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Néstor Almendros

 
Wikipedia: Néstor Almendros

Néstor Almendros, A.S.C. (October 30, 1930March 4, 1992) was a Spanish cinematographer.

One of the highest appraised contemporary cinematographers, Néstor Almendros Cuyas was born in Barcelona, Spain, but moved to Cuba at age 18 to join his exiled anti-Franco father. In Havana, he wrote film reviews. Then he went on to study in Rome at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia. He directed six shorts in Cuba and two in New York. After the 1959 Cuban Revolution, he returned and made several documentaries for the Castro regime. But after two of his shorts (Gente En La Playa and La Tumba Francesa) were banned, he moved to Paris. There he became the favorite of Éric Rohmer and François Truffaut. In 1978, he started his Hollywood career, and won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography for the film Days of Heaven.

In his later years, Almendros co-directed two documentaries about the human rights situation in Cuba: Mauvaise Conduite (about the persecution of gay people) and Nobody Listened. He also shot several prestigious advertisements for Giorgio Armani (directed by Martin Scorsese), Calvin Klein (directed by Richard Avedon) and Freixenet. In 1992, Néstor Almendros died of AIDS in New York at age 61.

A Man with a Camera, published in 1984, is his account of the source of his creative inspirations.

Human Rights Watch International has named an award after him, given every year at the HRWI film festival.

See also

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