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William Howard Greene (1895–1956) was an American cinematographer. Career [ edit ] Greene was a cinematographer on many early Technicolor films, including Legong: Dance of the Virgins (1935) and A Star Is Born (1937).
W. Howard Greene, a pioneer in color cinematography, was nominated for an Oscar seven times, including five straight years from 1940 to 1944. All of his nominations were for his work in color, in the days when color and black and white cinematography were different categories at the Academy Awards. Color cinematography was not recognized as a ...
- August 16, 1895
- February 28, 1956
- Becky Sharp (1935), Directed by Rouben Mamoulian
- The Trail of The Lonesome Pine (1936), Directed by Henry Hathaway
- Phantom of The Opera (1943), Directed by Arthur Lubin
- When Worlds Collide (1951), Directed by Rudolph Maté
This long-neglected film was restored by the UCLA Film Archives and will be released on Blu-ray and DVD by Kino Lorber on April 16, 2019. This is fantastic news for film buffs who only know the film from badly constructed public domain sources reprinted from the 1945 re-release version which was reprinted in the inferior Cinecolor process instead o...
Even more glorious than Becky Sharp, on which Greene was the camera operator, this first three-strip Technicolor film, for which Greene was credited for his Technicolor photography, is as significant an accomplishment as Greene’s cinematography for the better known Marlene Dietrich-Charles Boyer starrer, The Garden of Allahlater the same year, for ...
Two honorary Academy Awards, six nominations in five years, and finally a competitive Oscar of his own, Greene had to share the honor with Hal Mohr. Sharing, though, was something Green was used to. Six out of seven of his nominations were shared with other cinematographers. The only film for which he was the sole nominee for Best Cinematography-Co...
Greene shared this nomination with John F. Seitz, who like Greene, had seven nominations to his credit, albeit unlike Greene, never won despite nominations for such classics as The Divine Lady, Double Indemnity, The Lost Weekend and Sunset Boulevard. This was a rare foray into science fiction for both legendary cinematographers, as it was for direc...
William Howard Greene (1895–1956) was an American cinematographer. W. Howard Greene in 1941 Greene was a cinematographer on many early Technicolor films, including Legong: Dance of the Virgins (1935) and A Star Is Born (1937).
William W. Howard Howard Duke Greene (16 Aug 1895 - certain 28 Feb 1956) 0 references . Sitelinks. Wikipedia (9 entries) edit. arwiki دبليو. هوارد غريني
Liz Greene (born 4 September 1946) is an American-British astrologer and author. Her father was born in London, and her mother in the United States. Career. Greene is one of the chief writers for astro.com, the website for her company Astrodienst.
W. Howard Greene is known as an Director of Photography, Assistant Director of Photography, Camera Operator, Additional Camera, and Cinematography. Some of his work includes A Star Is Born, Phantom of the Opera, When Worlds Collide, Mystery of the Wax Museum, Jungle Book, Jesse James, Nothing Sacred, and Doctor X.