Showing posts with label Alfred Hitchcock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alfred Hitchcock. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2013

The Classics and "Ginger Rogers" photographer John Miehle

John Miehle was born on August 7, 1902 in Los Angeles, California.   Being born so close to Hollywood Miehle went to work as an assistant camera man on the 1931 movie "Delicious" starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell. 

He then worked exclusively in the Camera and Electrical Department doing uncredited still photography on some of the best known films, such as "What Price Hollywood?," "Rain," "Little Women," "Top Hat," "Kitty Foyle," "Rope" and "Portrait of Jennie."

He photographed many of the greats as well including Constance Bennett, Joan Crawford, Irene Dunne, Ginger Rogers, Ann Harding, William Powell, Joel McCrea, Katherine Hepburn, Joan Bennett, Delores Del Rio, Randolph Scott, James Stewart, Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Ruth Hussey, Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotten, Ethel Barrymoore, Laraine Day, Franchot Tone, Ann Blyth, Farley Granger, and Dana Andrews.

He did many films with the great Ginger Rogers including many with Fred Astaire, and he worked on two Hitchcock films, "Rope" and "The Paradine Case."

The film "Portrait of Jennie" was a flop at the time but has become a famous classic in the fantasy romance genre.  He did many fine photos for the film.

In addition, he did many publicity shots of such stars as Carole Lombard, Marilyn Monroe, and Lucille Ball.

He died at the young age of 49 on February 19, 1952 in Los Angeles, California.

As usual, when I find more on any of the photographer's listed, I will add the new information on each one. 

Here are some examples of his work:

Barbara Stanwyck



Carole Lombard







Many great images of Joan Crawford for "Rain."
 















 
The many faces of Ginger Rogers.
 
 




 
Dancing alone and with Fred Astaire above.
 
Shirley Temple and her newborn.
 



Jean Arthur
 
Jennifer Jones

Lucille Ball

Marilyn Monroe

Gloria Swanson
 
Alida Valli
 
Hitch directing "The Paradine Case."


 
Two copies of his stamp.
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Photographer Leo Fuchs, Friend to the Stars

From Amazon.com

Leo Fuchs is a Hollywood veteran who spent over 40 years shooting some of the most moving and memorable images ever made of 50s and 60s film icons.

Leo Fuchs was born in Vienna to a family of pastry chefs in 1929 and moved to New York with his family at the age of ten. He sold his first picture (of Eleanor Roosevelt) for $5 when he was barely a teenager, then quit school at 14 to apprentice at Globe Photos in New York. He struck out on his own two years later, working in Broadway nightclubs and as a glamour photographer for newspapers and magazines. After serving as a Signal Corps cameraman in Germany in the early 50s, Fuchs stayed in Europe and was hired as a still photographer on his first film, Magic Fire, directed by William Dieterle.

Fuchs’ introduction to moviemaking came as one of the world’s leading “special photographers” on movie sets in Europe and North America. Starting as a freelance magazine photographer, he was one of the rare outsiders invited onto movie sets, where he often befriended actors, actresses, and filmmakers and captured candid shots both during shooting and after hours while socializing with the stars. With the support of his dear friend Cary Grant, Fuchs gave up photography in 1964 and spent the next 20 years as a motion picture producer.

Fuchs' photographs of Hollywood’s undisputed heyday are collected for the first time in Leo Fuchs: Special Photographer from the Golden Age of Hollywood, along with a rare essay by photography great, Bruce Weber. Film icons Rock Hudson, Audrey Hepburn, Paul Newman, Gregory Peck, Sean Connery, Shirley MacLaine, Frank Sinatra, Marlon Brando, Cary Grant, and never-before-published photographs of To Kill a Mockingbird’s Harper Lee as well as such legendary directors as Billy Wilder, Otto Preminger, Fred Zinnemann, and Alfred Hitchcock all appear unguarded—unlike any other photographs of the era. These images are complemented by pages of insider details taken from the recorded remembrances of Leo Fuchs himself.

He came out with book recently.  Leo Fuchs: Special Photographer offers never-before-seen, behind-the-scenes photographs of the glamorous world of post-war Hollywood. It serves as a valuable piece of history and a reference for the style, attitudes, and personalities of the dream factory’s elite that define modern-day celebrity. With a career spent steadily rising through the ranks of production, from outsider to boss, Leo Fuchs saw it all. Now his personal vision has been captured for the world to enjoy in Leo Fuchs: Special Photographer.

Here are multiple images of the young Paul Newman on the set of 'Cool Hand Luke', extended images of Audrey Hepburn, Cary Grant, Rock Hudson with Doris Day and alone, Gregory Peck in his stills for 'To Kill A Mockingbird', Shirley MacLaine as 'Irma la Douce' and as Shirley alone, director Alfred Hitchcock, Frank Sinatra among others. The manner in which he was able to make his actors relax and be comical for the camera is unmatched. These are both serious and entertaining images that will rescue memories of the days when Hollywood represented entertainment!


Marlon Brando

Tony Curtis


Audrey Hepburn

 
 
Tippi Hedren
 

Alfred Hitchcock
 

Sandra Dee and Bobby Darin
 
Brigitte Bardot
 
 
His book with cover of Paul Newman.
 
 
Frank Sinatra
 
Doris Day and Rock Hudson.

Rock Hudson
 
Gina Lollabrigida
 
Cary Grant
 
Sean Connery
 
James Gardner
 
Leslie Caron
 
Steve McQueen
 
Gregory Peck
 
Shirley MacLaine with daughter Sacha.

Shirley with Jack Lemmon
 
The photographer himself with Gina Lollabrigida.

And at work.
 
And now for my own personal private guilty pleasure.... The many photos he took of MacLaine and Lemmon for Irma La Douce: