- Source: Hans Dreier
- Academy Award untuk Desain Produksi Terbaik
- Hans Kelsen
- Hans Brox
- Jack Stephens (dekorator set)
- Adam Stockhausen
- Brian Ackland-Snow
- Edward Carfagno
- Lisa Thompson (dekorator latar)
- Stuart A. Reiss
- Pilar Revuelta
- Hans Dreier
- Morocco (film)
- Academy Award for Best Production Design
- Academy Awards
- Tony Walton
- Five Graves to Cairo
- Alan Lee (illustrator)
- Sunset Boulevard (film)
- 3rd Academy Awards
- Anton Furst
Hans Dreier (August 21, 1885 – October 24, 1966) was a German motion picture art director. He was Paramount Pictures' supervising art director from 1927 until his retirement in 1950, when he was succeeded by Hal Pereira.
Hans Dreier was born in Bremen, Germany in 1885. After studying architecture in Munich, Germany, Dreier worked as imperial supervising architect of the German Cameroon. During World War I, he served in the German Lancers.
He began his career in German films in 1919 as an assistant designer at UFA Studios. At the urging of German director Ernst Lubitsch, Dreier relocated to Hollywood in 1923 to work for Paramount. His first Hollywood film was Forbidden Paradise, directed by Lubitsch and starring Pola Negri. Dreier worked as Paramount's supervising art director from 1927 until his retirement in 1950.
He made contributions to nearly 500 films during his career, including many films directed by Josef von Sternberg and Ernst Lubitsch, as well as the film It's a Gift (1934) starring W. C. Fields. He was nominated for Academy Awards for his art direction on 23 occasions. He won Academy Awards for Best Art Direction (Color) for Frenchman's Creek (1944) and Samson and Delilah (1950). He also won the award for Art Direction (Black and White) for Sunset Boulevard (1950).
Selected filmography
See also
Art Directors Guild Hall of Fame
List of German-speaking Academy Award winners and nominees
References
External links
Hans Dreier at IMDb
Examples of Dreier's work in the William Ezelle Jones collection, 1925-1935, Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences