Quick Facts
Intro | American cinematographer |
A.K.A. | Joseph Biroc |
Was | Cinematographer |
From | United States of America |
Field | Film, TV, Stage & Radio |
Gender | male |
Birth | 12 February 1903, New York City |
Death | 7 September 1996, Woodland Hills (aged 93 years) |
Biography
Joseph Francis Biroc, A.S.C. (February 12, 1903 – September 7, 1996) was an American Academy Award-winning cinematographer. He was born in New York City and began working in films at the Paragon Studios in Fort Lee, New Jersey. After working there for approximately six years, he moved to Los Angeles. Once in Southern California, Biroc worked at the RKO Pictures movie studio. During World War II, he served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps, and filmed the Liberation of Paris in August 1944. In 1950, Biroc left RKO Pictures and freelanced on projects at various studios. In addition to his film work, which included It's a Wonderful Life (1946) and The Flight of the Phoenix (1965), Biroc worked on various television series, including the Adventures of Superman and Wonder Woman.
Biroc frequently collaborated with film director Robert Aldrich.
Early Life and Education
Joseph F. Biroc was born on February 12, 1903 in New York City, New York as Joseph ‘Joe’ Francis Biroc. He attended Emerson High School in Union City, New Jersey only to drop out to pursue a career in film – a subject he’d been passionate about since childhood. He saw his “first movie in 1910 on a vacant lot five blocks from his home” and knew from then he wanted to spend the rest of his life making movies.
Career
At the age of fifteen, with his uncle’s help, Biroc began his career in film as a film lab technician with Paragon Labs in Fort Lee, New Jersey in 1918. The apprenticeship marked the beginning of a series of jobs at numerous laboratories for Biroc – which was then a required step for aspiring cinematographers.
Two years later, he started working at Craftsman Labs in New York from 1920 to 1923 and shortly for Goldwyn Pictures in Culver City, California in 1923. After his time at Goldwyn Pictures, Biroc returned to New York and took a job as film printer for Famous Players-Lasky, where he was promoted to assistant cameraman shortly after. After Famous Players-Lasky shut down in 1927, Biroc moved to Los Angeles to work for United Artists prior to moving to RKO to work as a camera operator. Biroc started at RKO by serving as assistant to cinematographers Leo Tover, Robert De Grasse, and Edward Cronjager. During his time at RKO, Biroc worked on Cimarron (1931), Swing Time (1936), and Shall We Dance (1937). He also worked on A Woman Rebels (1936), Sylvia Scarlett (1935), and Five Came Back (1939) (among others), but received no screen credit as RKO hardly credited camera operators. His last work before World War II was for Bombardier (1943).
In 1943, Biroc began his career as a motion picture cameraman in the Army Signal Corps. Two years later, he filmed the brutalities at the Dachau concentration camp in Germany while serving as captain of the sixth detachment alongside George Stevens’s Special Motion Picture Coverage Unit. The end of the war marked a significant period in Biroc’s life as he achieved the rank of captain and eventually, the rank of major. He also obtained his first credit as cinematographer for It’s A Wonderful Life (1946). Following this, Biroc “served as cinematographer for the first 3-D American feature length film in color” titled Bwana Devil (1952).
In 1952, Biroc began his association with producer-director Robert Aldrich, starting with shooting an episode of The Doctor and moving onto films such as Attack (1956), World for Ransom (1954), The Flight of the Phoenix (1965), and The Longest Yard (1974). Biroc also “shot film for network television early on, such as musical shorts featuring Duke Ellington, Nat King Cole, and Louis Armstrong" – a feat considered rare for cameramen during the time period. During the majority of the 1950s, Biroc focused on television – both black and white and color. Biroc concluded his career in the 1970s and 1980s with work on television movies, specials, and miniseries.
Legacy
It's A Wonderful Life (1946)
Biroc worked alongside four-time Oscar nominated cinematographer Joseph Walker in filming It’s A Wonderful Life (1946) and achieved his first on-screen credit for his contribution.
Bwana Devil (1952)
Biroc was the cinematographer for the first feature-length 3-D color film in history, Bwana Devil (1952). He writes in an article for the American Cinematographer, “while other 3-D systems have employed dual cameras, none have pursued the theory that the 3-D cameras should see and record the scene exactly as the human eyes see it.” (336, August 1952). He goes on to explain how Natural Vision, the corporation he worked with, provided a different experience with 3-D pictures as it induced no eye strain.
Washington: Behind Closed Doors (1977)
Biroc wrote an article for American Cinematographer where he explained the process behind filming the series Washington: Behind Closed Doors (1977). In the article he mentions how the producers of the movie wanted the sets to look like actual locations, so each set had to have a big ceiling on it. He also mentions how he achieved a widespread shot for a scene – “we used a hospital chair as a dolly…we put a board across the handles of the wheelchair and the camera operator sat on the board.”
Hammett (1982)
Biroc worked with director Wim Wenders and producers Fred Roos, Ronald Colby, and Don Guest to achieve a classic lighting look for Hammett (1982). He stated in an interview with Richard Patterson for American Cinematographer, “Actually the way I photograph is the way they photographed 40, 50, 60, 80 years ago. It’s just basic lighting and basic photography.”
Personal life
Biroc “is survived by one sister, Agnes Cronmeyer, of Cranford, NJ, and four grandchildren.”
Partial filmography
Year | Film | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1929 | The Rescue | Herbert Brenon | |
1943 | Bombardier | Richard Wallace | |
1946 | It's a Wonderful Life | Frank Capra | |
1947 | Magic Town | William A. Wellman | |
1948 | On Our Merry Way | Leslie Fenton King Vidor | |
1948 | My Dear Secretary | Charles Martin | |
1949 | Roughshod | Mark Robson | |
1949 | Johnny Allegro | Ted Tetzlaff | |
1949 | Mrs. Mike | Louis King | |
1950 | The Killer That Stalked New York | Earl McEvoy | |
1951 | Cry Danger | Robert Parrish | |
1951 | The Bushwhackers | Rod Amateau | |
1951 | All That I Have | William F. Claxton | |
1952 | Red Planet Mars | Harry Horner | |
1952 | Bwana Devil | Arch Oboler | |
1952 | Loan Shark | Seymour Friedman | |
1952 | Without Warning! | Arnold Laven | |
1953 | The Tall Texan | Elmo Williams | |
1953 | The Glass Wall | Maxwell Shane | |
1953 | The Twonky | Arch Oboler | |
1953 | Vice Squad | Arnold Laven | |
1953 | Donovan's Brain | Felix E. Feist | |
1954 | World for Ransom | Robert Aldrich | |
1954 | Down Three Dark Streets | Arnold Laven | |
1956 | Nightmare | ||
1956 | Attack | Robert Aldrich | |
1956 | Tension at Table Rock | Charles Marquis Warren | |
1957 | Run of the Arrow | Samuel Fuller | |
1957 | Forty Guns | Samuel Fuller | |
1957 | The Amazing Colossal Man | Bert I. Gordon | |
1959 | The Bat | Crane Wilbur | |
1959 | FBI Story | Mervyn LeRoy | |
1960 | 13 Ghosts | William Castle | |
1961 | The Devil at 4 O'Clock | Mervyn LeRoy | |
1962 | Bye Bye Birdie | George Sidney | |
1963 | Under the Yum Yum Tree | David Swift | |
1963 | Gunfight at Comanche Creek | Frank McDonald | |
1964 | Ride the Wild Surf | Don Taylor | |
1964 | Kitten with a Whip | ||
1964 | Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte | Robert Aldrich | Nominated—Academy Award for Best Cinematography |
Viva Las Vegas | George Sidney | ||
1965 | The Flight of the Phoenix | Robert Aldrich | |
1965 | I Saw What You Did | William Castle | |
1967 | Enter Laughing | Carl Reiner | |
1967 | Tony Rome | Gordon Douglas | |
1967 | Fitzwilly | Delbert Mann | |
1968 | The Killing of Sister George | Robert Aldrich | |
1968 | The Detective | Gordon Douglas | |
1968 | The Legend of Lylah Clare | Robert Aldrich | |
1968 | What Ever Happened to Aunt Alice? | Lee H. Katzin | |
1970 | Too Late the Hero | Robert Aldrich | |
1970 | Mrs. Pollifax-Spy | Leslie H. Martinson | |
1971 | Escape from the Planet of the Apes | Don Taylor | |
The Grissom Gang | Robert Aldrich | ||
1972 | Ulzana's Raid | ||
1972 | Emperor of the North | Robert Aldrich | |
1973 | Cahill U.S. Marshal | Andrew V. McLaglen | |
1974 | Blazing Saddles | Mel Brooks | |
The Towering Inferno | John Guillermin | Won-Academy Award for Best Cinematography shared with Fred J. Koenekamp | |
The Longest Yard | Robert Aldrich | ||
1974 | Shanks | William Castle | |
1975 | Hustle | Robert Aldrich | |
1977 | The Choirboys | ||
1978 | Little Women | David Lowell Rich | |
1979 | Beyond the Poseidon Adventure | Irwin Allen | |
1980 | Airplane! | Jim Abrahams David Zucker Jerry Zucker | |
1980 | ...All the Marbles | Robert Aldrich | |
1982 | Hammett | Wim Wenders | |
1982 | Airplane II: The Sequel | Ken Finkleman |
Awards/Nominations
- Oscar AA nomination (1946; b&w; shared) for It's a Wonderful Life
- Oscar AA nomination (1964; b&w) for Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte
- Emmy Award (1972) for Brian's Song
- Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography - ABC Movie of the Week (1972)
- Oscar AA (1974; shared) for The Towering Inferno
- Emmy Award nomination (1977) for The Moneychangers [Part 1]
- Emmy Award nomination (1978) for Washington: Behind Closed Doors [Part 1] & A Family Upside Down
- Emmy Award nomination (1979) for Little Women [Part 2]
- Emmy Award nomination (1980) for Kenny Rogers as the Gambler
- Emmy Award (1983) for Casablanca [episode The Master Builder's Woman]
- Emmy Award nomination (1985) for A Death in California
- ASC Lifetime Achievement Award (1988) External links
- "Index to Motion Picture Credits - Joseph Biroc". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
- "Nominees/Winners". Television Academy. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
Bibliography and Further Reading
- "Hollywood Launches 3-D Production," in American Cinematographer(Hollywood), August 1952.
- "Photographing Washington: Behind Closed Doors," in American Cinematographer(Hollywood), November 1977.
- American Cinematographer(Hollywood), July 1981.
- Focus on Film(London), no. 13, 1973.
- Patterson, R., on Hammettin American Cinematographer(Hollywood), November 1982.
- Basinger, Jeanine, in TheIt's a Wonderful Life Book, 1987.
- American Cinematographer(Hollywood), March 1989.
- Obituary, in American Cinematographer(Hollywood), November 1996.
- Obituary, in Cinefantastique(Forest Park), vol. 28, no. 6, 1996.
