‘The Missing’ wins Best Short Documentary Award in Zurich
We are delighted to announce ‘The Missing’ has won the ‘Best Short Documentary’ award at the recent Inspirational Film Festival held in Zurich.
Read MoreLucinda Horrocks writes ‘Discovering an Archive’
Wind & Sky Producer Lucinda Horrocks has had an article published in Provenance, the free journal of the Public Record Office of Victoria.
Read More‘The Missing’ nominated for awards in Berlin, Tokyo and Hawaii
We are proud to announce that ‘The Missing’ has been nominated for several awards in the last few months at global film festival events.
Read More‘The Missing’ Nominated in British Short Film Awards
Exciting! Our short documentary ‘The Missing’ has been nominated for an award in the 2022 British Short Film Awards!
Read More‘The Missing’ screening in Croatia for the History Film Festival
We are proud to announce that the Wind & Sky Productions short documentary ‘The Missing’ is screening in Rijeka, Croatia as part of the 6th History Film Festival 13-17 September 2022.
Read MoreJuly is Documentary Month: Harbour Lights at Melbourne Documentary Film Festival 2021
Wind & Sky’s short documentary ‘Harbour Lights’ is part of the 2021 Melbourne Documentary Film Festival (MDFF) screening at the Cinema Nova Carlton and virtually in July.
PLEASE NOTE: Due to the COVID-19 Lockdowns in Victoria in July, August and September 2021, the in-cinema screening was cancelled and the festival went online in October.
Read MoreCelebrating humanitarian women and men of the First World War.
19 April 2021, Wind & Sky Productions
A new online exhibition ‘The Missing’ celebrates two Australian humanitarian efforts of WW1 – the Australian Red Cross Wounded and Missing Enquiry Bureau and post-war Australian Graves Workers.
Visit https://victoriancollections.net.au/stories/the-missing to view the free exhibition.
Read MoreThe Missing Screens in 2020 Veterans Film Festival
3 December 2020
We are proud to announce that our short documentary The Missing is screening in the Veterans Film Festival 2020 Virtual Edition from November 30 – December 31.
Read MoreHarbour Lights
Info
Commissioned by: Victorian Government
Produced: 2020
Length: 17:51 minutes
About The Film
In WW1 Melbourne a pioneering network of women at the Mission to Seafarers called the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild supported sailors who risked their lives at sea.
The documentary ‘Harbour Lights’ tells the remarkable story of the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild and the lives of seafarers in early 20th century Melbourne. It focusses on Melbourne’s iconic Mission to Seafarers building, its connection to the Great War and to a unique community of ships crew and volunteers.
This Wind & Sky Production was produced in collaboration with the Mission to Seafarers Victoria. It was directed by Jary Nemo and written and produced by Lucinda Horrocks and Jary Nemo with executive producers Sue Dight and Gordon MacMillan.
Narrated by Sharon Turley, the film features Jill Garner, Kate Darian-Smith, Chris McConville, Janet Miller and Gordon MacMillan. Music was specifically composed by the incredible Richard Chew. Featuring Melbourne historians, commentators, archivists and architects and rare footage and images of sailing and social life in and around the ports of Melbourne, this film will inform and connect audiences young and old.
Created with the support of the Victorian Government.
Story Background
At the outbreak of World War One shipping was central to the Victorian way of life.
Seafarers from every corner of the world visited Melbourne on merchant ships. They risked their lives bringing goods to what was then the largest port in Australia. Life could be equally difficult in port where exploitation of sailors was rife.
To help protect them from harm the Mission to Seafarers set up a network of support in Australia and around the world. The Mission was first established as a floating chapel in Hobson’s Bay in 1857, but by the early 20th century had established shore-based missions in Williamstown, Port Melbourne, and on the Yarra River in Melbourne.
The Melbourne Mission to Seafarers, which still stands today, was constructed on the Yarra River waterfront in 1917 during the First World War at a time when ships carrying cargo and people were subjected to heightened dangers at sea.
What is little-known about the story is the crucial work of a group of women called the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild who raised significant funds for the Mission’s construction and who volunteered their time to support the global welfare of seafarers from ship to shore.
The inspiration for the film project was the rediscovery in 2007 of a near-forgotten set of dusty old boxes stored under the Mission’s theatre. The boxes were filled with documents and photographs related to the activities of the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild from its foundation in 1906 to its demise in the 1960s.
In recent years a dedicated team of volunteers and staff at the Mission has been gradually digitising, identifying and cataloguing the Guild records. Through their research they discovered that the construction of the current Mission building at 717 Flinders Street, particularly the building of the Memorial Chapel, was paid for in large part by the fundraising efforts of the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild during WW1.
The archives also revealed that the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild model was a homegrown invention, pioneered in Melbourne in 1906 and exported to Missions around the world.
Though the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild disbanded in the 1960s, their legacy is present in the bones of the building they helped construct during the terrible years of the First World War. Their traces can be found in the outdoor garden, designed and planted by members of the Guild, and in the stained glass, decorative work and plaques in the building’s Memorial Chapel, dedicated to the memory of merchant mariners who lost their lives in the Great War.
Today the Mission continues to operate from the same building and has an active staff and volunteer community working in support of the world’s seafarers who visit the port of Melbourne.
In the News
Peter Krausz, Interview with Lucinda Horrocks and Jary Nemo Harbour Lights, Movie Metropolis, WYN 88.9FM, 24 July 2021.
Documentary Drive, ‘MDFF 2021: Shorts to Watch’, 06 July 2021.
Annie McLoughlin, ‘Harbour Lights & The Last Typewriter Shop In Melbourne’, Interview with Lucinda Horrocks and Jary Nemo, Showreel, 3CR Community Radio, 24 June 2021.
Screenings and Events
Winner, Best Documentary Film, Directors Circle Festival of Shorts 2021, 27 November – 4 December 2021.
Official Selection, Melbourne Documentary Film Festival 2021, 7-31 July 2021.
Official Selection, Setting Sun Film Festival 2021, 18-26 June 2021.
Official Selection, Carmarthen Bay Film Festival 2021, 18-19 May 2021.
Geelong Wooden Boat Festival: Sunday 8 March 2020, West Lounge Theatre, Geelong Foreshore. Program
Film Launch: Wednesday 26th February 2020, Melbourne Mission to Seafarers.
Viewing the Film
The film is free to show, watch and share online at internet quality at Harbour Lights on YouTube.
To arrange for a high quality screening copy for community screenings and events contact Wind & Sky Productions or Mission to Seafarers Victoria.
Media Contact
For interviews and further information, contact Wind & Sky Productions or Mission to Seafarers Victoria.
Credits
- Narrator
- Sharon Turley
- Featuring (in order of appearance)
- Dr Chris McConville, Gordon MacMillan, Janet Miller, Professor Kate Darian-Smith and Jill Garner
- With
- Raul S Gantalao Jr, Escoto Lemuel, Ben Schroeder, Cinda Manins
- And
- Ian Fletcher, Yuan Jia, Uma Kothari, Gordon Lansley, William Reed and Cheka Samaranayake
- Directed by
- Jary Nemo
- Written and Produced by
- Lucinda Horrocks and Jary Nemo
- Music by
- Richard Chew
- Executive Producers
- Sue Dight and Gordon MacMillan
- Research advisors
- Geraldine Brault, Maria Culka, Professor Kate Darian-Smith, Ros Fletcher, Professor Uma Kothari, Dr Barbara Lemon, Catherine McLay, Dr Chris McConville, Janet Miller, Rick Mitchell, Duncan ‘John’ Perryman, Dr Annette Sheill and Peter Taylor
- Archival photographs, music and footage courtesy of
- Australian Red Cross Society, Central Highlands Libraries, Internet Archive, National Film and Sound Archive, National Library of Australia, Mackarness Family Personal Archives, Mission to Seafarers Victoria, Public Record Office Victoria, State Library of Victoria and US National Archives
- Music
- Harbour Lights. Music by Richard Chew. Westering. Music by Richard Chew. Twilight (Crépuscule) by Jules Massenet. Performed by Amelita Galli-Curci. I Love You So, Waltz from The Merry Widow by Franz Lehár. Performed by Elise Stephenson and Harry Macdonough with Orchestra. Harbour Lights 2. Music by Richard Chew. If I Could Fly by Walking Hearts featuring Jennifer Holm. Courtesy of Epidemic Sound.
- With thanks to
- Peter Barrow, Sarah Bartak, Lin Bender AM, Patty Braumueller, Csilla Csongvay, Emer Diviney, Moira Drew, Ian Fletcher, Ajith Jayasuriya, Ben Jones, Patience Jones, Cinda Manins, Madeleine Martiniello, Georgia Melville, Elisabeth Moglia, Tara Oldfield, Lyn Pasquier, Nigel Porteous, Rev’d Onofre (Inni) Punay, Dr Rosalie Triolo, Ben Schroeder, David Simpson, Cheka Samaranayake, Daria Wray, the Helen Macpherson Smith Trust and KPMG.
- A special thanks to
- The women of the Ladies Harbour Lights Guild 1906 to 1961
- Produced in collaboration with
- The Mission to Seafarers Victoria
- Created with the support of
- The Victorian Government
- Licensing
- This film has been released under a
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license - Acknowledgement of country
- Project production and development took place on the lands of the Kulin nation. We acknowledge Traditional Owners and pay our respects to Elders past, present and future.
- Production company
- A Wind & Sky Production
- Copyright with
- © Wind & Sky Productions MMXIX