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Albert Whitlock

 
Actor: Albert J. Whitlock
  • Born: 1915 in London, England
  • Died: Oct 26, 1999 in Santa Monica, California
  • Active: '70s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Sting, Missing, The Lady Vanishes
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Lady Vanishes (1938)

Biography

Albert Whitlock started his career as an actor, appearing in a handful of British studio films while still a teen. He eventually shifted his interest towards the technical side of film, starting off in sign making and lettering, and then becoming a scenic artist. Visual effects would become his forte, specifically focusing on matte painting. Walt Disney noticed the talented young artist in the early '50s and convinced Whitlock to relocate to the U.S. After about ten years of service for the Walt Disney Studios, Whitlock transferred to Universal Studios, where he would become an innovator and prolific worker, developing designs for well over 130 films. He earned two Academy Awards, for his work in the films Earthquake and The Hindenburg. Whitlock died in late 1999. ~ All Movie Guide
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Albert Whitlock

the famous matte
Born September 15, 1915
London
Died October 26, 1999
Santa Barbara, California

Albert J. Whitlock (September 15, 1915 – October 26, 1999) was an English motion picture matte artist best known for his work with Disney and Universal Studios.

Contents

Life and career

His film career began as a page at Gaumont Studios in London in 1929, before going on to build sets and work as a grip. Trained as a sign painter, he began a life-long association with Alfred Hitchcock, completing all of the signs for The 39 Steps and then assisting in the miniature effects for The Man Who Knew Too Much.

Whitlock began working as a matte artist during World War II. Recruited by Walt Disney, who was an admirer of his work, he would relocate to the U.S. in the early 1950s.

At Disney, where the head of the Matte Department was fellow-Londoner and near-exact contemporary Peter Ellenshaw, he successfully mastered the impressionistic approach to matte painting that he would become known for. He remained with the studio for seven years, helping with the design of Disneyland as well as film work, before moving to Universal in 1961. There he served as the head of their matte department, continuing his long collaboration with Alfred Hitchcock and many other directors, until retiring from the company in 1985 (though he continued to work on the odd production for a few years after).

His crowning achievement was the creation of over 70 individual matte paintings for the 1974 disaster film, Earthquake, which earned him an Academy Award. He won the Oscar again the following year for The Hindenburg, in which he re-created the great airship and its final voyage. Universal loaned out Whitlock and his team for some notable visual effects work on films including Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes, the David Lynch version of Dune, Mame, The Learning Tree and Bound for Glory. In the latter film, Whitlock created the famous Dust Storm with moving cotton-covered disks.

In addition to his film work, Whitlock is famous among Star Trek fans for the matte painting used to establish the huge exterior of the Delta Vega lithium cracking station in Star Trek (1966). The painting was later modified and reused as the Tantalus penal colony from the Star Trek episode "Dagger of the Mind".

He is also responsible for the matte paintings in History of the World, Part I, and appears in the movie hawking used chariots. In High Anxiety, he once again produced background mattes for Brooks, and appears in the film as noted industrialist Arthur Brisbane.

Awards

Awards won

Awards nominated

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Albert Whitlock" Read more