1941 - BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
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- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Director
Born in Illinois in 1904, the only child of Jennie and Frank Toland, Gregg and his mother moved to California several years after his parents divorced in 1910. Through Jennie's work as a housekeeper for several people in the movie business, Gregg may had gotten a $12-a-week job at age 15 as an office boy at William Fox Studios. Soon he was making $18 a week as an assistant cameraman. When sound came to movies in 1927, the audible whir of movie cameras became a problem, requiring the cumbersome use of soundproof booths. Toland helped devise a tool which silenced the camera's noise and which allowed the camera to move about more freely. In 1931, Toland received his first solo credit for the Eddie Cantor comedy, "Palmy Days." In 1939 he earned his first Oscar for his work on William Wyler's "Wuthering Heights." In the following year he sought out Orson Welles who then hired him to photograph "Citizen Kane." (Toland was said to have protected the inexperienced Welles from potential embarrassment by conferring with him in private about technical matters rather than bringing these up in front of the assembled cast and crew.) For "Kane" Toland used a method which became known as "deep focus" because it showed background objects as clearly as foreground objects. (Film theorist Andre Bazin said that Toland brought democracy to film-making by allowing viewers to discover what was interesting to them in a scene rather than having this choice dictated by the director.) Toland quickly became the highest paid cinematographer in the business, earning as much as $200,000 over a three year period. He also became perhaps the first cinematographer to receive prominent billing in the opening credits, rather than being relegated to a card containing seven or more other names. Tragically, Toland's career was cut short in 1948 by his untimely death at age 44. Toland had a daughter, Lothian, by his second wife and two sons, Gregg jr. and Timothy, by his third. Lothian became the wife of comic Red Skelton.[LINK=tt0033467]- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Arthur was known as one of Hollywood's most accomplished lighting cameramen, a master at black and white cinematography. Miller began his career at 13, serving as an assistant to cinematographer Fred J. Balshofer. (They co-authored a book entitled "Two Reels and a Crank" in 1967.) Miller photographed the serial "The Perils of Pauline" in 1914, later joining director George Fitzmaurice. He later signed on with Cecil B. DeMille and in 1932 received a long term contract with Fox Studios. Retiring in 1951, Miller served as president of the American Society of Cinematographers and in the 1960s he set up an extensive exhibit of vintage camera equipment for the ASC. Miller passed away shortly after completing the documentary entitled "The Moving Picture Camera."- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Arthur Edeson is an American cinematographer who was a pioneer of his craft. His career spanned four decades and encompassed many films now regarded as classics.
Born in New York in 1891, Edeson first worked as a still photographer. In 1911 he entered the movie business at Eclair Studios, a production unit based in Fort Lee, NJ. There he was employed as an extra and still photographer. He became a cinematographer in 1914 and worked on films starring Clara Kimball Young, a very popular actress of that era whose films are, for the most part, lost. In 1917 Young left New Jersey for California, and so did Edeson.
In 1919 he was one of the 15 cameramen who founded the American Society of Cinematographers. During the 1920s he was hired by actor-producer Douglas Fairbanks for The Three Musketeers (1921) ('Fred Niblo'). Robin Hood (1922) (Allan Dwan) and The Thief of Bagdad (1924) (Raoul Walsh). That last film launched a long relationship between Edeson and Walsh. In 1925 Edeson worked on The Lost World (1925)) (Harry O. Hoyt), the first full-length feature film using the stop-motion animation technique. In 1929 he was cinematographer on In Old Arizona (1928) (Irving Cummings), the first talking picture shot entirely outdoors. Edeson was also one of the first to experiment with the widescreen format on Walsh's The Big Trail (1930). During that period he also worked with Lewis Milestone on the anti-war epic All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). Soon afterward he collaborated with James Whale on two technically groundbreaking films: Frankenstein (1931) and The Invisible Man (1933).
In 1936 Edeson was hired at Warner Bros. There he worked notably on the first film directed by John Huston, the classic noir The Maltese Falcon (1941), and re-teamed with Huston on the lesser known Across the Pacific (1942). He was also lenser on the perennial favorite Casablanca (1942) (Michael Curtiz) and later worked with Jean Negulesco, notably on The Mask of Dimitrios (1944) and Three Strangers (1946).
Edeson retired in 1949, putting an end to a distinguished career. He died in California in 1970.- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Multi-Academy Award-nominated cinematographer (13 in all), Harry Stradling was unique in that he established his reputation both in America and in Europe. He was the nephew of Mary Pickford's cameraman Walter Stradling, who provided the connections for his first job in Hollywood. Walter died in 1918 and Harry went on to serve his apprenticeship, working on B-movies and short subjects for lesser companies, like Pathe and Arrow. In 1930, he journeyed to France where he established a fruitful collaboration with the director Jacques Feyder, working on films which have become classics of French cinema: Le grand jeu (1934), La dame aux camélias (1934) and, his first noteworthy success, bringing to life the Flemish paintings of Carnival in Flanders (1935).
The visual quality of this film so impressed producer Alexander Korda, that he hired both Feyder and Stradling for his London Films production, Knight Without Armor (1937), starring Marlene Dietrich - hired by Korda for the then princely sum of $350,000. Despite budgetary constraints, which meant that many sets had be improvised and stylised, Stradling's low key lighting gave the film an impressionistic feel and made it look more 'expensive' than it was. It ended up furthering Dietrich's career and led to other prestige assignments in England, including South Riding (1938), The Citadel (1938) and Alfred Hitchcock's Jamaica Inn (1939). With an impressive portfolio thus in hand, Stradling returned to Hollywood and soon worked with 'Hitch' again on Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941) and Suspicion (1941). Who can forget that indelible scene of Cary Grant ascending a staircase with that suspicious glass of warmed milk for poor Joan Fontaine (the contents of the glass rendered even more dubious by being lit from the inside with a light bulb)? The ever- innovative Stradling also impressed critics and audiences alike with his application of double exposure, creating realistic-looking twins of Douglas Fairbanks Jr. for The Corsican Brothers (1941).
Between 1942 and 1949, Harry worked at MGM, where his close-ups of the changing face of Hurd Hatfield, in The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945), further established him as one of the most versatile cinematographers in the business. For Republic, he imbued Nicholas Ray's off-beat Trucolor western Johnny Guitar (1954) with an immense visual style which adds to the almost lyrical quality of the picture. Glamour and technicolour were also key ingredients in Stradling's musicals for MGM, foremost among them The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) and Guys and Dolls (1955). In 1955, Harry went across to Warner Brothers . During his nine year-long tenure there, he earned four Academy Award nominations, culminating in a second Oscar for his much lauded 70 mm filming of My Fair Lady (1964). Towards the end of his career, he contributed to boosting Barbra Streisand's, particularly through his meticulous soft-focus photography of Hello, Dolly! (1969) and Funny Girl (1968). Harry died on the job, during filming of another Streisand vehicle, The Owl and the Pussycat (1970), and was replaced by Andrew Laszlo.- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Arthur was known as one of Hollywood's most accomplished lighting cameramen, a master at black and white cinematography. Miller began his career at 13, serving as an assistant to cinematographer Fred J. Balshofer. (They co-authored a book entitled "Two Reels and a Crank" in 1967.) Miller photographed the serial "The Perils of Pauline" in 1914, later joining director George Fitzmaurice. He later signed on with Cecil B. DeMille and in 1932 received a long term contract with Fox Studios. Retiring in 1951, Miller served as president of the American Society of Cinematographers and in the 1960s he set up an extensive exhibit of vintage camera equipment for the ASC. Miller passed away shortly after completing the documentary entitled "The Moving Picture Camera."- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
Sol Polito, the Oscar-nominated cinematographer who helped create the distinct visual character of Warner Bros. films in the 1930s and 1940s, was born Salvador Polito on November 12, 1892, in Palermo, Sicily. While still young he emigrated to the US with his family, which settled in New York City, where he attended public school. He started out as a still photographer, then became a laboratory assistant before becoming an assistant to a movie camera crew. Polito received his formal training in the craft of cinematography during a three-year apprenticeship on a camera crew before graduating to head cameraman, shooting Rip Van Winkle (1914) in 1914.
He worked for a variety of movie companies through the early silent era, including Metro, Triangle, Universal and World. By the time he shot 13 program Westerns starring Harry Carey from 1925 to 1928, he already showed his mastery of black and white, creating crisp images. Polito joined First National Studios in 1927, which was merged with Warner Bros. the following year.
Polito thrived in the studio system that emerged with the vertical integration of the studios in the 1920s. He established himself as a first-rate craftsman who strove to create the finest images by following industry guidelines even as he perfected their application. Warner Bros., under studio boss Jack L. Warner, demanded efficiency from its technicians and would not allow extra shooting to achieve an effect unless the additional expense could be justified by its propensity to make the finished film a success at the box office. Polito became co-chief cinematographer, along with fellow Italian immigrant Tony Gaudio, at Warners.
He worked in a wide variety of genres, and he and Gaudio created what became known as "the Warners look"--a hard, unglamorous image, unsoftened by flattering lighting effects. Influenced by German Expressionism, the Warners "look" crafted by Polito and Gaudio was rooted in chiaroscuro contrasts between light and darkness that also were a metaphor for the world the characters lived in. Polito's cinematography for Mervyn LeRoy's I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932) is extremely expressive and adds to the somber tone created by the director. The Warners look in cinematography anticipated the "film noir" style that emerged in the late 1940s, when filmmakers and audiences, in response to the documentaries of World War II and Italian neo-realist cinema, sought to inject realism into American cinema (Polito was not really involved in postwar film noir, though he shot Anatole Litvak's classic noir Sorry, Wrong Number (1948), giving it a hazy look with an undefined framing that serves as a metaphor for the moral ambivalence and sense of anomie that is at the heart of the film).
When Warners moved to a lusher aesthetic in the 1930s, Polito readily adapted. As one of the studio's chief cinematographers, he often shot Warners' most important pictures. He frequently worked with director Michael Curtiz on the A-list pictures starring Errol Flynn, working in both black-and-white and the difficult Technicolor three-strip dye transfer process. His color cinematography on the blockbuster The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) is still hailed as one of the greatest examples of Technicolor shooting. For the studio's #1 star, Bette Davis, he created a more glamorous look. Eschewing the hard contrast between white and black that was part of Warners' famous "look", he created classic romantic fantasies, such as Now, Voyager (1942), which featured soft focus close-ups of Davis. As a cinematographer he was flexible and willing to modify his effects to fit the exigencies of the movie's theme. For his work at Warners, he was nominated three times for the Academy Award, twice for best color cinematography.
After shooting the Errol Flynn vehicle Escape Me Never (1947) and The Voice of the Turtle (1947) , Polito moved on to Paramount to shoot "Sorry, Wrong Number" (1948) for former Warner Bros. producer Hal B. Wallis. He shot only one more film before he retired: Anna Lucasta (1949) at Columbia Pictures.
Sol Polito died on Mary 23, 1960, in Hollywood, California. He was 67 years old.