Charles G. Clarke(1899-1983)
- Cinematographer
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Editor
Ace cinematographer Charles G. Clarke was born on March 19, 1899, in
Potter Valley, CA. He got into the film business in 1915 as an
assistant cameraman at Universal Pictures. He served in the army
overseas during World War One, and when he returned home got a job with
the National Film Co. as an assistant cameraman. He was promoted to
cinematographer on the serial
The Son of Tarzan (1920). He
worked steadily on virtually every type of film, from serials at the
independents to big splashy musicals and epics at the major studios (he
shot all of the China location footage and much of the studio work for
MGM's The Good Earth (1937),
although he didn't get screen credit for it). He did much work for Fox
Films in the 1930s, then went over to MGM for a few years. In 1938 he
went back to Fox--now 20th Century-Fox--and, with few exceptions, stayed
there for the rest of his career, working on everything from the
studio's low-budget Mr. Moto and Charley Chan series pictures to action
films
(Guadalcanal Diary (1943)) to
folksy outdoor pictures
(Thunderhead: Son of Flicka (1945)
and Smoky (1946)) to big CinemaScope
musicals
(Stars and Stripes Forever (1952)).
He died at his home in Beverly Hills, CA, in 1983.