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Australian Directors' Guild

The Australian Directors' Guild (ADG) is an industry guild representing the interests of film, television, commercials and digital media directors, including documentary makers and animators, throughout Australia. With its headquarters in Sydney, the ADG has branches in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia. As of 2022 the president of ADG is Rowan Woods.

Australian Directors' Guild
Founded1981
Headquarters
  • Australian Directors' Guild National Office
  • Suite 28/330-370 Wattle Street
  • Ultimo, NSW 2007, NSW Australia
Key people
  • Rowan Woods, President
  • Alaric McAusland, Executive Director
Websiteadg.org.au

Founded initially as the Australian Feature Film Directors' Association in September, 1981 and renamed the Australian Screen Directors' Association four months later, the organisation became the Australian Directors' Guild in 2007 in order to align itself more clearly to other international directors guilds which had for some years been strengthening their ties with each other and with their Australian counterpart.[1][2][3] In 2014, the ADG membership voted unanimously for constitutional changes to enable the Guild to register as a trade union under Australia's federal Industrial Relations Act 1988.[4] In February, 2015 registration as an industrial organisation was approved by the Fair Work Commission.

Overview edit

The ADG is a craft association representing screen directors working in all genres. It seeks to promote excellence in screen direction through seminars, conferences, workshops and awards, to encourage communication and collaboration between directors and others in the industry, to provide professional support for its members, to represent the interests of directors in cultural and policy debates and decisions and to play a constructive role in matters affecting the Australian screen industry as a whole.

The ADG is governed by a board of directors, elected from and by the membership, and appoints a full-time executive director and a coordinator.

The ADG provides members with information, access, professional advice and advocacy relating to issues that affect directors – such as contracts, fees, codes of practice, rights and disputes. It maintains and provides connections with overseas Guilds through its affiliation with the International Association of English Speaking Directors Organisations (IAESDO).[5]

The Guild organises a Directors Attachment Scheme in cooperation with Screen Australia whereby successful applicants are placed in productions in order to gain experience working in film or television.[6] Beginning in 1993, the ADG has held regular directors conferences and between 1988 and 2008, it printed a newsletter which later became the magazine, Screen Director. Current issues of Screen Director are available online.[7]

In 2007 the ADG began giving annual awards for directors. These have grown to include 17 categories with special awards recognising service and achievement.

Ozdox, a semi-autonomous documentary group affiliated with the ADG and working closely with Guild staff, fosters and promotes documentary culture, primarily through discussion screenings and seminars. Founded in 2003, Ozdox encourages documentary directors to become members of the ADG.

In 1995 the ADG formed the Australian Screen Directors Authorship Collecting Society (ASDACS) to collect overseas royalties for distribution to Australian and New Zealand directors

As of 2014, the ADG had a membership of over 700, including full/retired members, associate members and student members. Full members must be refereed and their credentials approved by the ADG Board. Membership fees are determined according to annual wage levels and state location.

Guild Chapters in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia organise a range of local events and activities and liaise with their relevant State screen bodies. The staff and operations of the Guild are financed through fees for membership, income from events, a small percent of overseas royalties collected through ASDACS, a voluntary levy from the budgets of members' productions and sponsorship from state and federal film bodies, Screenrights and Media Super.[8]

History edit

1981 – 1991 edit

In early 1981, a meeting of film directors was held in response to plans to import an overseas director for Hoodwink, a feature film financed by Australian taxpayers through the New South Wales Film Corporation. The meeting held the view that the development of Australian directors was a key part of the rationale for government funding of films. Failing to gain support for their opposition from the relevant industry union, the Australian Theatrical & Amusement Employees Association (AT&AEA), the directors decided to set up the Australian Feature Film Directors Association. In around September 1981, 18 directors met at the AT&AEA headquarters in the Sydney suburb of Glebe to sign the Articles of Association. Nine directors were the formal signatories: Gillian Armstrong, James Ricketson, Esben Storm, Albie Thoms, Henri Safran, Keith Salvat, Tom Jeffrey, Carl Schultz and Michael Pate.

The organisation soon attracted interest from directors other than feature film directors, especially from television directors, leading to the decision to change its name to the Australian Screen Directors Association (ASDA). New signatories to the ASDA Articles of Association on 15 January 1982 included Phillip Noyce and Stephen Wallace and a number of directors best known for their television work: John Power, Maurice Murphy, Peter Maxwell, Ron Way and Ian Barry.

In the years that followed, ASDA continued to concern itself with the importation of overseas directors, supporting directors of note and where Australian directors were also included in the projects. A range of cultural events, meetings and seminars were organized and, as membership grew, membership fees enabled the employment of a manager. Attempts at instituting a standard directors contract proved fruitless as the Screen Producers Association of Australia (SPAA) refused to negotiate, citing ASDA's lack of industrial registration as its reason. Nevertheless, in 1985 a disputes committee was formed and ASDA continued to represent directors in disputes with producers.

ASDA Board meetings were initially held in members' houses or at an industry watering hole, the 729 Club, until 1984 by which time income had increased sufficiently for the establishment of an office in the suburb of Glebe. In 1985, with the admission of documentary directors, membership reached 100, but the influence of ASDA through its various activities reached many more directors as well as others interested/involved in film and television production. These cultural events also became a source of finance.

As the organization developed further, eventually including membership in other capital cities, the Australian Film Commission (AFC) began to give financial support to ASDA's cultural events and seminars. Correlatively, with the growth of membership and establishment of a financial base, ASDA was able to play a role in the politics of the industry. Lobbying on behalf of directors' viewpoints on a range of issues soon became one of the Association's primary activities.[1]

1992 – 1999 edit

By 1992 ASDA membership was around 200 and, as activity within the organisation increased, this number soon doubled.[9] By the end of the decade, members numbered almost 900, including both associate and student members.[10]

During the 1990s, members participated directly in the Association through a range of committees including a documentary committee, an animators committee, a television directors committee, a women's committee, events committee and policy committee, among others. President Stephen Wallace, in revitalising ASDA, recognised the members' interest in the art/craft of directing and proposed the institution of a Directors Conference and Directors Discussion Screenings. Many such screenings were held over the following years, along with a range of seminars and meetings to discuss industry policy.

ASDA's first National Directors Conference was held in June 1993. Over the next years, these conferences coincided with ASDA's AGM and became forums for policy debate as well as for exploration of directing issues.

During this period also, ASDA continued its participation in industry policy development with submissions to and meetings with relevant organisations, reviews and government departments. Work on a Standard TV directors contract was begun and a reconstituted Disputes Committee began life by dealing with a serious television dispute arising in some measure out of the lack of such a contract. Other disputes continued to be brought to the committee by directors working in many areas of the industry. In 1999, one of these disputes, with Channel 9 over wages for directors on the Far Scape series, brought the long-simmering issue of industrial representation to the fore. President Stephen Wallace vigorously rejected the view that ASDA should work through the industry union, the Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance (MEAA) but rather that it should itself seek industrial registration.[11]

ASDA's efforts to develop standard directors' contracts continued and in 1999 Neil Haggquist, the business agent for the Directors Guild of Canada (DGC) was brought to Australia to help develop a contract which would be acceptable both to Australian and US companies. Also in this period a prolonged struggle to achieve Moral Rights for directors was initiated when both federal government film agencies, the Australian Film Commission and the Film Finance Corporation Australia, as well as the Australian Writers Guild came out in opposition to the inclusion of directors as authors in mooted changes to the Copyright law of Australia.

ASDA understood that the authorship of screen directors was not well-recognised and was under additional threat in a changing global and technological landscape. As a consequence, many of its activities at this time were aimed at fostering a better understanding of the director's role. Thanks to these efforts, when Moral Rights legislation was introduced into the Copyright Act in 2000, directors were defined as makers of a film along with writers and producers. Importantly, with the subsequent passing of the 2006 Copyright Amendment Act, ASDA and the Australian Writers Guild, now working together, managed to achieve protection for their members from contractual pressures to waive their moral rights – a waiver which is permitted and widely exercised in some other jurisdictions, notably in the United States.[12]

In 1994, ASDA President Stephen Wallace, at the invitation of the late John Juliani the DGC (Directors Guild of Canada), met in Toronto with the DGA (Directors Guild of America) and BECTU (Britain's Broadcasting, Entertainment, Cinematograph and Theatre Union), thus beginning a process of achieving closer relationships with overseas guilds.[13] Subsequently, ASDA regularly participated in the annual International Directors' Guild Forum, an event which it hosted in Sydney in 1998.[14]

Similarly in 1995, ASDA formed ASDACS (the Australian Directors Collecting Society) after having been approached by the Société des Auteurs et Compositeurs Dramatiques to distribute money collected on behalf of directors from the sale of video tapes in France. ASDACS subsequently formed further relationships with other European collecting societies and in recent years has distributed roughly half a million dollars annually to its 800 director members in Australia and New Zealand.[15][16][17]

In 1999, ASDA made further gains for directors in arguing for their inclusion as beneficiaries under the retransmission scheme proposed in the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act (2000). These efforts came to fruition in 2005 through the Copyright Amendment (Film Directors' Rights) Act, providing for film directors to share in retransmission royalties along with producers in certain cases.[18][19]

2000 – 2014 edit

By the end of the 1990s, political, social and technological changes were resulting in a diminution of member involvement in many organizations across Australia and ASDA was not immune to these changes. Most of the member committees of the earlier period had become inactive, members meetings became infrequent, and most of the work fell to active members of the board—particularly successive association presidents Donald Crombie and Ray Argall—and to the executive directors: Richard Harris (1998-2007),[20] Drew Macrae (2007-2009), In 2009–2011, the ADG also employed an industrial relations and policy manager, Needeya Islam.[21] Much of their time was claimed by industrial issues, international relations and the necessity of participation in a large number of policy debates and reviews of public sector institutions and regulations, with their attendant demands for consultations, participation in industry committees and detailed submissions.

In this period also, digital media became an increasingly significant area of concern as rapid transformations affected telecommunications, television and "film" which was increasingly moving away from celluloid formats.

Thanks to consistent participation in industry politics and promotion of directors' viewpoints, by the time the association changed its name to the Australian Directors' Guild (ADG) in 2007, it had become a well-established and well-recognised player in a complex industry/cultural scene in which seemingly every possible craft and interest group was establishing its own organised representation. ADG President Ray Argall became involved in the work of the Australian Screen Council, an attempt, ultimately ill-fated, to bring the screen guilds together.[22][23] More broadly and in line with the ADG's understanding of the increasing impact of globalisation on Australian screen, Argall officially represented Australia in the founding of the International Federation of Coalitions for Cultural Diversity in Seville in 2007. He is currently the Asia Pacific member of the Federation Board and coordinates the Australian Coalition for Cultural Diversity.[24][25]

It was in this period also that the ADG finalised rate cards for directors' fees.[26] And while directors' contracts had also been drafted, the ability to negotiate with producers for their implementation still remained a stumbling block. In 2014, following discussions with MEAA and SPAA, the ADG received unanimous support from its members for the constitutional changes necessary for registration as an industrial union.[4]

The ADG continued to maintain a focus on directors' creative and craft issues through seminars and discussion screenings in capital cities, at its national conference, and in collaboration with a range of other industry organisations, educational institutions and film festivals.[27][28][29]

Awards edit

At the 1995 conference, ASDA presented the first Cecil Holmes Award in recognition of services to directing. The Award is now generally given in alternate years or with the identification of a deserving recipient.[citation needed]

Cecil Holmes Award edit

ADG Directors Awards edit

In 2007, the first ADG Directors Awards were established. They are open to financial members in all categories and are the only Australian film directing awards judged solely by directors. This was the year in which the ADG was first included in the Directors Finder Series by the Directors Guild of America. The DGA Finders Series spotlights the director of an undistributed independent film chosen from member countries within the International Association of English-Speaking Directors Organizations (IAESDO).[30][31] The Finder's Award was relaunched by the ADG in 2012, and in 2014 an Innovation Award was also established.[32][33]

In 2018, Larissa Behrendt won "Best Direction of a Documentary Feature Film" for After the Apology, which was partly funded by the Adelaide Film Festival's Indigenous Feature Documentary Initiative.[34][35]

In May 2019, ten awards were presented, as well as the top prize of Best Direction in a Feature Film, which Warwick Thornton won for Sweet Country. Another major winner was Rachel Perkins, with Mystery Road, Series.[36][37]

Presidents edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "History of the ADG - Part 1 — Screen Director". Screendirector.org. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  2. ^ Colbert, Mary (23 June 2015). "ADG awards its own | Movie News | SBS Movies". Sbs.com.au. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  3. ^ Kroon, Richard W. (30 April 2014). A/V A to Z: An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Media, Entertainment and Other ... - Richard W. Kroon. ISBN 9780786457403. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  4. ^ a b "- ADG PRESIDENT — Personal Message — UNION -". Campaign-archive1.com. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  5. ^ "World Film and Television Directors Announce Dublin Declaration". Businesswire.com. 19 September 2003. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  6. ^ . Screenaustralia.gov.au. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  7. ^ "Screen Director". Screendirector.org. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  8. ^ . Mediasuper. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  9. ^ ASDA Newsletter, September 1993
  10. ^ Stephen Wallace, ASDA Press Report 1998
  11. ^ ASDA Newsletter March April 1999
  12. ^ Seiter, William; Ellen Seiter (2012). "The Creative Artist's Legal Guide: copyright, trademark, and contracts in film and digital media' production". Yale University Press. p. 56. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  13. ^ ASDA Newsletters Aug/Sept 1994 and presidents Report 1998-99
  14. ^ Presidents Report 1998-99
  15. ^ "asdacs". asdacs. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  16. ^ (PDF). Asdacs.com.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  17. ^ (PDF). Asdacs.com.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  18. ^ . Screenrights. 31 January 2013. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  19. ^ "Copyright Amendment Act 2006". Comlaw.gov.au. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  20. ^ . Ebscohost.com. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  21. ^ "Kingston Anderson appointed Australian Directors [sic] Guild general manager". If.com.au. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  22. ^ (PDF). Arts.gov.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  23. ^ "AWG quits Screen Council". If.com.au. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  24. ^ (PDF). Cdc-ccd.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  25. ^ . FICDC.org. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  26. ^ . ADG.org.au. Archived from the original on 14 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  27. ^ (PDF). Agsc.org.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  28. ^ . Screen.nsw.gov.au. Archived from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  29. ^ "Melbourne International Film Festival (MIFF) 2015". Miff.com.au. Archived from the original on 20 February 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  30. ^ "The Guild / Committees - DGA Independent Filmmakers Brochure". Dga.org. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  31. ^ "Peter Garrett To Attend Directors Guild Awards". Australianstage.com.au. 11 October 2007. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  32. ^ "news | news & updates". Screen.nsw.gov.au. 30 December 2011. Archived from the original on 20 February 2015. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  33. ^ "Entries open for ADG Awards". If.com.au. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  34. ^ "After The Apology". Adelaide Film Festival. 5 July 2020. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  35. ^ "After the Apology (2017)". Screen Australia. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  36. ^ Maddox, Garry (6 May 2019). "Sweet Country wins top prize at the Directors Guild Awards". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  37. ^ Knox, David (7 May 2019). "Australian Director's [sic] Guild Awards 2019: winners". TV Tonight. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  38. ^ . if.com.au. 1 December 2015. Archived from the original on 12 December 2015. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  39. ^ "Rowan Woods elected as president of Australian Director's [sic] Guild". Mumbrella. 12 December 2021. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
  40. ^ "About". Australian Directors' Guild. Retrieved 13 April 2022.

External links edit

  • Australian Directors' Guild

australian, directors, guild, industry, guild, representing, interests, film, television, commercials, digital, media, directors, including, documentary, makers, animators, throughout, australia, with, headquarters, sydney, branches, south, wales, queensland, . The Australian Directors Guild ADG is an industry guild representing the interests of film television commercials and digital media directors including documentary makers and animators throughout Australia With its headquarters in Sydney the ADG has branches in New South Wales Queensland South Australia Victoria and Western Australia As of 2022 update the president of ADG is Rowan Woods Australian Directors GuildFounded1981HeadquartersAustralian Directors Guild National Office Suite 28 330 370 Wattle Street Ultimo NSW 2007 NSW AustraliaKey peopleRowan Woods President Alaric McAusland Executive DirectorWebsiteadg wbr org wbr auFounded initially as the Australian Feature Film Directors Association in September 1981 and renamed the Australian Screen Directors Association four months later the organisation became the Australian Directors Guild in 2007 in order to align itself more clearly to other international directors guilds which had for some years been strengthening their ties with each other and with their Australian counterpart 1 2 3 In 2014 the ADG membership voted unanimously for constitutional changes to enable the Guild to register as a trade union under Australia s federal Industrial Relations Act 1988 4 In February 2015 registration as an industrial organisation was approved by the Fair Work Commission Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 1981 1991 2 2 1992 1999 2 3 2000 2014 3 Awards 3 1 Cecil Holmes Award 3 2 ADG Directors Awards 4 Presidents 5 References 6 External linksOverview editThe ADG is a craft association representing screen directors working in all genres It seeks to promote excellence in screen direction through seminars conferences workshops and awards to encourage communication and collaboration between directors and others in the industry to provide professional support for its members to represent the interests of directors in cultural and policy debates and decisions and to play a constructive role in matters affecting the Australian screen industry as a whole The ADG is governed by a board of directors elected from and by the membership and appoints a full time executive director and a coordinator The ADG provides members with information access professional advice and advocacy relating to issues that affect directors such as contracts fees codes of practice rights and disputes It maintains and provides connections with overseas Guilds through its affiliation with the International Association of English Speaking Directors Organisations IAESDO 5 The Guild organises a Directors Attachment Scheme in cooperation with Screen Australia whereby successful applicants are placed in productions in order to gain experience working in film or television 6 Beginning in 1993 the ADG has held regular directors conferences and between 1988 and 2008 it printed a newsletter which later became the magazine Screen Director Current issues of Screen Director are available online 7 In 2007 the ADG began giving annual awards for directors These have grown to include 17 categories with special awards recognising service and achievement Ozdox a semi autonomous documentary group affiliated with the ADG and working closely with Guild staff fosters and promotes documentary culture primarily through discussion screenings and seminars Founded in 2003 Ozdox encourages documentary directors to become members of the ADG In 1995 the ADG formed the Australian Screen Directors Authorship Collecting Society ASDACS to collect overseas royalties for distribution to Australian and New Zealand directorsAs of 2014 the ADG had a membership of over 700 including full retired members associate members and student members Full members must be refereed and their credentials approved by the ADG Board Membership fees are determined according to annual wage levels and state location Guild Chapters in New South Wales Queensland South Australia Victoria and Western Australia organise a range of local events and activities and liaise with their relevant State screen bodies The staff and operations of the Guild are financed through fees for membership income from events a small percent of overseas royalties collected through ASDACS a voluntary levy from the budgets of members productions and sponsorship from state and federal film bodies Screenrights and Media Super 8 History edit1981 1991 edit In early 1981 a meeting of film directors was held in response to plans to import an overseas director for Hoodwink a feature film financed by Australian taxpayers through the New South Wales Film Corporation The meeting held the view that the development of Australian directors was a key part of the rationale for government funding of films Failing to gain support for their opposition from the relevant industry union the Australian Theatrical amp Amusement Employees Association AT amp AEA the directors decided to set up the Australian Feature Film Directors Association In around September 1981 18 directors met at the AT amp AEA headquarters in the Sydney suburb of Glebe to sign the Articles of Association Nine directors were the formal signatories Gillian Armstrong James Ricketson Esben Storm Albie Thoms Henri Safran Keith Salvat Tom Jeffrey Carl Schultz and Michael Pate The organisation soon attracted interest from directors other than feature film directors especially from television directors leading to the decision to change its name to the Australian Screen Directors Association ASDA New signatories to the ASDA Articles of Association on 15 January 1982 included Phillip Noyce and Stephen Wallace and a number of directors best known for their television work John Power Maurice Murphy Peter Maxwell Ron Way and Ian Barry In the years that followed ASDA continued to concern itself with the importation of overseas directors supporting directors of note and where Australian directors were also included in the projects A range of cultural events meetings and seminars were organized and as membership grew membership fees enabled the employment of a manager Attempts at instituting a standard directors contract proved fruitless as the Screen Producers Association of Australia SPAA refused to negotiate citing ASDA s lack of industrial registration as its reason Nevertheless in 1985 a disputes committee was formed and ASDA continued to represent directors in disputes with producers ASDA Board meetings were initially held in members houses or at an industry watering hole the 729 Club until 1984 by which time income had increased sufficiently for the establishment of an office in the suburb of Glebe In 1985 with the admission of documentary directors membership reached 100 but the influence of ASDA through its various activities reached many more directors as well as others interested involved in film and television production These cultural events also became a source of finance As the organization developed further eventually including membership in other capital cities the Australian Film Commission AFC began to give financial support to ASDA s cultural events and seminars Correlatively with the growth of membership and establishment of a financial base ASDA was able to play a role in the politics of the industry Lobbying on behalf of directors viewpoints on a range of issues soon became one of the Association s primary activities 1 1992 1999 edit By 1992 ASDA membership was around 200 and as activity within the organisation increased this number soon doubled 9 By the end of the decade members numbered almost 900 including both associate and student members 10 During the 1990s members participated directly in the Association through a range of committees including a documentary committee an animators committee a television directors committee a women s committee events committee and policy committee among others President Stephen Wallace in revitalising ASDA recognised the members interest in the art craft of directing and proposed the institution of a Directors Conference and Directors Discussion Screenings Many such screenings were held over the following years along with a range of seminars and meetings to discuss industry policy ASDA s first National Directors Conference was held in June 1993 Over the next years these conferences coincided with ASDA s AGM and became forums for policy debate as well as for exploration of directing issues During this period also ASDA continued its participation in industry policy development with submissions to and meetings with relevant organisations reviews and government departments Work on a Standard TV directors contract was begun and a reconstituted Disputes Committee began life by dealing with a serious television dispute arising in some measure out of the lack of such a contract Other disputes continued to be brought to the committee by directors working in many areas of the industry In 1999 one of these disputes with Channel 9 over wages for directors on the Far Scape series brought the long simmering issue of industrial representation to the fore President Stephen Wallace vigorously rejected the view that ASDA should work through the industry union the Media Entertainment amp Arts Alliance MEAA but rather that it should itself seek industrial registration 11 ASDA s efforts to develop standard directors contracts continued and in 1999 Neil Haggquist the business agent for the Directors Guild of Canada DGC was brought to Australia to help develop a contract which would be acceptable both to Australian and US companies Also in this period a prolonged struggle to achieve Moral Rights for directors was initiated when both federal government film agencies the Australian Film Commission and the Film Finance Corporation Australia as well as the Australian Writers Guild came out in opposition to the inclusion of directors as authors in mooted changes to the Copyright law of Australia ASDA understood that the authorship of screen directors was not well recognised and was under additional threat in a changing global and technological landscape As a consequence many of its activities at this time were aimed at fostering a better understanding of the director s role Thanks to these efforts when Moral Rights legislation was introduced into the Copyright Act in 2000 directors were defined as makers of a film along with writers and producers Importantly with the subsequent passing of the 2006 Copyright Amendment Act ASDA and the Australian Writers Guild now working together managed to achieve protection for their members from contractual pressures to waive their moral rights a waiver which is permitted and widely exercised in some other jurisdictions notably in the United States 12 In 1994 ASDA President Stephen Wallace at the invitation of the late John Juliani the DGC Directors Guild of Canada met in Toronto with the DGA Directors Guild of America and BECTU Britain s Broadcasting Entertainment Cinematograph and Theatre Union thus beginning a process of achieving closer relationships with overseas guilds 13 Subsequently ASDA regularly participated in the annual International Directors Guild Forum an event which it hosted in Sydney in 1998 14 Similarly in 1995 ASDA formed ASDACS the Australian Directors Collecting Society after having been approached by the Societe des Auteurs et Compositeurs Dramatiques to distribute money collected on behalf of directors from the sale of video tapes in France ASDACS subsequently formed further relationships with other European collecting societies and in recent years has distributed roughly half a million dollars annually to its 800 director members in Australia and New Zealand 15 16 17 In 1999 ASDA made further gains for directors in arguing for their inclusion as beneficiaries under the retransmission scheme proposed in the Copyright Amendment Digital Agenda Act 2000 These efforts came to fruition in 2005 through the Copyright Amendment Film Directors Rights Act providing for film directors to share in retransmission royalties along with producers in certain cases 18 19 2000 2014 edit By the end of the 1990s political social and technological changes were resulting in a diminution of member involvement in many organizations across Australia and ASDA was not immune to these changes Most of the member committees of the earlier period had become inactive members meetings became infrequent and most of the work fell to active members of the board particularly successive association presidents Donald Crombie and Ray Argall and to the executive directors Richard Harris 1998 2007 20 Drew Macrae 2007 2009 In 2009 2011 the ADG also employed an industrial relations and policy manager Needeya Islam 21 Much of their time was claimed by industrial issues international relations and the necessity of participation in a large number of policy debates and reviews of public sector institutions and regulations with their attendant demands for consultations participation in industry committees and detailed submissions In this period also digital media became an increasingly significant area of concern as rapid transformations affected telecommunications television and film which was increasingly moving away from celluloid formats Thanks to consistent participation in industry politics and promotion of directors viewpoints by the time the association changed its name to the Australian Directors Guild ADG in 2007 it had become a well established and well recognised player in a complex industry cultural scene in which seemingly every possible craft and interest group was establishing its own organised representation ADG President Ray Argall became involved in the work of the Australian Screen Council an attempt ultimately ill fated to bring the screen guilds together 22 23 More broadly and in line with the ADG s understanding of the increasing impact of globalisation on Australian screen Argall officially represented Australia in the founding of the International Federation of Coalitions for Cultural Diversity in Seville in 2007 He is currently the Asia Pacific member of the Federation Board and coordinates the Australian Coalition for Cultural Diversity 24 25 It was in this period also that the ADG finalised rate cards for directors fees 26 And while directors contracts had also been drafted the ability to negotiate with producers for their implementation still remained a stumbling block In 2014 following discussions with MEAA and SPAA the ADG received unanimous support from its members for the constitutional changes necessary for registration as an industrial union 4 The ADG continued to maintain a focus on directors creative and craft issues through seminars and discussion screenings in capital cities at its national conference and in collaboration with a range of other industry organisations educational institutions and film festivals 27 28 29 Awards editAt the 1995 conference ASDA presented the first Cecil Holmes Award in recognition of services to directing The Award is now generally given in alternate years or with the identification of a deserving recipient citation needed Cecil Holmes Award edit 1995 Richard Mason 1996 Gil Brealey 1997 Freda Glynn Phillip Batty 1999 Lilias Fraser 2001 Tim Burstall 2002 Michael Thornhill 2003 John Flaus 2004 Amanda Higgs 2005 John Maynard 2006 Rolf de Heer 2007 Donald Crombie 2008 Tom Zubrycki 2009 Paul Cox 2011 Sally Riley Erica Glynn daughter of Freda Glynn 2012 Stephen Wallace 2012 Michael Frankel Greg Duffy 2017 Courtney Gibson 2018 Ray ArgallADG Directors Awards edit In 2007 the first ADG Directors Awards were established They are open to financial members in all categories and are the only Australian film directing awards judged solely by directors This was the year in which the ADG was first included in the Directors Finder Series by the Directors Guild of America The DGA Finders Series spotlights the director of an undistributed independent film chosen from member countries within the International Association of English Speaking Directors Organizations IAESDO 30 31 The Finder s Award was relaunched by the ADG in 2012 and in 2014 an Innovation Award was also established 32 33 In 2018 Larissa Behrendt won Best Direction of a Documentary Feature Film for After the Apology which was partly funded by the Adelaide Film Festival s Indigenous Feature Documentary Initiative 34 35 In May 2019 ten awards were presented as well as the top prize of Best Direction in a Feature Film which Warwick Thornton won for Sweet Country Another major winner was Rachel Perkins with Mystery Road Series 36 37 Presidents edit1981 82 Gillian Armstrong 1982 85 Phillip Noyce 1986 Chris Thompson for eight months 1987 89 Chris Noonan 1989 90 Graham Thorburn 1991 Roger Hudson 1992 2001 Stephen Wallace 2001 06 Donald Crombie 2006 15 Ray Argall 2015 December 2021 Samantha Lang 38 39 December 2021 present as of 2022 update Rowan Woods 40 References edit a b History of the ADG Part 1 Screen Director Screendirector org Retrieved 2 July 2015 Colbert Mary 23 June 2015 ADG awards its own Movie News SBS Movies Sbs com au Retrieved 2 July 2015 Kroon Richard W 30 April 2014 A V A to Z An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Media Entertainment and Other Richard W Kroon ISBN 9780786457403 Retrieved 2 July 2015 a b ADG PRESIDENT Personal Message UNION Campaign archive1 com Retrieved 2 July 2015 World Film and Television Directors Announce Dublin Declaration Businesswire com 19 September 2003 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Media Release New Director s Attachment Scheme launched with Kriv Stenders Kill Me Three Times Screenaustralia gov au Archived from the original on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Screen Director Screendirector org Retrieved 2 July 2015 Australian Directors sic Guild Awards Mediasuper Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 2 July 2015 ASDA Newsletter September 1993 Stephen Wallace ASDA Press Report 1998 ASDA Newsletter March April 1999 Seiter William Ellen Seiter 2012 The Creative Artist s Legal Guide copyright trademark and contracts in film and digital media production Yale University Press p 56 Retrieved 2 July 2015 ASDA Newsletters Aug Sept 1994 and presidents Report 1998 99 Presidents Report 1998 99 asdacs asdacs Retrieved 2 July 2015 Australian Screen Directors Authorship Collecting Society Ltd PDF Asdacs com au Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Australian Screen Directors Authorship Collecting Society Ltd PDF Asdacs com au Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Directors and Retransmission Rights Screenrights 31 January 2013 Archived from the original on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Copyright Amendment Act 2006 Comlaw gov au Retrieved 2 July 2015 SHOWCASE Ebscohost com Archived from the original on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Kingston Anderson appointed Australian Directors sic Guild general manager If com au Retrieved 2 July 2015 Submission by Australian Screen Council PDF Arts gov au Archived from the original PDF on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 AWG quits Screen Council If com au Retrieved 2 July 2015 Coalition for cultural diversity PDF Cdc ccd org Archived from the original PDF on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Australie FICDC org Archived from the original on 2 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Australian Directors Guild ADG org au Archived from the original on 14 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 composersguild PDF Agsc org au Archived from the original PDF on 3 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 industry support funding amp incentives Screen nsw gov au Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Melbourne International Film Festival MIFF 2015 Miff com au Archived from the original on 20 February 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 The Guild Committees DGA Independent Filmmakers Brochure Dga org Retrieved 2 July 2015 Peter Garrett To Attend Directors Guild Awards Australianstage com au 11 October 2007 Retrieved 2 July 2015 news news amp updates Screen nsw gov au 30 December 2011 Archived from the original on 20 February 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 Entries open for ADG Awards If com au Retrieved 2 July 2015 After The Apology Adelaide Film Festival 5 July 2020 Retrieved 11 September 2020 After the Apology 2017 Screen Australia Retrieved 11 September 2020 Maddox Garry 6 May 2019 Sweet Country wins top prize at the Directors Guild Awards Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 20 November 2019 Knox David 7 May 2019 Australian Director s sic Guild Awards 2019 winners TV Tonight Retrieved 20 November 2019 Australian Directors Guild names Samantha Lang as president if com au 1 December 2015 Archived from the original on 12 December 2015 Retrieved 13 July 2016 Rowan Woods elected as president of Australian Director s sic Guild Mumbrella 12 December 2021 Retrieved 13 April 2022 About Australian Directors Guild Retrieved 13 April 2022 External links editAustralian Directors Guild Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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