Australian Film, Television And Radio School
History
Established in 1972 as the Australian Film and Television School, as part of the Commonwealth Government's strategy to promote the development of Australia's cultural activity, AFTRS was opened to students in 1973, with the first intake of 12 students including directors Gillian Armstrong, Phillip Noyce and Chris Noonan.
In 1973 Jerzy Toeplitz was appointed Foundation Director of the School and after six years in the role was awarded the Order of Australia and the AFI's Longford Lyell Award.
In 1975 Gough Whitlam helped to create funding agencies to support the film school.
Campus
For many years AFTRS was located in purpose-built premises at North Ryde, Sydney. In 2008 the school relocated to a purpose-built facility adjacent to Fox Studios, located inside the Entertainment Quarter in Moore Park, Sydney.
The campus includes: a full-size 5.1 sound theatre (seats 126), state-of-the-art mix theatre, two large professional film and television studios, film studios, state-of-the-art sound recording studios, and a host of other facilities and equipment.
Courses and admission
Admission into AFTRS degree courses is competitive and based on merit selection. Places are limited. As of 2024 offerings include:
- Master of Arts Screen in 9 disciplines (full-time)
- Master of Arts Screen: Business (full-time or part-time)
- Graduate Diploma in Radio and Podcasting (full-time or part-time)
- Undergraduate degree: Bachelor of Arts Screen: Production (full-time)
Governance
As a statutory body, AFTRS is governed by the Australian Film Television and Radio School Act 1973 with its Council responsible to the Minister for the Arts, representing the Federal Parliament. There are nine members of the Council:
- three appointed by the Governor-General of Australia;
- three members appointed from convocation by the Council;
- the chief executive officer;
- one staff member elected by staff annually; and
- one student member elected by students annually.
As of April 2024, Rachel Perkins is chair of the council, while the CEO is the screenwriter Neil Greenwood.
The school is a member of ARTS8: the Australian Roundtable for Arts Training Excellence, a group of arts training organisations funded by the federal government.
AFTRS International VR Award
Amanda Duthie, Adelaide Film Festival artistic Director and virtual reality champion, along with Google Creative Technologist Mathew Tizard and AFTRS Head of Documentary Rachel Landers, sat on the jury for the inaugural AFTRS International VR Award in 2017. Nothing Happens, by Michelle and Uri Kranot, won the award, while The Other Dakar by Selly Raby, based on Senegalese mythology, received a Special Mention. The Unknown Patient, by Australian director Michael Beets won the award in 2018.
Academy Award success
As of 2024, four AFTRS student films had been NOMINATED for Academy Awards:
- 'Inja' (2000), directed by Steve Pasvolsky, produced by Joanne Weatherstone
- 'Birthday Boy' (2003), directed by Sejong Park, produced by Andrew Gregory
- 'The Saviour', directed by Peter Templeman, produced by Stuart Parkyn
- 'Emily' Student Academy Award (2010), directed by Ben Mathews, produced by Simon Moore
Six AFTRS Alumni are winners of the Academy Awards®:
- Jane Campion: Best Original Screenplay,'The Piano'
- Andrew Lesnie: Best Achievement in Cinematography,'The Lord of the Rings'
- Dion Beebe: Best Achievement in Cinematography,'Memoirs of a Geisha'
- Margaret Sixel: Best Film Editing, 'Mad Max: Fury Road'
- David White: Best Sound Editing, 'Mad Max: Fury Road'
- Peter Grace: Best Sound Mixing, 'Hacksaw Ridge'
Five AFTRS alumni were NOMINATED for the Academy Awards®:
- Dion Beebe: Best Achievement in Cinematography,'Chicago'
- Jane Campion: Best Director, 'The Power of the Dog'
- Chris Noonan: Best Director, 'Babe'
- Pip Karmel Best Editing, 'Shine'
- Tony McNamara: Best Original Screenplay, 'The Favourite'
Alumni
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (August 2020) |
The entire list of AFTRS graduates by year, from 1973 to now, can be viewed on the School's website.
Directing
- Mario Andreacchio
- Gillian Armstrong
- Jane Campion
- Alister Grierson
- Rolf de Heer
- Daniel Krige
- Jocelyn Moorhouse
- Chris Noonan
- Phillip Noyce
- Rachel Perkins
- Alex Proyas
- Michael James Rowland
- Ivan Sen
- Cate Shortland
- Kriv Stenders
- Warwick Thornton
- Rowan Woods
Producing
Screenwriting
- Billy Marshall Stoneking
- Tony McNamara
- Justin Davis
Cinematography
Editing
Composing
Design
Radio