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  1. John Mackenzie

    John Mackenzie

    Scottish film director

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  1. John Leonard Duncan Mackenzie (22 May 1928 – 8 June 2011) was a Scottish film director who worked in British film from the late 1960s, first as an assistant director and later as an independent director himself.

  2. John Mackenzie was a British missionary who was a constant champion of the rights of Africans in Southern Africa and a proponent of British intervention to curtail the spread of Boer influence, especially over the lands of the Tswana (“Bechuana” in older variant orthography) peoples.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. John MacDonald MacKenzie FRHistS FRSE (born 2 October 1943) is a British historian of imperialism who pioneered the study of popular and cultural imperialism, as well as aspects of environmental history. He has also written about Scottish migration and the development of museums around the world.

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  5. John Mackenzie (1928-2011) was a British film and TV director who worked with Ken Loach and Peter McDougall. He is known for The Long Good Friday, The Fourth Protocol, and A Sense of Freedom.

    • January 1, 1
    • Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
    • January 1, 1
    • London, England, UK
  6. John Mackenzie was a Scottish director who made acclaimed dramas for the BBC and Hollywood, such as The Long Good Friday and Just a Boy's Game. He learned from Ken Loach and worked with Peter McDougall, George Harrison and Frankie Miller.

  7. In the long history of British relationships with southern Africa, or Austral Africa as Mackenzie liked to call it, there are many examples of personal initiative that influenced policy and changed the face of the map.

  8. Nov 12, 2019 · As this collection is intended to summarise the career of John MacKenzie, this introduction will begin by doing so simply and succinctly: he changed how British imperial history is conceived, researched, and written about.

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