Bruce Beresford (born August 16, 1940, Sydney, Australia) is an Australian film and stage director, screenwriter, and producer who specialized in small-budget character-driven dramas.
Beresford began making short films as a student at the University of Sydney, from which he earned a bachelor’s degree in 1964. He then went to London, where he helped produce documentaries for the British Film Institute (1966–71). After returning to Australia, he directed his first feature film, the comedy The Adventures of Barry McKenzie (1972). The movie, which he wrote with Barry Humphries. was popular enough that he directed a sequel, Barry McKenzie Holds His Own (1974). His next collaboration with Humphries, Side by Side (1975), was less successful. In 1976 Beresford made the comedy Don’s Party, and it earned him an Australian Film Institute award for best director. However, the drama The Getting of Wisdom (1977) and the thriller Money Movers (1978) were less well received.
Beresford’s breakthrough came with his widely acclaimed Breaker Morant (1980), about the court-martial of Australian soldiers during the Boer War. The movie helped establish the Australian film industry and earned him an Academy Award nomination for best adapted screenplay. It also led to an invitation to direct the Hollywood film Tender Mercies (1983), which was written by Horton Foote and starred Robert Duvall as a faded country music star. For the drama, Beresford received an Oscar nomination for best director. His next two films, King David (1985) and The Fringe Dwellers (1986), were misfires, but he was praised for his direction of Crimes of the Heart (1986), the film adaptation of Beth Henley’s play of the same name. Perhaps his biggest success was Driving Miss Daisy (1989), winner of an Academy Award for best picture. The movie starred Morgan Freeman as the African American chauffeur for an elderly Jewish woman, played by Jessica Tandy, and traces their growing appreciation of one another. Mister Johnson (1990), a drama about a Nigerian man who tries to be equal with the British colonial administration, won critical praise but little notice. Other notable films included Black Robe (1991), Rich in Love (1992), Paradise Road (1997), Double Jeopardy (1999), and The Contract (2006).
Beresford later helmed Mao’s Last Dancer (2009), which was based on the real-life story of a Chinese ballet dancer who defected to the United States, and Peace, Love & Misunderstanding (2011). His later credits included the dramedy Mr. Church (2016) and the TV movie Flint (2017), about the contaminated water crisis in Flint, Michigan. Ladies in Black (2018), set in 1950s Sydney, was based on a best-selling novel. In addition to his film work, Beresford also directed several operas.