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Bert Glennon

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Name
  
Bert Glennon

Role
  
Cinematographer


Spouse
  
Mary Coleman (m. ?–1967)

Children
  
James Glennon


Died
  
June 29, 1967, Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California, United States

Grandchildren
  
Meghan Glennon, Andrew Glennon, Juliet Glennon, Allison Glennon

Movies
  
Stagecoach, House of Wax, Drums Along the Mohawk, Rio Grande, They Died with Their Boots On

Similar People
  
Dudley Nichols, David Buttolph, Ernest Haycox, Ray Rennahan, James Glennon

Bert Lawrence Glennon (November 19, 1893 – June 29, 1967) was an American cinematographer and film director. He directed Syncopation (1929) the first film released by RKO Radio Pictures.

Contents

Glennon was born in Anaconda, Montana, and attended Stanford University, California, where he graduated in 1912. Before gaining fame in Hollywood, Glennon served as a pursuit pilot instructor during World War I.

He began his work in film in 1912 as a stage manager for theater entrepreneur Oliver Morosco and then c. 1913 worked for Keystone and Famous Players, then was laboratory superintendent for Clune Film Corporation, for four years. In 1915 he did his first film as cinematographer, The Stingaree (serial) and in 1928 he directed his first film, The Perfect Crime.

He was nominated for three Academy Awards in Best Cinematography for the films Stagecoach (1939), Drums Along the Mohawk (1939), and Dive Bomber (1941).

Glennon worked as a cinematographer on over a hundred films for directors including John Ford, André De Toth, Josef Von Sternberg, Raoul Walsh, and Cecil B. DeMille.

His son, James Glennon, was also an Academy Award Nominated cinematographer.

As director

  • Gang War (1928)
  • The Air Legion (1929)
  • Syncopation (1929)
  • Girl of the Port (1930)
  • As screenwriter

  • Second Wife (1930)
  • As actor

  • The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1914) (as Herbert Glennon)
  • References

    Bert Glennon Wikipedia


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