Karl Freund

 

Karl Freund

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Karl Freund var en filmarbetare, regissör, manusförfattare och producent. Han föddes i Königinhof, Bohemia, Österrike-Hungary [now Dvur Kralove, Czech Republic] den 16 januari 1890. Karl Freund dog 3 maj 1969, han blev 79 år. Han är känd för bland annat Metropolis (1927), All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), Mysteriet 'Dracula' (1931), Key Largo (1948) och The Great Ziegfeld (1936).

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Karl Freund

Född 1890-01-16 (136 år sedan) i Königinhof, Bohemia, Österrike-Hungary [now Dvur Kralove, Czech Republic]. Död 1969-05-03 (79 år).
Längd 173 cm.

Utmärkelser
Utmärkelse Gala År Prisad för
German Film Award - Special Award for Outstanding Contributions to German Cinema German Film Awards 1965 1965
Academy Award for Best Technical Achievement 27th Academy Awards 1954
Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White (The Good Earth) 10th Academy Awards 1937 Đất Lành
Nominerad för utmärkelser
Utmärkelse Gala År Nominerad för
Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White (The Chocolate Soldier) 14th Academy Awards 1941 The Chocolate Soldier
Academy Award for Best Cinematography (Blossoms in the Dust) 14th Academy Awards 1941 Blossoms in the Dust
Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White (The Good Earth) 10th Academy Awards 1937 Đất Lành
Förhållanden
Namn Från Till Typ av förhållade
Gertrude Elizabeth Freund(Gifta: 1920–1967-01-14) 1920 1967-01-14 Gifta
Susette Freund(Gifta: 1915–1918) 1915 1918 Gifta
Barn

Gerda Maria Freund

Föräldrar

Glasers Julius Freund, Marie Freund

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Karl Freund

Biografi från Wikipedia Extern länk till biografins källa

Karl W. Freund, A.S.C. (January 16, 1890-May 3, 1969) was a cinematographer and film director.

Born in Dv?r Králové (Königinhof), Bohemia, his career began in 1905 when, at age 15, he got a job as an assistant projectionist for a film company in Berlin where his family moved in 1901.

He worked as a cinematographer on over 100 films, including the German Expressionist films The Golem (1920), The Last Laugh (1924) and Metropolis (1927). Freund emigrated to the United States in 1929 where he continued to shoot well remembered films such as Dracula (1931) and Key Largo (1948). He won an Academy Award for Best Cinematography for The Good Earth (1937). In 1937, he went to Germany to bring his only daughter, Gerda Maria Freund, back to the United States, saving her from almost certain death in the concentration camps. Karl's ex-wife, Susette Freund (née Liepmannssohn), remained in Germany where she was interned at the Ravensbrück concentration camp and eventually taken in March, 1942 to Bernburg Euthanasia Center where she was murdered.

Between 1921 and 1935, Freund also directed ten films, of which the best known are probably The Mummy (1932) starring Boris Karloff, and his last film as director, Mad Love (1935) starring Peter Lorre.

Freund's only known film as an actor is Carl Dreyer's Michael (1924) in which he has a cameo as a sycophantic art dealer who saves the tobacco ashes dropped by a famous painter.

At the beginning of the 1950s, he was persuaded by Desi Arnaz at Desilu to be the cinematographer in 1951 for the televisions series I Love Lucy. Critics have credited Freund for the show's lustrous black and white cinematography, but more importantly, Freund designed the "flat lighting" system for shooting sitcoms that is still in use today. This system covers the set in light, thus eliminating shadows and allowing the use of three moving cameras without having to modify the lighting in-between shots. And where Freund did not invent the three camera shooting system, he did perfect it for use with film cameras in front of a live audience.

Freund and his production team also worked on other sitcoms produced at/through Desilu such as "Our Miss Brooks".

Innehåll från Wikipedia tillhandahålls enligt villkoren i Creative Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).

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