Glen MacWilliams Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
Glen MacWilliams (1898-1984), was an American cinematographer. Born in California, MacWilliams started his career in the silent days. He worked in the United Kingdom for much of the 1930s, working on several musicals with Jessie Matthews. He returned to the US in the 1940s where he worked extensively for 20th Century Fox, filming Laurel and Hardy's first two films for the studio and also worked with Alfred Hitchcock on Lifeboat in 1944. He had previously worked with Hitchcock on one occasion in Britain.He later worked in television on such shows as Highway Patrol, Wanted: Dead or Alive, The Untouchables and My Living Doll before he retired in the mid-1960s.
Cinematographer, active from 1918 to 1966. Long spell at 20th Century Fox: 1925-1932 and, again, 1941 to 1946. Best known in the 1930's for King Solomon's Mines (1937) and, later, for his work on Alfred Hitchcock's wartime thriller Lifeboat (1944). After 1958, worked exclusively in television.
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Profiled in "American Classic Screen Interviews" (Scarecrow Press). [2010]
Cinematographer
Title
Year
Status
Character
Lovetime
1921
The Mother Heart
1921
The Lamplighter
1921
Wing Toy
1921
Partners of Fate
1921
Kismet
1920
A Splendid Hazard
1920
The Poor Simp
1920
The Luck of the Irish
1920
His Majesty, the American
1919
The Knickerbocker Buckaroo
1919
Arizona
1918
One Hundred Percent American
1918
Short
Say! Young Fellow
1918
Headin' South
1918
The Iron Men
1966
TV Movie
My Living Doll
1964-1965
TV Series 26 episodes
Vacation Playhouse
1964
TV Series 1 episode
My Favorite Martian
1963
TV Series director of photography - 1 episode
The Untouchables
1962-1963
TV Series 6 episodes
77 Sunset Strip
TV Series 5 episodes, 1960 - 1961 director of photography - 2 episodes, 1960 - 1961
Cheyenne
1961
TV Series 2 episodes
Hawaiian Eye
TV Series 3 episodes, 1960 - 1961 director of photography - 3 episodes, 1960 - 1961
Surfside 6
TV Series 1 episode, 1961 director of photography - 2 episodes, 1961