- Hal Mohr
Hal Mohr (August 2 ,1894 ,San Francisco –May 10 ,1974 inSanta Monica, California ) was a famed moviecinematographer . He is one of only six cinematographers to have a "Star" on the famousHollywood Walk of Fame , the others beingJ. Peverell Marley ,Ray Rennahan ,Leon Shamroy ,Haskell Wexler , andConrad L. Hall . His wifeEvelyn Venable also has a "Star".Career
In 1915, in an early example of an
exploitation film peddled directly to theater owners, Mohr andSol Lesser produced and directed a film "The Last Night of the Barbary Coast". This film purported to show the last night of the depraved Barbary Coast section ofSan Francisco before it was shut down by the police. (The area wasn't actually closed down until 1917.) This is now considered alost film .The following year he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Cinematographer for his work on "
The Fourposter " a 1952 film based on a play of the same name, written byJan de Hartog . He was also nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Cinematography in a Black and White Film, for his work on the same movie.Notably, he is the only person to have won a competitive
Academy Award without being nominated for it. In 1936, a write-in campaign won him the Best Cinematography Oscar for his work on "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (1935). The Academy later changed the Oscar rules, making write-in voting impossible.He won another Academy Award for his work on "The Phantom of the Opera" (1943). Other film cinematographer credits include "
Cheers for Miss Bishop " (1941) and "Another Part of the Forest" (1948).Personal life
Mohr married actress
Evelyn Venable onDecember 7 ,1934 , whom she met on the set of theWill Rogers film "David Harum". Strict vegetarians, they had two daughters, Dolores and Rosalia, and remained married until his death in 1974.External links
*imdb name|id=0005803|name=Hal Mohr
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