- American Society of Cinematographers
Infobox Union
name= American Society of Cinematographers
country=United States
members= ~340
full_name= American Society of Cinematographers
native_name=
founded= 1919
current=
head=
dissolved_date=
dissolved_state=
merged_into=
office=Hollywood, California
people=Daryn Okada , ASC - President
website= [http://www.theasc.com/ www.theasc.com]
footnotes=The American Society of
Cinematographers (ASC) is an educational, cultural, and professional organization. It is not alabor union , and it is not aguild . Membership is by invitation and is extended only to directors of photography andspecial effect s experts with distinguished credits in the film industry. Not all cinematographers can place the initials A.S.C. after their names. ASC membership has become one of the highest honors that can be bestowed upon a professional cinematographer, a mark of prestige and distinction. ["American Cinematographer Magazine"] The ASC currently has approximately 340 members.Origins
Its history goes back to the
Cinema Camera Club inNew York City founded byPhil Rosen ,Frank Kugler , andLewis W. Physioc and theStatic Club inLos Angeles founded byCharles Rosher andHarry H. Harris . Both were created in 1913, and were united into a national organization when Rosher and Rosen moved to Los Angeles in 1918. The ASC was chartered inCalifornia in January 1919, and claims to be the "oldest continuously operating motion picture society in the world". The following year, theWilliam S. Hart film "Sand" was released onJune 27 , bearing toJoe August the first cinematographer credit followed by the letters "ASC".Publications
1920 also marked the beginning of "
American Cinematographer " magazine, still in print today. The magazine focuses on the cinematography of current motion picture releases, including interviews with cinematographers and technical information. Back-issues remain in high demand among film makers, seeking to discover how a particular film's look was achieved. In the 1990s the magazine received a make-over, courtesy of the current editor, Stephen Pizzello. The previously restrained, technical journal style of the magazine gave way to the current format, broadening appeal and increasing circulation.Other than the magazine, the most well-known publication of the ASC is the
American Cinematographer Manual . The first edition was published in 1935 byJackson J. Rose as "The American Cinematographer Hand Book and Reference Guide". The Hand Book evolved from the "Cinematographic Annual" only published twice, in 1930 and 1931. Rose's handbook went through nine editions by the middle of the 1950s, and it was from this book that the modern American Cinematographer Manual originated. The first edition of the new manual was published in 1960, and is now in its ninth edition (2004).Founding members
*
Phil Rosen
*Homer Scott
*William C. Foster
*L.D. Clawson
*Eugene Gaudio
*Walter L. Griffin
*Roy H. Klaffki
*Charles Rosher
*Victor Milner
*Joe August
*Arthur Edeson
*Fred LeRoy Granville
*J.D. Jennings
*Robert S. Newhard
*L. Guy Wilky Award categories
Film
* Best Cinematography in Theatrical Releases
Television
* Best Cinematography in Movies of the Week, Miniseries, or Pilot Episodes
* Best Cinematography in Episodic TV SeriesLifetime Achievement
* Lifetime Achievement Award
* Television Career Achievement Awardee also
*
Cinematographer
*List of motion picture-related topicsReferences
External links
* [http://www.theasc.com/ ASC official website]
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