Gordon Willis Biography
Born: May 28, 1931
Getting his start as a summer stock actor, American cinematographer Gordon Willis turned to photography after experience as an Air Force cameraman. In 1970, the 39-year-old Willis lensed his first feature film, The_Landlord. Following his debut behind the camera, Willis worked steadily throughout the 1970s, on films such as The_Paper_Chase (1973), The_Parallax_View (1974), and All the President's Men (1976). It was for his work on Francis_Ford_Coppola's The_Godfather (1972) that Willis first won acclaim; he would go on to act as cinematographer for the next two Godfather installments, garnering an Academy Award nomination in 1991, for his work on The Godfather Part III.
It was also during the 1970s that Willis began his long collaboration with director Woody_Allen, first working with him on Annie_Hall in 1977. Willis and Allen would collaborate on six more films during the 1970s and 1980s, with the cinematographer lending his distinctive touch to Interiors (1978), Stardust_Memories (1980), A_Midsummer_Night's_Sex_Comedy (1982), Zelig (for which Willis won a 1984 Oscar nomination), Broadway_Danny_Rose (1984), The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), and, perhaps most memorably, 1979's Manhattan. Aside from directing the 1980 melodrama Windows, Willis has worked solely as a cinematographer, continuing to work throughout the 1990s, with such a director as Alan_J._Pakula on Presumed_Innocent (1990) and The_Devil's_Own (1997). In 1995, Willis was honored by his colleagues with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Cinematographers. Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi
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