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・ Michael Row the Boat Ashore
・ Michael Rowan-Robinson
・ Michael Rowbotham
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・ Michael Rowe (director)
・ Michael Rowe (journalist)
・ Michael Rowland
・ Michael Rowland (jockey)
・ Michael Rowland (news presenter)
・ Michael Rowland (prelate)
・ Michael Rowntree
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Michael Rubbo
・ Michael Ruben Rinaldi
・ Michael Rubin
・ Michael Rubinstein
・ Michael Rubio
・ Michael Rudd
・ Michael Rudder
・ Michael Rudman
・ Michael Rudolph
・ Michael Rudroff
・ Michael Rudy Tham
・ Michael Ruetz
・ Michael Ruffin
・ Michael Ruhlman
・ Michael Rumaker


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Michael Rubbo : ウィキペディア英語版
Michael Rubbo

Michael Dattilo Rubbo (born 31 December 1938) is an Australian filmmaker who has written and directed over 50 films in documentary and fiction. Rubbo studied at Scotch College, Melbourne, and read anthropology at Sydney University, before travelling on a Fulbright scholarship to study film at Stanford University, California where he got his MA in Communication Arts. Rubbo worked for 20 years as a documentary film director at the National Film Board of Canada before returning to Australia.
==Early career==

Rubbo worked for 20 years as a documentary film director at National Film Board of Canada, taking time off in between films to teach both in Australia at the just opened National Film School, and U.S. universities (including Harvard University). Hired by the NFB to make films for children, Rubbo directed over 40 documentaries, winning many international prizes. His best known documentaries are ''Sad Song of Yellow Skin'' (1972)) (filmed in Vietnam during the war), ''Waiting for Fidel'' (1973), ''Wet Earth and Warm people'' (a personal journey though Indonesia), ''Margaret Atwood: Once in August'' (1984), and a more recent documentary made after his NFB tenure, ''Much Ado About Something'' (2001)〔''. ''Much Ado About Something'' explores the possibility that Christopher Marlowe was the hidden hand behind William Shakespeare. "Rubbo marshals the evidence with lucidity and zest and comes to his own original and contentious conclusion” - Suzy Baldwin, ''Sydney Morning Herald''
Working at the NFB, Rubbo was an early pioneer in the field of metafilm, creating subjective, highly personal films that were more like personal journals than objective records of reality.
''Sad Song of Yellow Skin'', Rubbo's reaction to the Vietnam war, is his most awarded film in this genre. That Rubbo should have pursued this vision at the National Film Board was particularly striking, as the NFB's English-language production branch had, during Rubbo's tenure, generally encouraged a much more objective approach to non-fiction film, including the use of voice-of-God narration.
His films have been widely shown on TV; ''Much Ado About Something'' being repeated several times on PBS Frontline Program which still sells the film. His work is also in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) New York and film schools around the world. He has been visiting lecturer at New York University, UCLA, Stanford University and the University of Florida with longer teaching periods at Harvard University and the Australian Film, Television and Radio School (AFTRS). In 1973, he helped found Film Australia, an independent organization devoted to the promotion of Australian cinema.
Rubbo has also directed and written four children’s feature films including ''The Peanut Butter Solution'' (1985), ''Tommy Tricker and the Stamp Traveller'' (1988) along with its sequel ''The Return of Tommy Tricker'' (1994), and the Daytime Emmy award winning film ''Vincent and Me'' (1990). He spent some time as the Head of Documentaries at Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Television, encouraging cinema vérité and instigating the popular ''Race Around the World'' series.

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