- Source: Alfred Gilks
Alfred Gilks (29 December 1891 – 6 September 1970) was an American cinematographer from 1920 through to 1956. Gilks has worked on over sixty films and is known for utilizing his U.S. Navy background to capture and operate one of the first 'nautical cameras' for the film Old Ironsides (film).
Gilks won one Academy Award for his cinematography in the film An American in Paris (1951) before retiring from the cinematography work in 1960.
Career
Gilks began his career in cinematography in 1918 while serving as a member of the Field Photographic Unit of the Office of Strategic Services. He then went to work for Paramount Studios while remaining involved with other production companies such as MGM, RKO Radio Pictures, and C.V. Whitney Pictures. Alfred Gilks joined the American Society of Cinematographers in 1922 and eventually won his first and only Oscar with his film An American in Paris.
Gilks worked on many silent films in the 1920s, such as Red Hair (1928) with Clara Bow and the historical epic Old Ironsides (1926) starring Esther Ralston. In the latter film, he used some of the first motorized camera equipment on a production.
He also worked on well-known sound films such as Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen (1934), Ruggles of Red Gap (1935), several of the Dr. Kildare movies, and his Oscar-winning work on An American in Paris (1951). Gilks shared the Best Cinematography Academy Award for An American in Paris with John Alton. His last credit was for second unit photography on John Ford's seminal The Searchers (1956).
Selected filmography
Awards and Nominations
= Academy Awards
=References
External links
Alfred Gilks at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ten Modern Commandments
- Sweetie (film 1929)
- And Sudden Death
- Red Hair (film)
- Midshipman Jack
- Old Ironsides (film)
- Little Miss Marker
- The First Kiss (film Amerika Serikat 1928)
- The Air Mail
- Ruggles of Red Gap
- Alfred Gilks
- Gilks
- John Alton
- An American in Paris (film)
- Little Miss Marker (1934 film)
- List of three-strip Technicolor films
- Sam Wood
- When Worlds Collide (1951 film)
- William Cameron Menzies
- Academy Award for Best Cinematography