Arthur Edeson

Male
October 24, 1891

From Wikipedia Arthur Edeson, A.S.C. (October 24, 1891 – February 14, 1970) was a film cinematographer, born in New York City. He was nominated for three Academy Awards in his career in cinema. Edeson began his career as a still photographer, but turned to movies in 1911 as a camera operator at the American Éclair Studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey when it and many other early film studios in America's first motion picture industry were based there at the beginning of the 20th century. When the Éclair Studio was reorganized as the World Film Company, he was promoted to chief cinematographer assigned to the star Clara Kimball Young. Throughout the twenties, Edeson photographed a number of important films, including Douglas Fairbanks' Robin Hood (1922) and The Thief of Bagdad (1924), and the ground breaking special effects film The Lost World (1925). When sound came in, Edeson experimented with camouflaging the microphones in exterior shots. In Old Arizona (1929), the first sound film to be shot outside a studio, provided evidence to Hollywood executives that talking pictures need not be confined to the sound stage. The western was also the first film to be made in the 70mm widescreen process, known as "Fox Grandeur". In the early thirties, perhaps his most memorable creative partnership was formed with director James Whale, for whom he photographed the first three of Whale's quartet of horror films: Frankenstein (1931), The Old Dark House (1932), and The Invisible Man (1933). His principal work was on the side of realism, which is considered by most film historians to represent the "zenith of Hollywood photography." Edeson built on the influence of German Expressionism, brought to the America cinema by German cinematographers during the 1920s. In 1919, Edeson was one of the founders of the American Society of Cinematographers.

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Filmography
Movies
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The Fighting O'Flynn
6.90
movie1949United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Two Guys from Texas
6.80
movie1948United States
Credit: Director of Photography
My Wild Irish Rose
6.80
movie1947United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Stallion Road
6.80
movie1947United States
Credit: Director of Photography
The Time, The Place and The Girl
6.80
movie1946United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Never Say Goodbye
6.80
movie1946United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Nobody Lives Forever
7.00
movie1946United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Two Guys from Milwaukee
6.80
movie1946United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Three Strangers
6.90
movie1946United States
Credit: Director of Photography
The Conspirators
6.80
movie1944United States
Credit: Director of Photography
The Mask of Dimitrios
7.10
movie1944United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Shine on Harvest Moon
6.80
movie1944United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Thank Your Lucky Stars
6.80
movie1943United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Casablanca
8.50
movie1943United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Across the Pacific
6.80
movie1942United States
Credit: Director of Photography
The Male Animal
6.80
movie1942United States
Credit: Director of Photography
The Maltese Falcon
7.90
movie1941United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Sergeant York
7.60
movie1941United States
Credit: Additional Photography
Kisses for Breakfast
6.80
movie1941United States
Credit: Director of Photography
Lady with Red Hair
6.80
movie1940United States
Credit: Director of Photography