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Haskell Wexler

Haskell Wexler, ASC (February 6, 1922 – December 27, 2015) was an American cinematographer, film producer, and director. Wexler was judged to be one of film history's ten most influential cinematographers in a survey of the members of the International Cinematographers Guild.[2] He won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography twice, in 1966 and 1976, out of five nominations. In his obituary in The New York Times, Wexler is described as being "renowned as one of the most inventive cinematographers in Hollywood."[3]

Haskell Wexler
Wexler in 1999
Born(1922-02-06)February 6, 1922
DiedDecember 27, 2015(2015-12-27) (aged 93)
Occupation(s)Cinematographer, film producer and director
Years active1947–2015
Known forCinéma vérité
Notable workAmerica America (1963); Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966); In the Heat of the Night (1967); The Thomas Crown Affair (1968); Medium Cool (1969); Bound for Glory (1976); Days of Heaven (1978)
Spouse(s)
Nancy Ashenhurst
(m. 1943; div. 1953)

Marian Witt
(m. 1954; div. 1985)

(m. 1989)
[1]
Children
RelativesJerrold Wexler (brother)
Tanya Wexler (niece)

Early life and education

Wexler was born to a Jewish family in Chicago in 1922.[4] His parents were Simon and Lottie Wexler, whose children included Jerrold, Joyce (Isaacs) and Yale. He attended the progressive Francis Parker School, where he was best friends with Barney Rosset.

After a year of college at the University of California, Berkeley, he volunteered as a seaman in the Merchant Marine in 1941, as the U.S. was preparing to enter World War II. He became friends with fellow sailor Woody Guthrie, who later gained fame as a folk singer.[5] While in the Merchant Marine, Wexler advocated for the desegregation of seamen.[6] In November 1942, his ship was torpedoed by a German submarine and sank off the coast of South Africa. He spent 10 days on a lifeboat before being rescued.[6] After the war, Wexler received the Silver Star and was promoted to the rank of second officer.[6][7]

He returned to Chicago after his discharge in 1946 and began working in the stockroom at his father's company, Allied Radio. He decided he wanted to become a filmmaker, although he had no experience, and his father helped him set up a small studio in Des Plaines, Illinois. He began by shooting industrial films at Midwest factories. When his studio lost too much money, it was eventually shut down, but the business served as an unofficial film school for Wexler.[6]

He later took freelance jobs as a cameraman, joining the International Photographers Guild in 1947. He worked his way up to more technical positions after beginning as an assistant cameraman on various projects.[6] He made a number of documentaries, including The Living City, which was nominated for an Academy Award.

Film career

Wexler briefly made industrial films in Chicago, then in 1947 became an assistant cameraman. Wexler worked on documentary features and shorts; low-budget docu-dramas such as 1959's The Savage Eye, television's The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet and TV commercials (he would later found Wexler-Hall, a television commercial production company, with Conrad Hall). He made ten documentary films with director Saul Landau, including Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang, which aired on PBS and won an Emmy Award and a George Polk Award. Other notable documentaries shot and co-directed (with Landau) by Wexler included Brazil: A Report on Torture and The CIA Case Officer and The Sixth Sun: A Mayan Uprising in Chiapas.

In 1963 Wexler self-funded, produced and photographed the documentary The Bus in which a group of Freedom Riders are followed as they make their way from San Francisco to Washington D.C.[8] That same year he served as the cinematographer on his first big-budget film, Elia Kazan's America America. Kazan was nominated for a Best Director Academy Award. Wexler worked steadily in Hollywood thereafter. George Lucas, then 20, met Wexler who shared his hobby of auto racing. Wexler pulled a few strings to help Lucas get admitted to the USC Film School.[9] Wexler would later work with Lucas as a consultant for American Graffiti (1973).

Wexler was cinematographer of Mike Nichols' screen version of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), for which he won the last Academy Award for Best Cinematography (Black & White) handed out.[10] The following year had Wexler as the cinematographer for the Oscar-winning detective drama, In the Heat of the Night (1967), starring Sidney Poitier. His work was notable for being the first major film in Hollywood history to be shot in color with proper consideration for a person of African descent. Wexler recognized that standard lighting tended to produce too much glare on that kind of dark complexion making the actors look bad. Accordingly, Wexler toned it down to feature Poitier with better photographic results.[11]

Wexler was fired as cinematographer during filming of Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation and replaced by Bill Butler. He was also fired from Miloš Forman's 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and again replaced by Bill Butler. Wexler believed his dismissal on Cuckoo's Nest was due to his radical left political views as highlighted by his concurrent work on the documentary Underground, in which the left-wing urban guerrilla group The Weather Underground were being interviewed while hiding from the law. However, Forman said he had terminated Wexler over mere artistic differences. Both Wexler and Butler received Academy Award nominations for Best Cinematography for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, though Wexler said there was "only about a minute or two minutes in that film I didn't shoot.”[5]

However, he won a second Oscar for Bound for Glory (1976), a biography of Woody Guthrie, whom Wexler had met during his time in the Merchant Marine. Bound for Glory was the first feature film to make use of the newly invented Steadicam, in a famous sequence that also incorporated a crane shot. Wexler was also credited as additional cinematographer on Days of Heaven (1978), which won a Best Cinematography Oscar for Néstor Almendros. Wexler was featured on the soundtrack of the film Underground (1976), recorded on Folkways Records in 1976.[12]

He worked on documentaries throughout his career. The documentary Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang (1980) earned an Emmy Award; Interviews with My Lai Veterans (1970) won an Academy Award. His later documentaries included; Bus Riders' Union (2000), about the modernization and expansion of bus services in Los Angeles by the organization and its founder Eric Mann, Who Needs Sleep? (2006),[13] the Independent Lens documentary Good Kurds, Bad Kurds: No Friends But the Mountains (2000),[14] Tell Them Who You Are (2004)[13] Bringing King to China (2011),[15] and From Wounded Knee to Standing Rock: A Reporter's Journey (2019).[16]

Wexler also directed fictional movies. Medium Cool (1969), a film written by Wexler and shot in a cinéma vérité style, is studied by film students all over the world for its breakthrough form. It influenced more than a generation of filmmakers. In DVD commentary for Criterion Collection, Wexler recalled that the studio execs were flabbergasted the film, "an edgy, Godardian tale that ricocheted from one hot-button topic to the next (poverty, racism, civil rebellion, the war in Vietnam, the Kennedy and King assassinations)."[17] The making of Medium Cool was the subject of a BBC documentary by Paul Cronin, Look Out Haskell, It's Real: The Making of Medium Cool (2001).[18] "Medium Cool" was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2003.[19]

Produced by Lucasfilm, Wexler's film Latino (1985) was chosen for the 1985 Cannes Film Festival. He both wrote and directed the work. Another directing project was From Wharf Rats to Lords of the Docks (2007), an intimate exploration of the life and times of Harry Bridges, an extraordinary labor leader and social visionary described as "a hero or the devil incarnate--it all depends on your point of view."[20]

In 1988, Wexler won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Cinematography for the John Sayles film Matewan (1987), for which he was also nominated for an Academy Award. His work with Billy Crystal in the HBO film 61* (2001) was nominated for an Emmy.

In 2021, filmmakers Joan Churchill and Alan Barker released a 26-minute documentary, Shoot From the Heart, about Wexler's life and career.[21] Churchill described her intention in making the film this way: “We were making a film about a man who was a passionate activist, who never gave up hope for the world.”[22]

A "lifelong liberal activist," during the final years of his life, Wexler trained his focus on raising awareness of sleep deprivation and long hours in the film industry, culminating in the documentary Who Needs Sleep? (2006), which "examined the routine overworking of Hollywood film crews."[3][19] In a first-person article in HuffPost, Wexler wrote, "There's nothing I love more than making films. But the health of my fellow film workers and citizens is more important than anything on the silver screen."[23]

Personal life

Wexler married the American actress Rita Taggart in 1989. He had two sons, four grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter.

Death

Wexler died in his sleep at the age of 93 on December 27, 2015, at his home in Santa Monica, California.[24][25]

Legacy and honors (career awards)

Selected filmography

Frequent collaborators

References

  1. ^ "Haskell Wexler Biography (1922?-)". Filmreference.com. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  2. ^ . PRNewswire. October 16, 2003. Archived from the original on January 21, 2014. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Anderson, John (2015-12-27). "Haskell Wexler, Oscar-Winning Cinematographer, Dies at 93". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  4. ^ . Haskell Wexler's personal blog. Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  5. ^ a b Anderson, John (December 27, 2015). "Haskell Wexler, Oscar-Winning Cinematographer, Dies at 93". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
  6. ^ a b c d e Current Biography Yearbook 2007, H. W. Wilson Co. (2007) pp. 594-596
  7. ^ "About". Haskell Wexler's personal blog. Retrieved 17 Jan 2014.
  8. ^ "NFPF Grant Recipient: Haskell Wexler's The Bus (1965)". Archive UCLA Film & Television. 26 July 2019. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  9. ^ "From ‘American Graffiti’ To Outer Space", New York Times, Sept. 12, 1976
  10. ^ Beginning the next year, the Academy eliminated a separate category for awards for Black and White and Color in Art Direction, Cinematography, and Costume Design. Source: Clooney, Nick (November 2002). The Movies That Changed Us: Reflections on the Screen. New York: Atria Books, a trademark of Simon & Schuster. p. 79. ISBN 0-7434-1043-2.
  11. ^ Harris, Mark (2008). Pictures at a Revolution: Five Films and the Birth of a New Hollywood. Penguin Press. p. 221. ISBN 9781594201523.
  12. ^ "Underground: Emile de Antonio, Mary Lampson, and Haskell Wexler with the Weather Underground". Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  13. ^ a b "Haskell Wexler, Oscar-Winning Cinematographer, Dies at 93". The New York Times. 2015-12-27. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  14. ^ "Good Kurds, Bad Kurds". The University of Arizona CMES Video and Book Library. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  15. ^ "BRINGING KING TO CHINA". DOC NYC. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  16. ^ "New film: From Wounded Knee to Standing Rock". The Santa Barbara Independent. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  17. ^ Jones, J.R. (2013-07-10). "The lost Chicago of Medium Cool". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  18. ^ French, Philip (2015-09-13). "Medium Cool review – a landmark fusion of fiction and documentary". The Guardian. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  19. ^ a b McLellan, Dennis; Dolan (2015-12-28). "Haskell Wexler dies at 93; two-time Oscar-winning cinematographer and lifelong activist". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  20. ^ . The Harry Bridges Project. Archived from the original on 2009-12-12.
  21. ^ Jenkins, Tara (2022-02-03). "A Candid Look at Haskell Wexler". American Cinematographer. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  22. ^ Jenkins, Tara (2022-02-03). "Behind the Legend: A Candid Look at Haskell Wexler, ASC in Shoot From the Heart – The American Society of Cinematographers". American Cinematographer. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  23. ^ Wexler, Haskell (2012-03-29). "Sleepless in Hollywood: A Threat to Health and Safety". HuffPost. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  24. ^ Richard Natale (December 27, 2015). "Haskell Wexler, Oscar-Winning Cinematographer and Documentary Filmmaker, Dies at 93". Variety.com. Retrieved December 27, 2015.
  25. ^ Matt Brenan (December 27, 2015). . Indie Wire.com. Archived from the original on December 29, 2015. Retrieved December 27, 2015.
  26. ^ a b "Haskell Wexler". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  27. ^ "Tell Them Who You Are". the Guardian. 2006-06-02. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  28. ^ "PAST SOC LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS". SOC Awards. 2014-12-06. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  29. ^ "Where Are They Now? IDA Documentary Award Winners". International Documentary Association. 2022-02-02. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  30. ^ "HUMANITARIAN AWARD: CINEMATOGRAPHER HASKELL WEXLER". Location Managers Guild of America. 15 April 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  31. ^ "Cinema with the Right Stuff Marks 2013 National Film Registry". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  32. ^ "Haskell Wexler dies at 93; two-time Oscar-winning cinematographer and lifelong activist". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  33. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing | Film Registry | National Film Preservation Board | Programs | Library of Congress". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  34. ^ "Haskell Wexler obituary". TheGuardian.com. 27 December 2015.
  35. ^ "12on12off". 12on12off.

External links

  • Official website
  • Haskell Wexler at IMDb
  • A documentary about Wexler's 1969 film Medium Cool
  • John Patterson, "Through a lens darkly", The Guardian, interview, 2 June 2006
  • Underground Album Details at Smithsonian Folkways
  • of Wexler about the film Medium Cool
  • Haskell Wexler Dead at 93: Legendary Cinematographer, Activist Captured the Struggles of Our Times, Democracy Now!, 28 December 2015
  • Radio interview with Haskell Wexler on Fresh Air (17 mins, 1993)

haskell, wexler, february, 1922, december, 2015, american, cinematographer, film, producer, director, wexler, judged, film, history, most, influential, cinematographers, survey, members, international, cinematographers, guild, academy, award, best, cinematogra. Haskell Wexler ASC February 6 1922 December 27 2015 was an American cinematographer film producer and director Wexler was judged to be one of film history s ten most influential cinematographers in a survey of the members of the International Cinematographers Guild 2 He won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography twice in 1966 and 1976 out of five nominations In his obituary in The New York Times Wexler is described as being renowned as one of the most inventive cinematographers in Hollywood 3 Haskell WexlerWexler in 1999Born 1922 02 06 February 6 1922Chicago Illinois U S DiedDecember 27 2015 2015 12 27 aged 93 Santa Monica California U S Occupation s Cinematographer film producer and directorYears active1947 2015Known forCinema veriteNotable workAmerica America 1963 Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf 1966 In the Heat of the Night 1967 The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 Medium Cool 1969 Bound for Glory 1976 Days of Heaven 1978 Spouse s Nancy Ashenhurst m 1943 div 1953 wbr Marian Witt m 1954 div 1985 wbr Rita Taggart m 1989 wbr 1 ChildrenKatharineJeffreyMarkRelativesJerrold Wexler brother Tanya Wexler niece Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Film career 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Legacy and honors career awards 6 Selected filmography 7 Frequent collaborators 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education EditWexler was born to a Jewish family in Chicago in 1922 4 His parents were Simon and Lottie Wexler whose children included Jerrold Joyce Isaacs and Yale He attended the progressive Francis Parker School where he was best friends with Barney Rosset After a year of college at the University of California Berkeley he volunteered as a seaman in the Merchant Marine in 1941 as the U S was preparing to enter World War II He became friends with fellow sailor Woody Guthrie who later gained fame as a folk singer 5 While in the Merchant Marine Wexler advocated for the desegregation of seamen 6 In November 1942 his ship was torpedoed by a German submarine and sank off the coast of South Africa He spent 10 days on a lifeboat before being rescued 6 After the war Wexler received the Silver Star and was promoted to the rank of second officer 6 7 He returned to Chicago after his discharge in 1946 and began working in the stockroom at his father s company Allied Radio He decided he wanted to become a filmmaker although he had no experience and his father helped him set up a small studio in Des Plaines Illinois He began by shooting industrial films at Midwest factories When his studio lost too much money it was eventually shut down but the business served as an unofficial film school for Wexler 6 He later took freelance jobs as a cameraman joining the International Photographers Guild in 1947 He worked his way up to more technical positions after beginning as an assistant cameraman on various projects 6 He made a number of documentaries including The Living City which was nominated for an Academy Award Film career EditWexler briefly made industrial films in Chicago then in 1947 became an assistant cameraman Wexler worked on documentary features and shorts low budget docu dramas such as 1959 s The Savage Eye television s The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet and TV commercials he would later found Wexler Hall a television commercial production company with Conrad Hall He made ten documentary films with director Saul Landau including Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang which aired on PBS and won an Emmy Award and a George Polk Award Other notable documentaries shot and co directed with Landau by Wexler included Brazil A Report on Torture and The CIA Case Officer and The Sixth Sun A Mayan Uprising in Chiapas In 1963 Wexler self funded produced and photographed the documentary The Bus in which a group of Freedom Riders are followed as they make their way from San Francisco to Washington D C 8 That same year he served as the cinematographer on his first big budget film Elia Kazan s America America Kazan was nominated for a Best Director Academy Award Wexler worked steadily in Hollywood thereafter George Lucas then 20 met Wexler who shared his hobby of auto racing Wexler pulled a few strings to help Lucas get admitted to the USC Film School 9 Wexler would later work with Lucas as a consultant for American Graffiti 1973 Wexler was cinematographer of Mike Nichols screen version of Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf 1966 for which he won the last Academy Award for Best Cinematography Black amp White handed out 10 The following year had Wexler as the cinematographer for the Oscar winning detective drama In the Heat of the Night 1967 starring Sidney Poitier His work was notable for being the first major film in Hollywood history to be shot in color with proper consideration for a person of African descent Wexler recognized that standard lighting tended to produce too much glare on that kind of dark complexion making the actors look bad Accordingly Wexler toned it down to feature Poitier with better photographic results 11 Wexler was fired as cinematographer during filming of Francis Ford Coppola s The Conversation and replaced by Bill Butler He was also fired from Milos Forman s 1975 film One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest and again replaced by Bill Butler Wexler believed his dismissal on Cuckoo s Nest was due to his radical left political views as highlighted by his concurrent work on the documentary Underground in which the left wing urban guerrilla group The Weather Underground were being interviewed while hiding from the law However Forman said he had terminated Wexler over mere artistic differences Both Wexler and Butler received Academy Award nominations for Best Cinematography for One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest though Wexler said there was only about a minute or two minutes in that film I didn t shoot 5 However he won a second Oscar for Bound for Glory 1976 a biography of Woody Guthrie whom Wexler had met during his time in the Merchant Marine Bound for Glory was the first feature film to make use of the newly invented Steadicam in a famous sequence that also incorporated a crane shot Wexler was also credited as additional cinematographer on Days of Heaven 1978 which won a Best Cinematography Oscar for Nestor Almendros Wexler was featured on the soundtrack of the film Underground 1976 recorded on Folkways Records in 1976 12 He worked on documentaries throughout his career The documentary Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang 1980 earned an Emmy Award Interviews with My Lai Veterans 1970 won an Academy Award His later documentaries included Bus Riders Union 2000 about the modernization and expansion of bus services in Los Angeles by the organization and its founder Eric Mann Who Needs Sleep 2006 13 the Independent Lens documentary Good Kurds Bad Kurds No Friends But the Mountains 2000 14 Tell Them Who You Are 2004 13 Bringing King to China 2011 15 and From Wounded Knee to Standing Rock A Reporter s Journey 2019 16 Wexler also directed fictional movies Medium Cool 1969 a film written by Wexler and shot in a cinema verite style is studied by film students all over the world for its breakthrough form It influenced more than a generation of filmmakers In DVD commentary for Criterion Collection Wexler recalled that the studio execs were flabbergasted the film an edgy Godardian tale that ricocheted from one hot button topic to the next poverty racism civil rebellion the war in Vietnam the Kennedy and King assassinations 17 The making of Medium Cool was the subject of a BBC documentary by Paul Cronin Look Out Haskell It s Real The Making of Medium Cool 2001 18 Medium Cool was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2003 19 Produced by Lucasfilm Wexler s film Latino 1985 was chosen for the 1985 Cannes Film Festival He both wrote and directed the work Another directing project was From Wharf Rats to Lords of the Docks 2007 an intimate exploration of the life and times of Harry Bridges an extraordinary labor leader and social visionary described as a hero or the devil incarnate it all depends on your point of view 20 In 1988 Wexler won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Cinematography for the John Sayles film Matewan 1987 for which he was also nominated for an Academy Award His work with Billy Crystal in the HBO film 61 2001 was nominated for an Emmy In 2021 filmmakers Joan Churchill and Alan Barker released a 26 minute documentary Shoot From the Heart about Wexler s life and career 21 Churchill described her intention in making the film this way We were making a film about a man who was a passionate activist who never gave up hope for the world 22 A lifelong liberal activist during the final years of his life Wexler trained his focus on raising awareness of sleep deprivation and long hours in the film industry culminating in the documentary Who Needs Sleep 2006 which examined the routine overworking of Hollywood film crews 3 19 In a first person article in HuffPost Wexler wrote There s nothing I love more than making films But the health of my fellow film workers and citizens is more important than anything on the silver screen 23 Personal life EditWexler married the American actress Rita Taggart in 1989 He had two sons four grandchildren and one great granddaughter Death EditWexler died in his sleep at the age of 93 on December 27 2015 at his home in Santa Monica California 24 25 Legacy and honors career awards EditIn 1993 Wexler won a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Cinematographers the first active cameraman to be awarded 26 In 1996 he was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame the first cinematographer in 35 years to be so honored 26 In 2004 Wexler was the subject of a documentary Tell Them Who You Are directed by his son Mark Wexler 27 In 2007 he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Independent Documentary Association and the same from the Society of Operating Cameramen 28 29 In 2014 the Location Managers Guild of America awarded Wexler the Humanitarian Award at its inaugural awards show 30 Six of the films he worked on have been preserved by the National Film Registry for being culturally historically or aesthetically significant Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf inducted in 2013 Days of Heaven 2007 Medium Cool 2003 In the Heat of the Night 2002 American Graffiti 1995 and One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest 1993 31 32 33 In September 2016 George Lucas created the Haskell Wexler Endowed Chair in Documentary at the USC School of Cinematic Arts The first holder of the Wexler Chair is Michael Renov Vice Dean of Academic Affairs at SCA and a professor in the Bryan Singer Division of Cinema amp Media Studies Selected filmography EditStakeout on Dope Street 1958 Wexler is credited under the pseudonym of Mark Jeffrey due to problems with his Guild membership 34 citation needed The Savage Eye 1960 Hoodlum Priest 1961 Angel Baby 1961 Face in the Rain 1963 America America 1963 The Best Man 1964 The Loved One 1965 also producer Who s Afraid of Virginia Woolf 1966 In the Heat of the Night 1967 The Thomas Crown Affair 1968 Medium Cool 1969 also director and screenwriter American Graffiti 1973 as visual consultant Introduction to the Enemy 1974 also director One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest 1975 replaced by Bill Butler Underground 1976 also co director Bound for Glory 1976 Coming Home 1978 Days of Heaven 1978 Second Hand Hearts 1981 Lookin to Get Out 1982 The Man Who Loved Women 1983 Latino 1985 also director and screenwriter Matewan 1987 Colors 1988 Three Fugitives 1989 Blaze 1989 Other People s Money 1991 The Babe 1992 The Secret of Roan Inish 1994 Canadian Bacon 1995 Mulholland Falls 1996 The Rich Man s Wife 1996 Limbo 1999 61 2001 Silver City 2004 The Writer with No Hands 2014 appearance as self Who Needs Sleep 2006 director and director of photography 35 Frequent collaborators EditHal Ashby Norman Jewison John Sayles Saul LandauReferences Edit Haskell Wexler Biography 1922 Filmreference com Retrieved 29 January 2018 Top 10 Most Influential Cinematographers Voted on by Camera Guild PRNewswire October 16 2003 Archived from the original on January 21 2014 Retrieved January 17 2014 a b Anderson John 2015 12 27 Haskell Wexler Oscar Winning Cinematographer Dies at 93 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 11 04 Haskell Wexler The Hollywood Interview Haskell Wexler s personal blog Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved January 17 2014 a b Anderson John December 27 2015 Haskell Wexler Oscar Winning Cinematographer Dies at 93 The New York Times via NYTimes com a b c d e Current Biography Yearbook 2007 H W Wilson Co 2007 pp 594 596 About Haskell Wexler s personal blog Retrieved 17 Jan 2014 NFPF Grant Recipient Haskell Wexler s The Bus 1965 Archive UCLA Film amp Television 26 July 2019 Retrieved 25 November 2019 From American Graffiti To Outer Space New York Times Sept 12 1976 Beginning the next year the Academy eliminated a separate category for awards for Black and White and Color in Art Direction Cinematography and Costume Design Source Clooney Nick November 2002 The Movies That Changed Us Reflections on the Screen New York Atria Books a trademark of Simon amp Schuster p 79 ISBN 0 7434 1043 2 Harris Mark 2008 Pictures at a Revolution Five Films and the Birth of a New Hollywood Penguin Press p 221 ISBN 9781594201523 Underground Emile de Antonio Mary Lampson and Haskell Wexler with the Weather Underground Smithsonian Folkways Recordings Retrieved 2022 11 04 a b Haskell Wexler Oscar Winning Cinematographer Dies at 93 The New York Times 2015 12 27 Retrieved 2022 11 05 Good Kurds Bad Kurds The University of Arizona CMES Video and Book Library Retrieved 2022 11 04 BRINGING KING TO CHINA DOC NYC Retrieved 2022 11 04 New film From Wounded Knee to Standing Rock The Santa Barbara Independent Retrieved 2022 11 04 Jones J R 2013 07 10 The lost Chicago of Medium Cool Chicago Reader Retrieved 2022 11 04 French Philip 2015 09 13 Medium Cool review a landmark fusion of fiction and documentary The Guardian Retrieved 2022 11 04 a b McLellan Dennis Dolan 2015 12 28 Haskell Wexler dies at 93 two time Oscar winning cinematographer and lifelong activist Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2022 11 04 From Wharf Rats to the Lords of the Docks The Life and Times of Harry Bridges The Harry Bridges Project Archived from the original on 2009 12 12 Jenkins Tara 2022 02 03 A Candid Look at Haskell Wexler American Cinematographer Retrieved 2022 11 04 Jenkins Tara 2022 02 03 Behind the Legend A Candid Look at Haskell Wexler ASC in Shoot From the Heart The American Society of Cinematographers American Cinematographer Retrieved 2022 11 04 Wexler Haskell 2012 03 29 Sleepless in Hollywood A Threat to Health and Safety HuffPost Retrieved 2022 11 04 Richard Natale December 27 2015 Haskell Wexler Oscar Winning Cinematographer and Documentary Filmmaker Dies at 93 Variety com Retrieved December 27 2015 Matt Brenan December 27 2015 Haskell Wexler Legendary Cinematographer Dead at 93 Indie Wire com Archived from the original on December 29 2015 Retrieved December 27 2015 a b Haskell Wexler Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2022 11 04 Tell Them Who You Are the Guardian 2006 06 02 Retrieved 2022 11 04 PAST SOC LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS SOC Awards 2014 12 06 Retrieved 2022 11 04 Where Are They Now IDA Documentary Award Winners International Documentary Association 2022 02 02 Retrieved 2022 11 04 HUMANITARIAN AWARD CINEMATOGRAPHER HASKELL WEXLER Location Managers Guild of America 15 April 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Cinema with the Right Stuff Marks 2013 National Film Registry Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved 2022 11 04 Haskell Wexler dies at 93 two time Oscar winning cinematographer and lifelong activist Baltimore Sun Retrieved 2022 11 04 Complete National Film Registry Listing Film Registry National Film Preservation Board Programs Library of Congress Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved 2022 11 04 Haskell Wexler obituary TheGuardian com 27 December 2015 12on12off 12on12off External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haskell Wexler Official website Haskell Wexler at IMDb A documentary about Wexler s 1969 film Medium Cool Haskell Wexler ASC Focuses on the Making of Matewan John Patterson Through a lens darkly The Guardian interview 2 June 2006 Underground Album Details at Smithsonian Folkways Video interview of Wexler about the film Medium Cool Haskell Wexler Dead at 93 Legendary Cinematographer Activist Captured the Struggles of Our Times Democracy Now 28 December 2015 Radio interview with Haskell Wexler on Fresh Air 17 mins 1993 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haskell Wexler amp oldid 1147811561, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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