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Director:

Jack Lee

  • Born: 1913 in Stroud, Gloucester, England, UK
  • Died: Oct 15, 2002
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '40s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Action
  • Career Highlights: The South of Algiers, A Town Like Alice, The Wooden Horse
  • First Major Screen Credit: Children on Trial (1946)

Biography

Jack Lee started out as an editor for the General Post Office, a British government-sponsored film unit. In 1940, the year that the GPO matriculated into the Crown Film unit of the Ministry of Information, Lee edited the legendary documentary London Can Take It. Promoted to director in 1941, he spent the war years helming Crown's morale-boosting "reality" efforts. In 1947, he moved to Wessex Films, where he wrote and directed his first dramatic feature, The Woman in the Hall. With his extensive background in government propaganda films, it is small wonder that some of Lee's best directorial efforts were war pictures, including The Wooden Horse (1951) and A Town Like Alice (1956). In 1961, Jack Lee relocated to Australia, where he forsook directing to run his own production company. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Jack Lee
For Jack Lee the film director, see Jack Lee (film director), for the bagpipe player, Jack Lee (bagpiper)

Jack Lee is an American songwriter and musician. Alongside Paul Collins (later of The Beat) and Peter Case (later of The Plimsouls), Lee formed the seminal, yet short-lived Los Angeles power pop trio The Nerves. Lee played guitar for the group - favouring a thin, unembellished, almost rhythmic playing style - along with composing and singing most of the group's songs. The band, originally based in San Francisco, made the move to Los Angeles in 1976, and began putting on a series of self-promoted and self-financed concerts, providing a focal gathering point for many members of L.A.'s nascent punk scene, as well as giving many of L.A.'s early punk bands their initial shows (The Weirdos, The Screamers and The Dils, among others). This 'Do It Yourself' aesthetic (although not usually associated with music extant pre-punk) was also reflected in the Nerves' self-financed and self-released 1976 EP - the four songs from which (two of them Lee compositions) all going on to much-deserved reverence, if not mainstream recognition, amongst punk and power pop circles. Though in hindsight influential, this self-contained recording and gigging strategy most likely placed undue stress upon the relationship between the three band members. The Nerves' existence, always tenuous, finally disintegrated in the aftermath of another self-financed venture - this time a cross-country tour in the summer of 1977, with the band covering almost twenty-five thousand miles in a single 1969 Ford LTD Wagon and playing with such notables as the Ramones, the Diodes and Mink Deville. Though the press surrounding the band was nearly always positive and newer material sounded strong, it was not enough to hold the band together. The Nerves finally tore apart in 1978, less than a year before Blondie would turn one of Jack Lee and the Nerves' songs into a new wave classic and bonafide chart hit (and two years before several L.A. power pop bands like the Knack and 20/20 capitalized with a 'skinny tie' image and style largely inspired and derived from the Nerves).

"Hanging on the Telephone", Lee's most famous and enduring composition, originally the lead track on the Nerves' lone 1976 EP, found its way to the ears of the members of Blondie during the recording sessions for what would become the group's widely successful third album, Parallel Lines. Two years after the original Nerves release had failed to attract either major label or mainstream audience attention, the song exploded as the lead-off track on Parallel Lines, going on to become a UK Top Five hit. Lee's signature song remains a popular cover choice of bands today (most recently revived by indie singer/songwriter Cat Power), even if most groups are unfamiliar with any version predating Blondie's. Lee also contributed a further number to Parallel Lines, entitled "Will Anything Happen?", as well as the song "You Are My Lover" for Suzi Quatro, which appeared on her album "And Other Four Letter Words"(like all of Suzi Quatro's records, the album was produced by Mike Chapman, who also produced Blondie's "Parallel Lines" in the same year). Lee later lent a 1983 hit to British singer Paul Young, called "Come Back and Stay".

Following Parallel Lines' success, Lee slowly put together and released a solo album entitled Jack Lee's Greatest Hits, Vol. 1, which featured re-worked recordings of Nerves songs, as well as new material. However, with the exception of this LP, little since has been heard from Lee, who seemed content to largely resign from the commercial music world. Nevertheless, the strength of Jack Lee's songwriting and interest surrounding his first group remained fervent, so much so that in 2001, Spain's Penniman Records [1] re-released the Nerves' EP as a deluxe 25th Anniversary ten-inch record with extra demo and live material culled from their whirlwind 1977 tour.

Currently, Jack Lee is at work on a new album and plans to tour with his band, Jack Lee Inferno, which made an appearance April 1 2007 at The Radio Heartbeat Powerpop Festival in Brooklyn, New York.



 
 

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Director. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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