Filmmakers killed in Australian helicopter crash
Two celebrated filmmakers working on a documentary with Oscar-winning director James Cameron and National Geographic have died in a helicopter crash in Australia, the media group said yesterday.
Andrew Wight, 52, and Mike deGruy, 60, both longtime colleagues of Cameron, were killed when their helicopter crashed at a rural airstrip south of Sydney, National Geographic said a statement on its website.
According to local media reports the pair were in Australia working on a feature-length documentary about Papua New Guinea.
Wight recently co-produced the feature film “Sanctum 3D” with “Avatar” and “Titanic” director Cameron, after accompanying him on six deep-ocean documentary expeditions.
DeGruy, an Emmy award winning diver and submarine pilot with 30 years of experience in ocean filmmaking, was director of undersea photography for Cameron’s “Last Mysteries of the Titanic”.
Cameron said the pair had died “doing exactly what they loved most, heading out to sea on a new and personally challenging expedition.”
“They were passionate storytellers who lived by the explorer’s code of humour, empathy, optimism and courage,” Cameron said in the National Geographic statement.
“Their deaths are a tremendous loss for the world of underwater exploration, conservation and filmmaking.”
Wight was the helicopter owner and pilot, said National Geographic.
Emergency services arrived at the scene to find the helicopter “well alight”, police said, adding that it ‘crashed shortly after taking off”, according to witnesses at Jasper’s Brush, south of Nowra, on Saturday afternoon.
“Witnesses have told police the helicopter crashed shortly after taking off,” police said.
|
Responsible Right of Expression — In the interest of freedom of expression, coupled with a true sense of responsibility to encourage community dialogue, the Macau Daily Times offers its readers the opportunity to express their opinions on new-related matters through this website. All opinions are welcome. However, we reserve the right to remove comments that are deemed to be obscene, or are merely insults written under the cloak of anonymity. MDT |
- Courts show inclination towards Government
- The Decisive Moment
- SINOPINIONS
- “MGM Butterfly Pavilion” debuts with original music
- Population increases slightly in Q1
- UCCLA meets in Macau to discuss projects
- AL committee finishes deliberation on reform bills
- ANM warns: “WiFi Go” service violates private data
- Monday’s blackout affected part of the mobile network: Regulator considers CTM justification “unacceptable”
- Galaxy presents this year’s Volleyball World Grand Prix Macau
- IAS to finish disability assessment in June
- NZ ‘runaway millionaire trial’: thousands lost at Wynn Macau tables
- IEEM offers scholarships for comparative studies of Europe and Asia
- Students donate to Caritas Macau
- Workshop on Notary Law









Post your comment