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Fred Sersen

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Years active
  
1930–1956


Name
  
Fred Sersen

Role
  
Painter

Fred Sersen FRED SERSEN 18901962 fine California watercolor coastal seascape

Born
  
February 24, 1890 (
1890-02-24
)
Czechoslovakia

Died
  
December 11, 1962, Los Angeles, California, United States

Education
  
San Francisco Art Institute

Awards
  
Academy Award for Best Visual Effects

Similar People
  
Lyle R Wheeler, William S Darling, Leon Shamroy, Barbara McLean, Lamar Trotti

Occupation
  
special effects artist

Fred Sersen (February 24, 1890 – December 11, 1962) was a Czechoslovak-American painter and cinema special effects artist working mainly at 20th Century Fox Studios from the 1930s to the 1950s with credits in over 200 movies. He won two Academy Awards for Best Effects, Special Effects (photographic), in 1940 for The Rains Came, and in 1944 for Crash Dive. An artificial lake created for the former film was named in his honor.

Contents

Biography

Fred Sersen was born Ferdinand Metodej Sersen, February 24, 1890, in Czechoslovakia, Then a part of Austria-Hungary, At the age of 17 he moved to the United States. He studied art at the Los Angeles School of Art and Design, the Portland Art Academy, and the San Francisco Institute of Art. His first credited film was A Connecticut Yankee (1931). In 1937 he recreated the 1871 Great Chicago Fire on the screen for the film In Old Chicago. Other notable effects for which he is credited include the fire in Hangover Square, the flying saucer in The Day the Earth Stood Still, and the sinking of the ship in Titanic.

He died December 11, 1962 in Los Angeles, California.

Awards

  • Academy Award for The Rains Came (1939)
  • Academy Award nomination for The Blue Bird (1940)
  • Academy Award nomination for A Yank in the R.A.F. (1941)
  • Academy Award nomination for The Black Swan (1942)
  • Academy Award for Crash Dive (1943)
  • Academy Award nomination for Wilson (1944)
  • Academy Award nomination for Captain Eddie (1945)
  • Academy Award nomination for Deep Waters (1948)
  • References

    Fred Sersen Wikipedia