Bryan Bruce (born 1948) is a New Zealand documentary maker and author.[1]
Early life
Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Bryan Bruce emigrated with his family to New Zealand in 1956. He grew up in Christchurch and attended the University of Canterbury, where he graduated with an M.A. in Sociology and Philosophy. Bruce earned a Diploma in Teaching from Christchurch Teachers' College and taught for ten years.
Career
He was a professional musician for 20 years before he took up a career as a documentary maker. While moonlighting as a bar pianist, a chance meeting with Dunedin Producer, Ross Johnson, led him to hosting and writing scripts for the TV series The Late Late Show in 1982.[2] Presenter Ian Johnstone, accepted Bruce's proposal for We’re Only Human, a pop-psychology program which ran for two successful seasons on TV2, followed by Just Testing. In the mid to late 1980s, TVNZ’s documentary department dissolved, but launched Bruce's career as an independent filmmaker. He partnered with New Zealand’s Department of Health to write and present Safer Sex, an educational documentary dealing with sex in New Zealand in the age of AIDS. He then decided to follow New Zealand yachtsman Peter Blake as he competed and won the 1989 Whitbread Round the World race, and sold the documentary internationally.
Under his company banner, Red Sky Film & TV, Bryan Bruce is involved in most, if not all aspects of the documentary production, including writing, producing, directing, editing and often presenting. Often, he travels around the world to see how other people and systems operate to help provide perspective on the documentary topic.
Bruce's feature-length documentaries cover diverse topics, from natural history, biography, psychology, sociology, social justice, mental health and crime. Over his career, Bruce has written, produced and/or directed 30+ documentaries and docudramas. In addition to many one-off documentaries, Bruce also wrote, produced and directed the real crime show series, The Investigator[3] that debuted on TVNZ1 and CBS Reality in 2007. The second series in 2009 won a Qantas Award for Bruce’s directing, and sold to a number of overseas channels.[4]
To help make many of his documentaries freely available to the public, Bruce launched a Substack in April 2024.[5]
Publications
Bruce's published non-fiction works include the following:
2024 New York Festivals® TV & Film Awards. Winner, Silver Medal (The Food Crisis)[7]
2023 New York Festivals® TV & Film Awards. Winner, Silver Medal (Inside Child Poverty Revisited)[8]
2023 New Zealand Television Awards. Finalist, NZ On Air Best Documentary (Inside Child Poverty Revisited)[9]
2015 New York Festivals® TV & Film Awards. Winner, Silver Medal (Passion in Paradise)[10]
2014 New York Festivals® TV & Film Awards. Winner, Gold Medal (Mind The Gap)[11]
2012 New Zealand Television Awards. Nominated, Best Director - Documentary (Inside Child Poverty). Nominated, Best Popular Documentary (with Richard Thomas) (Inside Child Poverty)
2011 New York Festivals® TV & Film Awards. Winner, Silver and Bronze Medals in Religion and History categories (Jesus: The Cold Case)
2008 Qantas Film and Television Awards. Winner, Achievement in Directing - Factual/Entertainment Programme Series (The Investigator). Nominated, Best Factual Series (The Investigator)
2003 New Zealand Television Awards. Winner, Best Narration Script - Non-Drama; shared with Ian Johnstone (The Lost Dinosaurs of New Zealand.) Nominated, Best Director - Documentary (The Lost Dinosaurs of New Zealand)
2003 Banff Television Awards (United States). Finalist (The Lost Dinosaurs of New Zealand)
2003 New York Festivals® TV & Film Awards. Finalist (The Lost Dinosaurs of New Zealand)
2000 TV Guide Television Awards. Nominated, Best factual programme or documentary script, shared with Ian Johnstone (The Trouble with Ben).
1999 TV Guide Television Awards. Nominated, Best Director - Factual (Shaky Beginnings)
1997 TV Guide Film & Television Awards of New Zealand. Winner, Best Director - Factual (Inside New Zealand:Murder, They Said)[14]
1993 Film & TV Awards. Winner, Best Director - Documentary (Serious Fraud)
Controversies
Some of Bryan Bruce's documentaries have been controversial, and garnered media attention particularly in New Zealand.
Inside Child Poverty, which exposed the plight of children living in New Zealand's poorest homes on the eve of the 2011 election, contributed to the establishment of a Ministry for Children, The Children's Act and the setting of Child Poverty Reduction Targets.[15]
Another controversial documentary was Bryan Bruce's award winning Jesus: The Cold Case, which looked at the roots of antisemitism. TVNZ was initially reluctant to release the 90 minute documentary,[16] and after doing so, Bruce received criticism from some reviewers and members of the fundamentalist Christian community. In spite of this, it won the NZ AFTA for Best Documentary and was a Silver and Bronze Medal Winner in the Religion and History categories at The New York Festivals Television and Film Awards in 2011.[17]