- Joseph McMillan Johnson
Joseph McMillan Johnson (1912-1990) was a leading
Hollywood art director born inLos Angeles .He graduated from USC with a degree in
architecture before attendingArt Center College of Design in Pasadena. He was working for well-known architectKem Weber when he was hired byDavid O. Selznick in 1938. He worked as a sketch artist for designs on "Gone with the Wind" in 1939, and was heavily involved with the creation of thespecial effects for "The Wizard of Oz" that same year. He worked on most of Selznick's major productions including "Duel in the Sun" (1946), "The Paradine Case " (1947) and "Portrait of Jennie " (1948), for which he won an Oscar for thevisual effects .A frequent collaborator with
Alfred Hitchcock , ("Rear Window " in 1954 was followed by "To Catch a Thief" in 1955 which earned him anotherAcademy Award nomination ), Johnson was forced to take a break from Hollywood during theMcCarthy witch hunts. He returned to his first career of architecture for a year, and worked with many notable architects in the LA area, many of whom having been his classmates at USC. When the McCarthy hysteria of Communism settled down, Johnson returned to Hollywood, earning Oscar nominations for his art direction on "The Facts of Life" in 1960 and the expensiveremake of "Mutiny on the Bounty" in 1962, and for visual effects onGeorge Stevens 's religious epic "The Greatest Story Ever Told " (1965) and theJohn Sturges thriller "Ice Station Zebra" in 1968.He retired in 1971 and died of a
cerebral haemorrhage in 1990.External links
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