Peter Andrikidis


Peter Andrikidis is an Australian film and television director and producer.

Early life and education

Andrikidis went to the Sydney high school Drummoyne Boys High School in the mid-1970s, where he made a small film called "Nemesis".
He graduated from the Australian Film Television and Radio School in Film Direction in 1981.

Career

Immediately after graduation from AFTRS, Andrikidis was recruited to Crawford Productions, where he worked on The Flying Doctors.
He moved to the ABC, where he worked as director and producer on the medical drama series G.P., which earned him his first Australian Film Institute Award. This was followed by the police drama series Wildside. This was followed by two series of the comedy/drama series Grass Roots.
Andrikidis has also directed a number of TV mini-series and telemovies. These included the real life dramatisations My Husband, My Killer, Heroes' Mountain and the adaptation of a novel by Bryce Courtney called Jessica, starring Natasha Wanganeen and released in 2004.
In 2004 and 2005, Andrikidis directed five telemovies in the BlackJack series and in 2006 he directed The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant, which was a co-production between Network Ten and Granada-ITV. In 2007, Andrikidis directed the SBS drama series East West 101 and several episodes of the first series of Underbelly. In 2008, he directed the UK.TV mini-series False Witness and the feature film .
He has also been set-up director of a number of Australian productions, including Embassy, Water Rats, Halifax f.p., The Straits, , Fat Tony and Co, Janet King, Catching Milat. American productions which have been produced in Australia such as BeastMaster and Farscape and HBO's Serangoon Road.
In 2015, he directed the Australian-produced feature film, Alex & Eve.
In 2019, he directed an episode of the French-American series, ’’Reef Break’’.
Peter is currently directing Hide & Seek for MatchBox, Universal NBC and the Nine Network.

Awards

, Andrikidis had won 26 awards and been nominated for 17.
In 2003 he was awarded a Centenary Medal for "Outstanding services to Australian Society and Film Production".