goup

Jack Cardiff

Jack Cardiff

follow
The son of vaudevillians, Jack Cardiff began his long and distinguished career as a child actor in silent films. When he hit his teens, he moved to behind-the-scenes work and earned his first screen credit as a glorified 'go-fer,' billed as fourth assistant director on "The Informer" in 1929. He quickly rose through the ranks from clapper boy to focus puller to second-unit cameraman. He was a camera operator on what is reputedly the first British Technicolor feature, "Wings of the Morning" (1937). As he emerged as a major director of photography in the 1940s, Cardiff garnered a reputation for his bold use of color. He shot the Powell-Pressburger masterpieces "Stairway to Heaven/A Matter of Life and Death" (1946), "Black Narcissus" (1947) - for which he won a Best Cinematography Oscar - and "The Red Shoes" (1948). Cardiff went on to become one of the finest practitioners of cinematography, skillfully utilizing color to enhance such features as John Huston's "The African Queen" (1951), Joseph L. Mankiewicz's "The Barefoot Contessa" (1954) and King Vidor's "War and Peace" (1956), for which he earned an Oscar nomination.

Create Post

icon_photo Photo/Video
Post
wait
Jack Cardiff
How much you willing to pay If power lunch with Jack Cardiff
Sure loading
Bid for lunch
des asce
loading
or
Forgot your provider or password? Click Here Don't have an account? Sign up
Welcome!
Choose a sign in option.
or
Already have an account? Log in
close
Post
close
Forgot!
Update password now.
Already have an account? Log in
close