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Henry Cronjager

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Occupation
  
Cinematographer

Children
  
Edward Cronjager

Role
  
Cinematographer


Name
  
Henry Cronjager

Years active
  
1909-1934

Siblings
  
Jules Cronjager


Born
  
February 15, 1877 (
1877-02-15
)
Germany

Died
  
August 1, 1967, Los Angeles, California, United States

Movies
  
Tol'able David, Ace of Aces, Daddy‑Long‑Legs, The Love Light, Clothes Make the Pirate

Similar People
  
Marshall Neilan, Adolph Zukor, Henry King, Maurice Tourneur, Oscar Apfel

The Seventh Day: 1922 w Music Richard Barthelmess


Henry Cronjager (February 15, 1877 – August 1, 1967) was a pioneering cinematographer during the early days of silent film, right up through the beginning of the sound film era. Born in Germany on February 15, 1877, he and his brother, Jules, moved to the United States, where he became a photographer in 1893, initially working in portrait studios, before ending up in the art department of the New York Edison Co.. Cronjager eventually moved into cinematography, working for companies such as Edison Studios, the Biograph Company, and Fox Film Corporation, being the first cameraman engaged by both of those studios. He was known for his use of shadows, which would become a staple of the later German expressionist film movement. His two sons, Henry Cronjager Jr. and Edward Cronjager were also cinematographers, with Edward being nominated for seven Oscars. His grandson, William Cronjager (through Henry Jr.), was an Emmy Award-winning cinematographer. His more notable silent films include 1917's Crime and Punishment, the Mary Pickford 1919 picture, Daddy Long Legs, and the 1921 film, Tol'able David. In 1920 he was one of the first cameramen to use the use the "double exposure" method to film an actor on screen in two different roles at the same time, in the 1920 David O. Selznick film The Wonderful Chance.

Contents

His career went into decline with the advent of talking pictures, although he was one of several cameraman to film Howard Hughes' 1930 film, Hell's Angels. In an ironic twist, when he was demoted from cinematographer to cameraman on the 1934 film Kentucky Kernels, he would retire. His son Edward had been selected as the director of photography for that film.

Filmography

(Per AFI database)

References

Henry Cronjager Wikipedia