Fijian actor in a major role—a rarity for the era. It achieved healthy global sales, though the ambitious scale limited Mirams' profits. In 1966, Mirams relocated to Sydney and founded Roger Mirams Productions. Soon afterward, he produced Woobinda (Animal Doctor) in the late 1960s, a series that sold to at least nine countries.

1970s productions including Spyforce

In the 1970s, Roger Mirams shifted his focus toward action-oriented and adventure television series, often aimed at broader audiences while building on his prior experience with children's programming. He created and produced Spyforce (1971–1973), a World War II espionage drama that ran for 42 episodes and received backing from Paramount Pictures to facilitate international distribution. Created in collaboration with Ron McLean and Brian Wright, the series starred Jack Thompson as an Australian intelligence officer combating enemy agents in the Pacific theater, alongside Peter Sumner and other cast members, and included an early screen appearance by Russell Crowe. Mirams intended Spyforce to emphasize the contributions of Australian and New Zealand forces to the Allied victory, countering narratives that credited the war's outcome primarily to American efforts. Mirams had earlier created The Rovers (1969–1970), a family adventure series centered on a couple and their foster child living aboard a boat called The Rover, which ran for 39 episodes and aired on the Seven Network. During the mid-1970s, he produced the children's adventure series The Lost Islands (1976), a co-production depicting survivors of a shipwreck navigating life on a mysterious island. He also produced telemovies in this period, including the supernatural drama The Haunting of Hewie Dowker (1976). These projects reflected his continued interest in blending adventure narratives with accessible storytelling for television viewers.

1980s–2000s series and final projects

In the 1980s and beyond, Mirams produced a succession of children's adventure series at the Grundy Organisation, where he remained for 25 years and specialised in action-oriented stories featuring young protagonists, often through international co-productions. He created and produced Secret Valley (1980–1983), a 26-episode drama about rival gangs of children in a hidden Australian valley that gained international success and was co-funded with French company Telecip. Mirams also produced the French co-production Runaway Island (1983–1984), an eight-episode miniseries set in colonial Australia. He continued this pattern with Professor Poopsnagle's Steam Zeppelin (1985), serving as producer and writer on the 24-episode spin-off from Secret Valley, again co-produced with French company Revcom. In the early 1990s, Mirams executive-produced telemovies in the South Pacific Adventures anthology, including Pirates Island (1991) and Mission Top Secret (1992), the latter spinning off into an eight-episode series (1993–1995) that he produced. He later produced Search for Treasure Island (1998–2000), a 25-episode series that received critical acclaim. Mirams' final project was Escape of the Artful Dodger (2001), a 13-episode series he produced and created, reimagining the Artful Dodger's fate in colonial Australia; it earned a nomination for Best Children's Television Drama at the 2002 Australian Film Institute Awards. He continued producing children's titles at Grundy until shortly before his death, maintaining his long-standing approach to international co-productions and family-oriented adventure content.

Personal life

Family and marriages

Roger Mirams was the younger brother of Gordon Holden Mirams, who served as New Zealand's film censor from approximately 1948 to 1959. The brothers collaborated on at least one film project, incorporating Gordon's collection of toy soldiers as props. In his later years, Mirams was married to Irene, and the couple owned a home at Great Mackerel Beach in Sydney's Pittwater area. Upon his death in 2004, he was survived by his wife Irene and his daughters Joanne and Jennifer. His son Jamie predeceased him, dying in a car accident in 1990. Joanne occasionally appeared in and contributed to her father's productions, such as in the children's film Funny Things Happen Down Under (1965).

Death and legacy

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