Kathleen Molyneux Neilson-Baxter (née Mander; 1915 – 2013), known professionally as Kay Mander, was a British documentary film film director and continuity supervisor.
Due to Thomas's work the Mander family moved to Paris in 1922. Mander remained in France for seven years, and attended French language school. In 1929, the Mander family returned to England were she attended Queenwood Ladies' College. In 1931, the Mander family moved to Berlin, living there until 1935.
After failing to secure a scholarship to Oxford University in 1935, Mander initially considered a career in teaching, journalism or acting.
In 1940, she was offered a job at Shell Film Unit making instructional films by producer Arthur Elton. Her debut film as a director was How to File (1941), intended as a training tool for the aircraft construction industry. Mander was praised for her innovative use of following the movement of the file. Mander directed four more instructional films for Shell Film Unit, two for the recently restructured Fire Service and another for the Ministry of Home Security. These films were highly complex and technical and made for specialised audiences but were characterised by clarity, simplicity and skilful technical exposition.
Mander went on to direct up to fifty instructional and promotional films in the UK and overseas. One of her best known films is Homes for the People (1945) which used the technique of allowing working class women to describe their living conditions, one of them vividly slating the design of her suburban house and summing up: "I call it a muck-up".
In the 1950s, Mander and her husband, fellow filmmaker Rowan Kennedy Neilson-Baxter, returned from Indonesia where they had helped set up a film unit. After directing a feature film for the Children's Film Foundation, The Kid from Canada (1957), Mander returned to continuity work, later saying that "I palpably had the skills" but could not face "battling" to continue directing.
She spent most of the rest of her career working in continuity on feature films, including From Russia with Love, The Heroes of Telemark and Fahrenheit 451.
Following her husband's death in 1978, Mander moved to Dumfries. Mander remained in Scotland for the rest of her life, spending the latter half of her life in Castle Douglas.
On 29 December 2013, Mander died aged 98 in Castle Douglas. Mander is commemorated with a Blue plaque on 194 Marlborough Avenue.
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