Hal and Jim McElroy

(1946-04-06) 6 April 1946

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Australian

Film and television producers

Early and family life[edit]

Hal and Jim McElroy were born in 1946 in Melbourne. As twins, they were always inseparable and had identical interests, school activities and friends. They entered the film industry together in 1966, moving to Sydney to work on productions such as Age of Consent (1969) and Ned Kelly (1970). They were inspired to become producers themselves, and set up a production company.[1]


Hal met his wife Di, a producer of live television shows, while both were working on the Australian Ballet's 1973 film of Don Quixote in Melbourne. She was secretary to the Administrator of the Australian Ballet, Dame Peggy van Praagh, and personal assistant to Sir Robert Helpmann and Rudolf Nureyev. Hal was production manager for the film company. They married in 1975, and had their honeymoon at the Cannes Film Festival, where Picnic at Hanging Rock was being exhibited.[2] They have three children.[1][2]


Hal and Jim had always lived together, and this continued even after Hal married Di. In 1977, a light and sound spectacular called Laserdome, in which the three McElroys had invested heavily, failed within three days and they lost their house and all their other assets.[1][2] In 1994 Hal and Jim parted company, as they felt a need to establish their own separate identities, in both their professional and personal lives.[1]


In November 1996, Hal McElroy was involved in a serious traffic collision which threatened to leave him blind, brain-damaged and paraplegic. He recovered, but now has seven screws and a plastic plate in his head.[1][2]


Hal and Di McElroy became business partners, with a company called McElroy Television, later McElroy Allmedia.[2][3] Their first co-production was Dog's Head Bay (1999), written by David and Kristin Williamson.[2]

(1982; producer; this was also directed by Peter Weir; Linda Hunt won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress)

The Year of Living Dangerously

(1982; writer and producer)

A Dangerous Summer

Traps (1994; producer)

(1996; producer)

Mr. Reliable

(1999; producer).

Dear Claudia

Jim's first credit was as production manager on the television series Spyforce (1971).


His later solo projects have all been in film. They include:

(1973; production manager and first assistant director)

Alvin Purple

(1974; production manager and associate producer)

Between Wars

(1975; assistant director)

The Man from Hong Kong

(1976; assistant director)

Caddie

(1978; producer)

Blue Fin

(1984; producer)

Razorback

(1988; originally a six-hour TV miniseries, producer)

A Dangerous Life

(1994, executive producer)

The Sum of Us

Hal McElroy's solo projects include:

at IMDb

Hal McElroy

at IMDb

Jim McElroy