22-491: The Camel Boy is a 1984 Australian animated feature film by Yoram Gross . Young Ali and his camel-driver grandfather Moussa take part in an expedition through the Australian Outback . Faced with prejudice, Moussa's knowledge and the hardiness of his camels in the punishing conditions quickly prove vital to both the success of the expedition and the survival of its members. This article about an animated film of
44-464: A Google Doodle was made for what would have been his 95th birthday to celebrate his life and works. Ethel Pedley Ethel Charlotte Pedley (19 June 1859 – 6 August 1898) was an English-Australian author and musician. Ethel Charlotte Pedley was born on 19 June 1859 at Acton, near London. She was the daughter of Frederick Pedley and his wife Eliza, née Dolby. Pedley began piano lessons aged 5. Pedley migrated to Australia with her family in
66-607: A brand new series, Old Tom . The Seven Network programmed a dedicated block of television produced by Yoram Gross – a fulfilment of its commitment to screen quality 'C classified' drama for children. Gross and EM.TV also launched the Junior TV channel in Germany, but shut down in many years later. Gross's autobiography, My Animated Life , was released in April 2011. Gross died in Sydney at
88-645: A special aerial image technique of drawings over live action backgrounds. The film was based on an Australian classic best seller by Ethel Pedley , and was described by ABC film critic John Hinde as a "brilliant technical success and the best cartoon film originated in Australia". It won Best Children's Film in Tehran and also won a Sammy Award for the Best Animated Film at the 1978 Australian Film Institute Television Awards . Gross went on to produce, direct, and script
110-716: A special retrospective screening of his career highlights, including the screening of Gross's most recent project, Autumn in Krakow , a poignant short film on his home town of Kraków, based on his late brother Nathan's poetry. In 2011, Gross was awarded the Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland and the Medal for Merit to polish Culture – "Gloria Artis". . For users in four countries: Australia, Greece, Germany, and Israel,
132-590: A total of 16 feature films for 19 children. Eight films featuring the adventures of Dot from the original film Dot and the Kangaroo . Dot and the Bunny (1984) was the winner of the 1983 Best Animated Film at the 28th Asia Pacific Film Festival , and Dot and Keeto (1985) won the Red Ribbon Award at the 1986 American Film and Video Festival. Coinciding with the release of the films, Gross also published books based on
154-511: Is helped to find her way back home by a friendly kangaroo . The illustrations were drawn by Frank P. Mahony . Pedley was a believer in the conservation of the Australian flora and fauna , and usually wrote from this perspective, singling out 'man' as disconnected from nature and the rest of the animals. It is thought her writing was inspired by her visits to the property owned by her brother Arthur, near Walgett . Ethel's preface to Dot and
176-555: The Blinky Bill series, The Adventures of Blinky Bill and Blinky Bill's Extraordinary Excursion , totalled 52 half-hour episodes and achieved significant international success, particularly in Europe. After Blinky Bill , Gross co-produced the series Tabaluga (26 half hours) with EM.TV & Merchandising AG , which became a top-rated children's show in Germany. An animated series adapting Australia's best-known kangaroo, Skippy ,
198-677: The Jagiellonian University in Krakow (also known as Krakow University). He first entered the film industry in 1947 at the age of 20 when he became one of the first students of Jerzy Toeplitz (founder of the Polish Film Institute , the Swiss Film Institute and the Australian Film and Television School ). Gross began his career as an assistant to Polish directors Eugene Cenkalski and Leonard Buczkowski as well as
220-753: The Yoram Gross Award for Best Animated Film at the Sydney Film Festival and the Yoram Gross Best Animation Award at the Flickerfest International Film Festival. Gross wrote a book on making animated films, titled The First Animated Step (1975) and produced a film of the same title. The first animated feature film produced by the Yoram Gross Film Studio, called Dot and the Kangaroo (1977), used
242-474: The 1870s but returned to London to study at the Royal Academy of Music , where she studied with her uncle Prosper Sainton, professor of violin, and won a medal. She was also trained by her aunt, the famous contralto Charlotte Sainton-Dolby , at her Vocal Academy. Pedley returned to Sydney in 1882, and began teaching singing and the violin. In 1896 Emmeline Woolley and Pedley visited London and persuaded
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#1732858801884264-458: The 1980s is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Yoram Gross Yoram Jerzy Gross AM (18 October 1926 – 21 September 2015) was a Polish-born, Australian film and television producer, animation director, and writer of children's and family entertainment. He founded the animation studio Flying Bark Productions . He was known for his adaptation of children's characters from books and films, and best known for
286-648: The Associated Board of the Royal Academy of Music and the Royal College of Music to extend their examinations to the Australian colonies. Pedley was appointed the solo representative of the Royal Academy of Music for New South Wales. The first examiner visited in 1897. Pedley's only published book is Dot and the Kangaroo , which featured a little girl named Dot who becomes lost in the Australian outback , and
308-572: The Dutch director Joris Ivens and studied script writing under Carl Foreman . In 1950 Gross moved from Poland to Israel, where he worked as a newsreel and documentary cameraman. He then became an independent film producer and director and began winning prizes at international film festivals. His full-length feature, Joseph the Dreamer (1962), a biblical story, received special prizes in many countries. His experimental film Chansons Sans Paroles (1958)
330-488: The Kangaroo is as follows: To the children of Australia in the hope of enlisting their sympathies for the many beautiful, amiable, and frolicsome creatures of their fair land, whose extinction, through ruthless destruction, is being surely accomplished Stricken with cancer, Pedley died on 6 August 1898 at the Darlinghurst home of her companion Emmeline Woolley at the age of 39. Her only novel, Dot and
352-575: The age of 88 on 21 September 2015. Gross won more than 80 international awards for his various films. Gross was honoured in the 1995 Australia Day Honours with a Member of the Order of Australia for his services to the Australian film industry, particularly in animation techniques. Gross celebrated his 60th anniversary in the film industry in May 2007. To celebrate the milestone, the New South Wales Film and Television Office honoured him by hosting
374-818: The films Dot and the Kangaroo , The Little Convict and Save the Lady . Gross's 1991 animated film The Magic Riddle was based on an original story and is a mixture of fairy tales from Hans Christian Andersen , the Brothers Grimm , and others. In 1992 Gross released Blinky Bill: The Mischievous Koala , based on the Australian children's classic by Dorothy Wall . This film featured an Australian koala and introduced Blinky Bill to an international audience. Blinky Bill generated one of Australia's most successful merchandising programs, bringing in millions of dollars in export earnings. In 1993 Yoram Gross Film Studio diversified into animated series for television. The first two of
396-544: The popular weekly television music program Bandstand for such artists as John Farnham . At the Sydney Film Festival in 1970, he was awarded second prize for The Politicians in the category of best Australian-made film, and at the 1971 Australian Film Awards, his film To Nefertiti won the bronze award. After 1977 Gross devoted his energies to animated films and series, but maintained an interest in experimental films with awards to assist young filmmakers including
418-528: The production of 10 new series over the next five years. In the following year the studio worked with the Canadian Nelvana to plan an animated adaptation of Dav Pilkey's Dumb Bunnies . The new millennium cemented Gross and EM.TV's position as the number-one family entertainment business in the Australian country and supplier of quality children's content to the world. The studio completed a second series of both Tabaluga and Flipper and Lopaka , as well as
440-531: The production of the films Dot and the Kangaroo and Blinky Bill: The Mischievous Koala . Gross was born in Kraków , Poland to a religious Jewish family and was the brother of the film director Natan Gross. Gross endured World War II under the Nazi regime. His family was on Oskar Schindler 's list, but chose to make their own risky escape, moving hiding places 72 times. Gross studied music and musicology at
462-417: Was completed in 1998, whereupon the studio commenced the animation of Flipper and Lopaka . Both series comprise 26 half-hour episodes. In March 1999, EM.TV a 50% share ownership in Yoram Gross Film Studio acquired from Village Roadshow Limited to form Yoram Gross-EM.TV Pty Ltd (YGEM) was created. This new partnership marked the transition from a family business to a world brand. EM.TV and YGEM committed to
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#1732858801884484-437: Was heralded by some international film critics as the most interesting film of 1959. Another comedy, One Pound Only (1964), set the box office record of the year. In 1967 Gross, his wife Sandra and young family migrated to Australia and lived in Sydney. They established Yoram Gross Film Studio in their house, as remote workers. Gross continued to make experimental films and to win awards. He originally produced film clips for
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